No. 1 | Free Inquiry (original) (raw)
Tributes to Tom Flynn
Tom Flynn: Champion for Freethought Andrea Szalanski
Thomas W. Flynn died suddenly August 23, 2021. Those who knew him personally and professionally were shocked and saddened. We had looked forward to many more years of his contributions, even though at the time of his death at age sixty-six he had accomplished much more than most people. Flynn was a scholar and a …
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Tributes to Tom Flynn
Memory Keeper Susan Jacoby
I do not remember when or under what circumstances I first met Tom Flynn, but I do know why we hit it off right away. Like me, Tom was devoted to reviving the public’s memory of Robert Green Ingersoll (1833–1899). He was the only person I knew who was as outraged as I was by …
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Tributes to Tom Flynn
Remembering Tom Flynn: Humanist, Humbug, Editor, Friend
Edward Tabash When we are steeped in promoting controversial ideas that shouldn’t be controversial in an educated society, it’s rare that a colleague comes along who is a true polymath. It’s so unusual to find someone with such a large repertoire of skills that we come to rely on such a person for literally everything. …
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Tributes to Tom Flynn
The Trouble with Christmas Excerpt Tom Flynn
Tom Flynn’s The Trouble with Christmas was originally published in 1993 (Prometheus Books) and republished in 2011. The following excerpt initially appeared in the Fall 1993 issue of Free Inquiry. Flynn went on to present his arguments against atheists celebrating Christmas in lectures and media appearances. As associate editor of Free Inquiry and coeditor of …
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In memory of Tom Flynn 1. shadows … shadowing … Tom Flynn … to the dark 2. shadows … shadowing … Tom Flynn … shadowing … in the dark 3. shadows … shadowing … Tom Flynn
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time seemingly so much time yet not for us only so much time for us and then it ends … life seemingly so much life yet not for us only so much life for us and then it ends … love seemingly so much love yet not for us only so much love for us …
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For Tom Flynn I saw you more than once loaded with papers & slides, & pictured what was on the inside, like a piñata, jumble of rational treasures that tumble out now, scattered thought, measures of logical light you continue to spill, far beyond fools’ empty fields & death’s visionless night.
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Poem
The Negotiation Joe Nickell
For Tom Flynn How can I believe you’re dead? It’s only something someone said. Would you leave us here to grieve, when you could give the lie to, instead? Perhaps yet live & not let go, for we do remember so— remember then, remember when, at last though remember best, were you here again.
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What Would Convince You? Daniel Bastian
As an atheist and former theist, I am occasionally asked what it would take to change my mind on a central metaphysical question. What met conditions or circumstances would reincorporate into my worldview the conviction that God exists and, more specifically, that Christianity offers the best explanation for the world we observe? However we may …
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What Is the Truth about Faith That Is ‘Not Blind’? Glade Ross
Often, when explaining to a religious person why I believe faith is a morally reprehensible practice, I encounter this response that dismissively avers: “Oh, that’s blind faith, and I’m as much against it as you are. It’s not the faith I exercise.” It seems, indeed, religious folk everywhere are eager to distinguish their own faith …
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Editorial
One of a Kind and Terribly Missed Robyn E. Blumner
On December 25, 2017, my husband and I were visiting Quito, Ecuador, after having spent the prior week exploring the Galapagos Islands. There wasn’t much to do that day. It was Christmas and everything was closed. Though atheists (of course!), we popped into a few churches in the historic downtown, hoping to see some pageantry …
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Op-Ed
Global Challenges in the Time of COVID-19 Russell Blackford
As humanity faces immense global challenges, such as the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and the increasingly visible effects of global warming, a new school of thought has emerged. Its essence is that we should investigate possibilities for “moral enhancement”: that is, we should consider how to alter human nature so that it becomes …
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Op-Ed
A Pagan Approach to the Abortion Debacle Shadia B. Drury
Tom Flynn was a moralist and a pragmatist. He rejected religion on moral grounds. He knew that the alliance of religion with morality was spurious. But in light of the power and intensity of the anti-abortion movement, he was pragmatic enough to side with those who defended abortion in ways that would circumvent monotheistic furor. …
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Op-Ed
Is There a Future? Ophelia Benson
We’ve been having to say goodbye a lot lately. We’ve been having to say it to vast swaths of life that we took for granted and assumed would always be there. Political sanity, reasoned public discourse, longer life expectancies, and above all the sense of a future. Not just our own personal futures, but a …
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Op-Ed
The Important Role of Museums and Heritage Preservation for Secular Humanism, Tom Flynn’s Insight Barry Kosmin
Movements need a sense of history and tradition to inspire respect and loyalty in their members. Tom Flynn’s enthusiasm and research in creating the Freethought Trail and establishing the Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum reflected his keen awareness of the importance of educational and public relations in maintaining the heritage of secularism and valorizing its …
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Appreciation
Danish Cartoonist Kurt Westergaard Dies at Eighty-Six Nicole Scott
Kurt Westergaard, the creator of the most provocative of the famous Danish Muhammad cartoons, has died of natural causes at age eighty-six. Born on July 13, 1935, in the village of Døstrup, Denmark, Westergaard grew up in a conservative Christian home but turned from these roots in high school when he was introduced to cultural …
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Looking Back
Looking Back – December 2021/January 2022
35 Years Ago “… I think it a fundamental misuse of language to equate religion with secularism when the latter refers to different aspects of experience. This is linguistic definition by capricious legislation, a form of definition-mongering. Anyone has the right to misuse language if he so wishes, but there is something basically unethical about …
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Letters
Letters to the Editor – December 2021/January 2022
World Population Re: “Will World Population Drop Far Enough, Fast Enough?,” FI, August/September 2021. Tom Flynn’s essay arguing that the earth is already overpopulated with us was spot on. In the mid-1960s, I had occasion to ask M. King Hubbert, he of Hubbert’s Peak fame and then the greatest living geologist, if he thought we …
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Cuno's Corner
Actually, Virginia … Steve Cuno
In fond memory of Christmas archnemesis Tom Flynn Once again, we arrive at that most wonderful time of the year. I refer to Christmastime, the season—in the United States, anyway—of decked-out pine trees, gag-reflex-inducing TV specials, and fresh, righteous, Starbucks cup–sparked outrage. And, not to be overlooked, your local paper will likely reprint the 1897 …
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Fox's Lair
Sucking Up to the Virgin Mary Hank Fox
I see these press releases from churches every week in the newspaper. One of them in particular caught my eye. A little shrine near where I live was having a special Adoration of the Virgin Mary event, and the description of it included a “procession in praise of the Sacred Virgin Mary,” followed by a …
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Great Minds
Elbert Hubbard: Torchbearer for Freethought Timothy Binga
Susan Jacoby, in her book Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism (2004), wrote about the “Golden Age of Freethought” and specifies the years 1875 to 1914 as freethought’s heyday. Understandably, Robert Green Ingersoll was the era’s standard-bearer for the freethought cause. Ingersoll was probably the most-heard speaker in the United States before the advent of …
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Great Minds
An American Bible Selections written by Elbert Hubbard. Edited by Alice Hubbard (East Aurora, New York: Roycrofters, 1911. Pp. 289–308).
A RELIGION of just being kind would be a pretty good religion—don’t you think so? But a religion of kindness and useful effort is nearly a perfect religion. We used to think it was a man’s belief concerning a dogma that would fix his place in eternity. This was because we believed that God was …
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High Heresy
The Difference a Pronoun Can Make John J. Dunphy
The Roman Catholic Church is in an uproar, but it’s not about its pedophile priests or the bishops who diligently cover for them. This venerable institution has its theological panties in a wad because some of the faithful might have received “invalid sacraments.” Michael Stechschulte’s August 24, 2020, article in America, a Jesuit publication, gives …
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God on Trial
The Eden Two Were Innocent! R. F. Ilson
The Bible begins with the book of Genesis, in which we read that the first humans, Adam and Eve, were forbidden on pain of death to eat the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Nevertheless, beguiled by the Serpent, they did so and were duly punished (by exile from Eden and …
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Review
Religion’s Demoralizing Gift of Morality to the World Robert Louis Semes
What It Means to Be Moral: Why Religion Is Not Necessary for Living an Ethical Life by Phil Zuckerman (Berkeley, California: Counterpoint Press, 2019, ISBN 978-1-64009-274-7). 360 pp. Hardcover, $28.00. Where does contemporary morality, with its historical emphasis on anything connected to sex, come from? Peter Heather, renowned English scholar, tells us in his marvelous …
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