Archive for March, 2008

Greg Epstein on Public Radio’s Speaking of Faith

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Checking out our site after hearing about us on public radio’s “Speaking of Faith” with Krista Tippett? Welcome! Join our mailing list for updates on Humanism and the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard, including about our upcoming events such as those with Bad Religion’s Greg Graffin, our student-moderated debate between conservative Christian intellectual Dinesh D’Souza and leading atheist activist Dan Barker, our popular minicourses and discussion groups, or on Greg Epstein’s upcoming book Good Without God (to be published by Morrow/HarperCollins in 2009).

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We’re delighted for the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard and Humanism in general to be featured for the first time ever on public radio’s biggest and best program about religion. “Speaking of Faith” is public radio’s conversation about religion, meaning, ethics, and ideas. Each week, award-winning host Krista Tippett probes the myriad ways in which religious impulses inform every aspect of life and culture, nationally and globally.

This week’s episode, titled “A New Humanism,” is described as follows:

In a recent Pew poll, 16 percent of Americans identified themselves as “unaffiliated” — atheist, agnostic, or most prominently “nothing in particular.” Greg Epstein, a Humanist chaplain at Harvard, described himself that way until he discovered the tradition of humanism. He is passionate about articulating an atheist identity that is not driven by a stance against religion but by positive ethical beliefs and actions.

The story weaves Epstein’s personal and philosophical reflections on Humanist history and community together with readings and musical selections from other voices that help articulate a centuries-old tradition of positive atheism, agnosticism, and skepticism. Another great feature of the story is that Speaking of Faith’s blog has begun a series of posts exploring different aspects of Humanism in greater depth, such as ancient Epicurean philosophy, or the idea of modern literature as a source of inspiration, a kind of “Canon” for the non-religious.

To listen to the episode online or for live broadcast stations and times, visit speakingoffaith.publicradio.org

Barker v. D’Souza: A Student-Moderated Debate

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

At Harvard’s Memorial Church, Tues April 22, 8pm:

CHRISTIANITY VS. ATHEISM?

A Student-Moderated Debate Between:

Dinesh D’Souza

leading conservative Christian intellectual and author of What’s So Great About Christianity; AND

Dan Barker

head of the US’s largest atheist organization, and author of Losing Faith in Faith.

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**FREE/OPEN TO THE PUBLIC: NO TICKETS OR RESERVED SEATS.**

Arrive early to ensure best quality seating!

Minicourse: Compassionate Communication

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

As a follow-up to the extremely successful course on “Voluntary Simplicity” currently being offered at Harvard by the Humanist Chaplaincy and the Ethical Society of Boston, comes another great miniseminar. Join us for 3 weekly sessions on March 27, April 3 and 10 to learn about “Compassionate Communication.”

The purpose of the course: to strengthen our ability to inspire compassion from others and to respond compassionately to others and to ourselves. The intent is to remind us about what we already know-about how we humans were meant to relate to one another-and to assist us in living in a way that concretely manifests this knowledge.

The course will be taught by Margo Woods, D.Sc. and Carolyn Nalbandian, Ph.D. and will take place in Grays Hall-5 in the Harvard Quad from 7-9PM on March 27, April 3 and April 10th. As with the Voluntary Simplicity Course, call 781-646-6059 to register and reserve parking pass; or come to first session.

Topics to be explored include:

• the intention to communicate
• how to separate observation from evaluation and judgment
• our human needs that drive our feelings
• empathic listening
• the rewards of being truly “present”
• the power of being “heard”
• the difference between needs and strategies for meeting those needs
• the source of anger and its resolution
• Giving effective compliments

Join us to learn the background of this communication philosophy and start to practice it. It can change your life.

Featured Student Voice: Mary Ellen Giess, HDS

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Humanism is About Community

mary-ellen-giess-photo.jpgI can remember the response I got from a fellow grad student Humanist at Harvard last year when I told him that yes, I was a Humanist from the Divinity School – “Are you here to put us on some kind of black list or something?” It was around then that the idea of organizing a Harvard Divinity School Humanists group began to look pretty good to me. We Div School Humanists are something of anomaly, even for Humanists, as people studying religion while seemingly stepping away from that lifestyle personally. Still, as someone who studies religion and public life, I wanted to see how we Humanists could adopt a public life for ourselves within the dynamic interreligious atmosphere of Harvard Divinity School. When one of my fellow HDS Humanists suggested that we fully integrate ourselves into the spiritual life of the school by leading one of the Noon Services offered by a different religious groups at HDS each week, I was immediately all in. What better way to engage ourselves in interreligious dialogue than to open our practices for public experience?

Of course, figuring out what exactly those practices were was a different matter. The first steps were easy – shifting the service locale from the school chapel to the community room, informing our coordinators that we would need coffee during the service, not just after – steps that were only too natural. It was only when we sat down to actually plan the service that we ended up staring at each other (over coffee, of course) with nothing to say, for the first time in the short history of our group. The first thing that we all agreed on was that we had barely anything in common. There was our resident hard-core atheist, or, as he prefers to describe himself, the “friendly” atheist, who still manages to piss off our religious compatriots in class pretty regularly. There was the self-proclaimed atheist “by faith,” the one who has been prohibited from mentioning care ethics in any of our future meetings. Our Jeffersonian Deist was the one who had suggested the service at all; he balks at calling himself a Humanist but he’s come around. Then there was my poor roommate, raised Catholic but falling away, dragged along to these meetings in which she wonders how she got there –what do these loud men have to do with her spiritual, naturalist love of the world? Finally there’s me, the Unitarian Universalist agnostic and alleged group leader, feeling like I was herding cats most of the time.

Yet the answer to our dilemma was right there, staring us in the face – our very diversity was a unique conception of community. For what sort of community are we, anyway? Held together by mere disbelief, drastically different from any other religious community, which are generally held together by belief. Can we really be a loving, nurturing community with so little in common? We decided that what we wanted to share most was how we hang together despite the odds – we wanted to show the broader Harvard community that we Humanists are diverse, yet still somehow unified. Moreover, we wanted to push our outside community to examine their own community lives – what held them together, what pushed them apart, how communities define our deepest selves.

The service itself was simultaneously an exercise in discomfort and yet the most natural thing in the world. With none of us accustomed to speaking “worshipfully” about our spiritual journeys, we nonetheless elected to open the service with sentences of belief – each of us wrote several sentences expressing the ways Humanism reflects us. For there are few of us who are totally comfortable with the term; we find other words better suited to describing our innermost beliefs. However, there is something common – communal, I daresay – that we find in adopting the term, and so we attempted to articulate the reasons why for our audience. Then, two of our braver members spoke at more length – our hardcore atheist and spiritual agnostic, just to demonstrate our diversity. Two other members of our group shared readings that spoke to their own Humanism. Finally, we asked the broader community to join us in examining their own communities and how we define community at the Divinity School through a writing and then spoken meditation.

We chose an atypical format, even for eclectic HDS Noon Services. We set the room up in a circle of tables, so that we could see the many human faces in the room – facing in, focusing on each other and talking about our shared experience. This interactiveness came as a surprise to many, but when is Humanism about complacent listening? We are thinkers; we are doers, and we demanded the same from our visitors. I was so pleased to see several faces from the broader Harvard Humanist community present. I wanted to share this unique Divinity School experience – the opportunity for us non-believers to express our belief in something: in each other.

In the end, the experience was gratifying. I apologized to my fellow HDS Humanists for forcing them into an uncomfortable situation, but even the hardcore atheist said the experience was positive and affirming. We were – dare I say it – proud of ourselves and of each other, proud to be a community. As I muse over these final reflections, I realize that the very function of Humanism is to provide community. Although we are often barely united in common disbelief, we are also united by the human call to companionship. We can disbelieve alone, we don’t need each other for that. We can be moral agents alone, as well, if we try. However, as long as we continue to seek each other out, we will be Humanists in the true sense, and we will keep working together to define that ever-evolving term.

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Mary Ellen Giess is a second year Masters student at Harvard Divinity School. She studies religion in public life, including religion and government. She plans to pursue a career educating about their intricate relationship.