Society

Religious Beliefs

Volume 14 Number 3, Autumn 2001

Rhyme and Reason

I normally avoid getting involved in discussion of religion in the context of skeptics and skepticism. The main reason for this is that I do not believe that there is necessarily any intrinsic conflict between a belief in one or more deities and a scientific approach concerned essentially with falsifiable phenomena. If someone's religious beliefs have no observable and testable consequences on the universe then, in a sense, they are of no interest to the scientist or the skeptic. Therefore, although I do not possess any myself, I do believe that it is possible to hold religious beliefs and, at the same time, to have a scientific and skeptical worldview. And, indeed, there are many people with religious beliefs that, in the main, do not contradict their rational worldview.

Reinventing the Past: Why rely on orthodox historical study when you can invent your own?

From the archives, Rachel Carthy looks at the burgeoning free-for-all she calls cryptohistory

From the archives: Nothing but a Dirty Film? Polywater – the cold fusion of the 1960s

From the archives in 1990, Bill Penny looks at the history of the pseudoscientific cold fusion, free energy movement

From the archives: A panoply of paranormal piffle – The Skeptic meets Stephen Fry

From the archives in 1990, Steve Donnelly of The Skeptic meets actor, comedian, author and atheist Stephen Fry

From the archives: A hole in the head – Creationists and APEmen in Lowestoft

From the archives in 1990, Jean N Dorricott investigates the Creation Science Movement and their belief in Creationism

From the archives: The 1988 Nullarbor UFO Mystery – Solved

From the archives, A.T. Brunt examines the January 1988 reports of UFO sightings over Australia's Nullarbor region.

IQ tests continue to flourish, in spite of inherent biases, because we so badly want to feel special

From the archives in 1989, Wendy Grossman looks at a recent stunt by Mensa to identify Britain's brightest children, and why intelligence tests favour the demographic of their authors

From the archives: The many traditions of Christmas that are now lost to history

From the archives in 1989, Toby Howard reminds us of long-forgotten Christmas traditions - like burning the Yule log, wearing animal disguises, and "The Devil's Knell".
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