Point of Inquiry - podcast cover

Point of Inquiry

Center for Inquirywww.pointofinquiry.org
Point of Inquiry is the Center for Inquiry's flagship podcast, where the brightest minds of our time sound off on all the things you're not supposed to talk about at the dinner table: science, religion, and politics. Guests have included Brian Greene, Susan Jacoby, Richard Dawkins, Ann Druyan, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Eugenie Scott, Adam Savage, Bill Nye, and Francis Collins. Point of Inquiry is produced at the Center for Inquiry in Amherst, N.Y.
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Episodes

Godless Infidels: Leigh Eric Schmidt on Atheism in the 19th Century

Today the United States is the most secular and irreligious it has ever been. According to http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/11/11/religious-nones-are-not-only-growing-theyre-becoming-more-secular/ ">Pew Research, the percentage of Americans who identify as atheist, agnostic, or having no religion in particular is up to 23%, compared to the 16% it was in 2007. With a lack of religious affiliation becoming normalized, it’s hard to imagine what it was like for the nonreligious when God’...

Oct 10, 201633 min

Doomsday Dread: The End of Civilization, with Phil Torres

Phil Torres is an author, contributing writer for the Future of Life Institute, and an Affiliate Scholar at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. His writing has been featured in numerous publications such as Time , Motherboard , Salon , Huffington Post , and our very own https://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php/3532 "> Free Inquiry . His book is The End: What Science and Religion Tell Us About the Apocalypse . Since the beginning of civilization, people have worried about its ...

Oct 04, 201653 min

Editing Our Pasts: Dr. Julia Shaw on The Illusion of Memory

Dr. Julia Shaw is a psychological scientist and senior researcher in the Department of Law and Social Science at London South Bank University. She teaches at the undergraduate and graduate level and her research on false memory has been published in several international academic journals. She returns to Point of Inquiry this week to discuss her new book, The Memory Illusion . Our memories are a collection of perceptions of our past experiences, and they influence what we think we’re capable of ...

Sep 26, 201631 min

The People vs. the Planet: Barry Vann on the Consequences of Climate Change

Since the beginning of humankind unpredictable forces of nature have been among our most dangerous threats: volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, tornados, hurricanes, and other disasters that trigger our fight-or-flight survival instincts. Pollution invoked climate change is exacerbating natural disasters and spurring unprecedented human migration. So when so many people are clamoring for safety and running for the hills, what does that mean for those who are already atop them? Aut...

Sep 19, 201636 min

Terrible Food, Small Portions: Andrew Stark on Accepting Your Inevitable Demise

Death is an unsettling thing to come to grips with. We know it is inevitable that it will one day happen to us. One of the first things most of us learn about death is that it happens to everyone, yet perhaps because no one ever comes back to tell the tale, there’s a lot about our impending doom that’s difficult to fully grasp. To help us take comfort in our inexorable demise, we welcome Andrew Stark, an author and political science professor at the University of Toronto. Having spent time as a ...

Sep 12, 201632 min

In the Weeds with Emily Willingham on Medical Cannabis

Emily Willingham is a journalist, scientist, and award winning skeptical blogger, with much of her work centered on autism and debunking junk science controversies. Recently the autism community has shown a surge in support for medical cannabis, as anti-vaccination activists claim that cannabis may hold the key for a cure, and many people with autism claim it to be a useful for controlling their symptoms. Willingham and host Lindsay Beyerstein delve further into the topic to sort through the mis...

Sep 07, 201626 min

Faking Your Own Death: Elizabeth Greenwood on Death Fraud

Elizabeth Greenwood teaches at Columbia University and like many other young professionals she has an insurmountable amount of student loan debt. With the overwhelming feeling that she would never escape her debt she desperately longed for a new start. There was no going back on what she had done to accumulate her debt, but perhaps she could skip ahead. She began to investigate what it would take to fake one’s own death in the 21st century. Greenwood was shocked to ​find a robust infrastructure ...

Aug 29, 201631 min

Getting to the Pit of the Bull: Bronwen Dickey on Canines and Conspiracies

Bronwen Dickey is a contributing editor at The Oxford American, and author of Pit Bull: The Battle Over an American Icon . Her writing can also be found in The New York Times , The Virginia Quarterly Review , Newsweek , Slate , The San Francisco Chronicle , and numerous other publications. For Dickey’s most recent piece , just published in Popular Mechanics , she embarks on the “Conspire-Sea Cruise,” giving us an inside look at what the world of a conspiracy theorist is like and what fuels the n...

Aug 23, 201633 min

Competitive Cupping: David Gorski on Pseudoscience at the Olympics

Those following the Olympics this year may have noticed Michael Phelps sporting circular bruises all over his body. That’s because Phelps, like many Olympic athletes, won’t go after their medals without going after their cups. The growing fad of cupping is an ancient practice in which cups are placed all over the body and skin is suctioned inside the cup, bursting blood vessels and creating circular bruises. The claim is that cupping releases toxins and heals muscle tissue, among a number of oth...

Aug 16, 201636 min

Faisal Saeed Al Mutar: Facebook and Social Media Silencing

Iraqi-born writer Faisal Saeed Al Mutar is a blogger for the Huffington Post and a columnist for the Center for Inquiry’s own Free Inquiry magazine. Having grown up in Iraq under the rule of Saddam Hussein, he’s now a human rights activist and secularism advocate as well as founder of the Global Secular Humanist Movement and Secular Post. For Faisal and progressive Muslims and secularists across the globe, social media is the primary means of not only seeking community and acceptance, but to ope...

Aug 08, 201635 min

Donald Trump's Dirty Laundry, with David Cay Johnston

David Cay Johnston is an award winning investigative journalist and New York Times best-selling author, as well as one of few journalists who has deeply dug into the dirty laundry of Donald Trump, now the Republican nominee for President of the United States. In 1988 Johnston left the LA Times to report on casino gambling in Atlantic City, which resulted in uncovering a detailed history of corruption in Trump’s past dealings. The information he began to unearth compelled Johnston to follow Trump...

Aug 02, 201631 min

Wendy Kaminer: Dangerous Spaces for Free Speech

Free speech on college campuses has become a topic of impassioned debate, as the lines between hate speech and harassment, or peaceful protest and public disturbance, are rather blurry and hotly contested. Particularly since the protest movements of the 1960s, college campuses have long been a kind of testing ground for different norms and boundaries of free expression. At the same time, some institutions of higher learning have speech codes which many feel are serving to silence debate and disc...

Jul 26, 201630 min

Ali Rizvi: Islam and Identity for an Atheist Muslim

Religions have always gone through transitions over time. Not only do the faiths themselves evolve, but the role they play in day-to-day life adapts to fit the needs of a given culture. As the youngest Abrahamic religion on the market, all eyes are on Islam, as a debate rages as to whether there is any chance of reform or secularization within a religion that is so deeply woven into the fabric of the Muslim world. Ali Rizvi is a Pakistani-Canadian writer, physician, and author of the new book At...

Jul 18, 201650 min

Digitally Aware: David Levy on Mindfulness in an Information Overload

It was only a couple of decades ago that the most complex handheld computing system fathomable was a TI-83 graphing calculator. Technology has usually served to make our lives easier, but in the post-digital boom, in which full-blown pocket size computers are the norm, our attention spans are shrinking along with our free time (and graphing is the least of our data worries). Technology can seem to have made certain aspects of life simultaneously easier and more difficult. Our guest this week is ...

Jul 11, 201635 min

Surviving the Beauty Culture, with Autumn Whitefield-Mandrano

Autumn Whitefield-Mandrano is the author of the acclaimed new book on feminism and beauty, Face Value: The Hidden Ways Beauty Shapes Women’s Lives . Her work can be found such outlets as Glamour , Jezebel , Salon , The Guardian , and her own blog, The Beheld: Beauty and What It Means . Her book takes a closer look at why beauty is so coveted in American society and how the pedestal of beauty affects women in particular. She and host Lindsay Beyerstein delve into perceptions of beauty from both s...

Jun 28, 201629 min

Invisible Asperger’s: Michelle Vines on Late-Life Diagnosis

Michelle Vines grew up knowing she was different from other people. She always assumed she was just a bit odd and eccentric but never in a way that suggested she wasn’t neurotypical. She lived in Australia where she excelled in math and science and became a chemical engineer in the oil and gas industry. After finding her work environment deeply unsatisfying and her personal relationships increasingly frustrating, she was forced to sort through why she was struggling. When the possibility of Aspe...

Jun 20, 201633 min

Bloody Bangladesh: Michael De Dora on the Attacks on Secularists

Secularist bloggers, writers and LGBT activists are being hacked to death in the streets of Bangladesh by militant Islamic groups. To help us get to the bottom of why there needs to be no end in sight to the violence is the Center for Inquiry’s Office of Public Policy Director, Michael De Dora. Starting in April of 2013 when secular activist Avijit Roy reached out to De Dora, the Center for Inquiry has worked closely with threatened individuals like Roy to move writers and bloggers in Bangladesh...

Jun 13, 201636 min

Jessica Valenti: The Measure of a Woman's Worth

Author and Guardian US columnist Jessica Valenti is a pioneer of digital-age feminist writing, starting her blog feministing.com ">Feministing in 2004, and becoming known as one of the leading voices in the discussion about gender equality. Valenti’s newest contribution to the movement is her new book, Sex Object: A Memoir . Her witty and courageous book explores the cold, hard realities of growing up female in a male-dominated society, with a unique spin on a story many women are all too fam...

Jun 07, 201634 min

Susan Jacoby on Conversions, Both Profound and Practical

In the literature about religious conversion, embracing a new faith is usually explained as being a profound and magical experience. A flash of light, a near death experience, an emotional new beginning; these are all common themes in religious conversion stories. But what about the less flashy stories of people who change their religious affiliation simply for reasons of practicality? Point of Inquiry welcomes back bestselling, award-winning author Susan Jacoby to discus her new book, Strange G...

May 31, 201640 min

Hooked on a Stigma: Maia Szalavitz on Understanding Addiction

Maia Szalavitz is an author and award-winning journalist specializing in science, public policy, and addiction treatment. Most famous of her several books was her 2006 exposé, Help at Any Cost: How the Troubled–Teen Industry Cons Parents and Hurts Kids . Her latest book is Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addiction . As a recovering addict herself, Szalavitz knows about the stigma of addiction first hand. She spent much of her teen and young adult life addicted to drugs l...

May 23, 201633 min

An Unrecognizable Reformation: Shadi Hamid on Islamic Exceptionalism

This week, Josh Zepps sits down with commentator and writer Shadi Hamid. He’s a senior fellow in the Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institution, a contributing writer to The Atlantic , and his new book is http://amzn.to/1OcgSw3"> Islamic Exceptionalism: How the Struggle Over Islam is Reshaping the World . There is a heated debate about whether there is something intrinsically unique about the religion of Islam that has lead to destructive groups like Al Qaed...

May 17, 201658 min

Lies They Told My Mother: Dr. Amy Tuteur on the Moralization of Childbirth

Dr. Amy Tuteur is an obstetrician-gynecologist and writer, returning to Point of Inquiry to discuss her new book, Push Back: Guilt in the Age of Natural Parenting . Known from her popular blog as The Skeptical OB , she has appeared in several publications and news outlets over the years educating the public about the facts of birthing healthy babies, and more importantly correcting the misinformation surrounding birth and mothering, such as breast feeding, nipple confusion, attachment theory, an...

May 09, 201636 min

Race Car Brains with Bicycle Brakes: Dr. Ned Hallowell on ADHD in a Distracting World

Dr. Ned Hallowell is a child and adult psychiatrist, a New York Times bestselling author, and among the world’s leading experts in the field of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). He’s written numerous books about ADHD and modern distraction, including Driven to Distraction , Delivered from Distraction: Getting the Most out of Life with Attention Deficit Disorder , Worry: Controlling it and Using it Wisely , and others. Dr. Hallowell points out that those with ADHD possess what he c...

May 03, 201628 min

Single Ladies, Single Longer: Rebecca Traister on the Rise of the Unmarried Woman

For a very long time marriage was considered a foundation of American life. Adulthood and marriage came hand in hand, and shortly after marriage children were the next logical step. Breaking that mold wasn’t a socially acceptable or financially viable option for women. Today, however, marriage rates show us a very different picture of what is considered the norm. To lend some insight into these changing conventions, Point of Inquiry welcomes Rebecca Traister, an author and award-winning journali...

Apr 26, 201637 min

The Burzynski Case and the Pitfalls of Medical Journalism, with Tamar Wilner

Medical doctors can hold our lives in their hands. But with great power comes great responsibility, and doctors owe it to their patients to provide accurate information and treatments based on science and evidence. This is the standard we expect and take for granted; yet one doctor, Stanislaw Burzynski, has been skirting medical ethics and scientific protocols for decades with his controversial and unproven cancer treatments, which he claims without evidence, can destroy cancer cells. The Center...

Apr 18, 201627 min

Johann Hari: The Beginning of the End of the War on Drugs

This week we welcome back journalist Johann Hari, author of Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs . Hari is a vocal advocate for ending the drug war, and he joins us this week in advance of the UN General Assembly’s special session on drugs, being held April 18 to 21. This special session was not supposed to be held until 2019, but in September of 2012, Mexico, Colombia, and Guatemala expressed the need to hold an international conference on drug policy reform sooner th...

Apr 13, 201656 min

David Silverman: The Relentless Ascent of Atheism

David Silverman, president of American Atheists, was recently seen on championing the importance of the atheist vote to American conservatives on the late night comedy show, <a href=" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AYs0rajBlE "> Full Frontal with Samantha Bee . Silverman attempted to persuade Republican believers and non-believers alike that that there was a dire need to keep God out of politics by promoting his cause at one of the most important conservative gatherings in politics: CPAC...

Apr 04, 201640 min

Surviving Death: Ann Neumann on the Ethical Landscape of Dying

Many of us picture our dying moments as being surrounded by loved ones, uttering last words of gratitude and advice before we slip off into a peaceful departure. Yet the reality is that dying is often a long, painful, and constantly fluctuating process. Our guest this week, Ann Neumann, writes a monthly column at The Revealer where she examines the intersection between religion and medicine, and she is the author of the new book, The Good Death: An Exploration of Dying in America . Neumann was i...

Mar 28, 201630 min

The Odds of Life’s Oddities, with Mathematician John Allen Paulos

John Allen Paulos is an award winning mathematician and best selling author. A professor in mathematics at Temple University, he has written for The Guardian , CFI’s Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, and his monthly column for ABCNews.com, “Who’s Counting?” His new book is called A Numerate Life: A Mathematician Explores the Vagaries of Life, His Own and Probably Yours . Paulos uses basic mathematic principles to lend a fresh perspective to everyday life, and the results can be fascinating. He sh...

Mar 21, 201632 min

Former White Supremacist Arno Michaelis: Understanding Hate, Overcoming Fear

Today’s guest is former white supremacist Arno Michaelis, author of My Life After Hate . A leader within what he called a “racial holy war," Michaelis later realized his hate was misplaced, the product of fear, anger, and an overall misunderstanding of concepts such as forgiveness and personal responsibility. Today he is a Buddhist and anti-violence activist with Serve 2 Unite, an organization that works with student leaders to create compassionate, nonviolent leadership in their communities. In...

Mar 15, 201653 min
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