Friday, December 30, 2011

Losing Control: A Film Screening and Discussion on Science, Film, and Love

The Center for Inquiry in New York City presents a pre-Valentine's Day screening of the new romantic comedy, Losing Control. Directed by scientist-turned-filmmaker Valerie Weiss, Losing Control is about a female scientist who applies scientific principles to her love life in a search to find out whether her boyfriend is "the one."
Inspired by Weiss' experiences earning a PhD at Harvard Medical School, the movie stars Miranda Kent (Campus Ladies), Reid Scott (My Boys, The Big C), Kathleen Robertson (90210), Lin Shaye (There's Something About Mary), Bitsie Tulloch (Quarterlife), Steve Howey (Shameless, Something Borrowed), and Ben Weber (Sex in the City, Twister).
The screening will be followed by discussion on science, film, and love with director Valerie Weiss and actor Ben Weber, hosted by CFI's Michael De Dora. The event will close with a brief performance by Eleisha Eagle, who wrote several songs for the movie soundtrack, including the credit song "When I Grow Up." A reception with wine and light fare will follow

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Hanukkah Quality

ERR OF THE DOG: This offensive billboard on the West Side Highway in Harlem was taken down by last night.It's true that Hanukkah presents are generally cheaper than Christmas presents (there's more of them, duh!), but only Jews are allowed to joke about it.  Thus, the Anti-Defamation League is protesting against the billboard ad for Wodka.
“Although rarely serious, we apologize to anyone we may have offended through our holiday campaign,’’

Wodka said on Twitter.


That's right, don't mess with us, or the [Polish] joke will be on you.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Kosher Thanksgiving

Turkey, being native to the New World, was not mentioned in the Torah.  Thus, some observant Jews are unsure whether they can eat it.  Most agree that they can, because it is certainly more like a chicken (not just taste-wise) than a bird of prey or vultures that are certainly not kosher.  The unfortunate minority follows Rabbi Yom-Tov Lippman Heller (1579-1654), who is often referred to as the Tosafot Yom-Tov, which is actually the title of a commentary on the Mishna for which he is famous.  According to Rabbi Joshua Heller,
Many of his descendants hold fast to a family tradition that he was among the early sages who declared the turkey to be non-kosher. Indeed, I have distant cousins who to this day satisfy their Thanksgiving obligations with a brisket and a chocolate turkey.
For more Talmud-worthy discussion of the holiday bird, you can visit http://www.thejewishweek.com/features/hammerman_ethics/turkey_kosher.

As we Ashkenazi Jews say, "a makeh unter yenems orem iz nit shver tsu trogen," which means "I wish I had their problems."

Thursday, November 17, 2011

The Comedy of Joel Chasnoff

The Comedy of Joel Chasnoff
Author of The 188th Crybaby Brigade
Thursday, December 8 @ 8pm
Bendheim Performing Arts Center
999 Wilmot Road, Scarsdale

A hilarious coming-of-age tale in which Chasnoff takes readers into the barracks, over, under, and through political fences, and face-toface with the absurd reality of life in the Israeli Army.

Further info: Paul Warhit: 914-637-0513 or Millie Jasper: 914-472-7630

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Judaism Without God?

If Judaism means being Jewish, then neither I nor anyone I had known before the age of 16 (i.e., before coming to the US) had any doubts that this is true. It seems that finally this concept has reached American shores (Hallelujah!).  According to an article in USA Today, at least American atheist say yes.

Here are some quotes from people interviewed by the newspaper:

"Atheism and Judaism are not contradictory, so to have an atheist in a Jewish congregation isn't an issue or a challenge or a problem.  It is par for the course. That is what Judaism is. It is our tradition to question God from top to bottom." (Maxim Schorin, a member of the Reform Congregation Beth El in Berkeley--but then he must be a Russian Jew)
"An individual who attends synagogue, participates in Jewish communal affairs, and contributes heavily to Jewish charities would undoubtedly be considered a very fine Jew, without asking questions about whether or not that person believed in God." (Jonathan Sarna, Professor of American Jewish history, Brandeis University) 
According to Shaul Magid, a professor of modern Judaism at Indiana University, atheists join synagogues because American Judaism lacks "a vibrant secular Jewish movement."

I have news for the esteemed professor.  There is an alternative.  The Society for Humanistic Judaism offers a home for people who want to keep their Jewish identity without having to partake of opium for the masses.

What Can Science Say About Free Will?


Are advances in the scientific understanding of the human mind shaping our conception of free will? If so, how? Are the cognitive sciences revealing that free will does not exist, or are they merely shedding light on the inner workings of agency? And do the answers to these questions have implications for moral responsibility?
This Sunday, CFI-New York City will sponsor a panel discussion featuring scientists and philosophers who will discuss their views on these and related questions.
Speakers include:
The panelists will participate in a roundtable conversation, then answer questions from the audience. The event will be followed by a reception with the speakers. 
Admission is $10 for the general public, free for paid members. 

Read more here:

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Hebdo Bombing

As you have probably heard, the office of the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo was destroyed by a bomb for daring to print an anti-Muhammed cartoon.

I was glad to learn that they are undefeated.  The newspaper has reprinted the cartoon and has distributed it as a special supplement.



I wasn't able to find the exact cartoon in question, but from what I did find (see the cartoon on the right) it seems they are equal opportunity satirists.  It's just that currently, only Islamic extremists go so far as to spill blood due to their religion (Timothy McVeigh was a Christian, but it wasn't his Christianity that drove him to destroy the Oklahoma City Federal Building).

Also, not all anti-Islamic cartoons Hebdo published are anti-Mohammed.  The one on the left, for instance, is entitled Mohammed Overcome by the Fundamentalists.  Its balloon says, “It’s a Drag Being Loved By Idiots”.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Whiteville Mayor Gives in to "Terrorists"


The mayor of Whiteville, Tenn., has finally given in to the demand of the Freedom from Religion Foundation to have the Latin cross on top of the town's water tower removed.  In a final salvo, he demanded in a letter to FFRF that the organization compensate the town for the $4,000 it cost to hire a crane to break off one of the arms of the cross, thus leaving a gallows-like monstrosity.

In his letter, the mayor, James Bellar, complains of the "fear and terror caused" by "the terrorist supporters of F.F.R.F."  He concludes the letter with "one word, and it is not a Town [sic] in Arizona": Phoenix.  I think he means that the cross will rise up again.  Unfortunately, with the current Catholic majority in the Supreme Court, this is not an impossibility.