Calling all Māori Atheists

19th August 2024

I mentioned a couple of weeks ago that I was going to attend a talk given by Sara Rahmani to the NZ Humanists in Wellington. At the talk she summarised her findings from a set of interviews she’s conducted with Māori who have been happy to talk with her about their spiritual journeys with her. Although most of these journeys have been from belief to non-belief, taking a variety of different paths to get there, she has also interviewed a few people who still hold religious or spiritual beliefs.

The information Sara has learned so far is fascinating, but she’s not finished yet. If you are Māori and would like to talk with Sara about your beliefs (or lack of them), she would love to hear from you. You can email her at sara.rahmani@vuw.ac.nz, and read more about the project here. If you want more information, there are some videos online where she talks about her research, such as this one:

In this week’s newsletter, Brian Paavo has found himself at a loose end in Honolulu and decided to pop in and say hello to the local Scientologists. I’ve looked at some over-hyped AI mobile devices, and come away from the experience very much underwhelmed. Bronwyn was side-tracked this week when I asked her about the Spiritualist Church of New Zealand Act 1924, and has dropped her original article idea to deliver a great job of drawing a thread through several layers of Spiritualist-related nonsense. And finally we have a chapter from a free booklet John Maindonald has written called “What Do the Data Say? – Traps to Avoid”, about how data and statistics can be misleading.

John is a Wellington based skeptic who has had a long and varied career working in academia, mostly around mathematics and statistics. We’re hoping to have a review of his new book, “A Practical Guide to Data Analysis Using R”, for the newsletter soon, as it has some interesting lessons for skeptics - as well as a lot of very technical information about using the R programming language for performing data analysis. In the meantime, I’ll be choosing a few of the more skeptically relevant chapters from his booklet to include in this newsletter.

Mark Honeychurch

Scientological Visit

Brian Paavo - 19 August 2024

Scientological Visit

On a recent visit to Honolulu I found myself with 45 minutes to kill in front of an inviting sign “_Free Movie starting every hour. Visitors are welcome. Church of Scientology._” Yes, please.

The Spiritualist Church of New Zealand Act 1924

Bronwyn Rideout - 19 August 2024

The Spiritualist Church of New Zealand Act 1924

So… I was planning on writing about an Autism scam that did the rounds on Australia news networks this month. Instead, Mark unintentionally sent me down a rabbit hole when he asked for an article about the approaching 100th anniversary of the Spiritualist Church Of New Zealand Act 1924 next month. It's branded a National Spiritual Day, which I'm anticipating may cause confusion and upset in other religious circles.

Systems of Human Judgement

John Maindonald - 19 August 2024

Kahneman's book Thinking Fast and Slow (2013) is a good starting point for thinking about the strengths and limitations of human thinking processes. There is no good substitute for the use of “educating gossip”, as Kahneman describes it, for training in effective judgement and in decision making.