The talks from Skepticon IV are being posted to YouTube.
So far we have:
- Richard Carrier on Bayes (my favorite)
- Julia Galef on the Straw Vulcan
- Greta Christina on angry atheists
- Hermant Mehta on math education
- David Fitzgerald on Mormonism
- J.T. Eberhard on mental illness (a dramatic end to the conference)
- an "atheist revival" by Sam Singleton (on the lighter side)
ADDED:
- "Death Panel" featuring Julia Galef, Eliezer Yudkowsky, Greta Christina, and James Croft
- Darrel Ray on secularism and sex
- Eliezer Yudkowsky on heuristics and biases (really more like a crash course in the core LW sequences)
- Joe Nickell on paranormal investigations (I missed this at the conference; and even more regrettably, missed the chance to ask Joe Nickell what he thinks of many-worlds.)
- Jen McCreight on "skeptical genetics" (the other talk I missed)
- Rebecca Watson on the religious right
- Spencer Greenberg on self-skepticism
- Dan Barker on atheist clergy
More to come soon, hopefully...
It may be a good pep talk for her co-ideologists, but from the outside it looks like straight-out ideological warfare, which of course it actually is. Unsurprisingly, like nearly all such material, its reasoning is full of holes big enough to drive a truck through. (The stuff you pointed out is only the tip of the iceberg.)
If anything, this should be evident from the fact that she makes a number of highly controversial ideological statements about current issues -- which I'm sure many people here would in fact dispute or at least consider as lacking in evidence -- as plain and common-sense truth, to an enthusiastic response by the audience.
I think it's indicative of some deep biases that this stuff, unlike ideological rants in general, can be posted on LW with general approval.
I should have made it more clear that I was using "pro-atheist" in the sense of the organized atheist movement. And yes obviously that movement is ideological. Worse for quality of thinking, it is political, in the sense that it has some clearly defined political allies (and also enemies).
Remember it wasn't posted separately, just as a batch of stuff from Skepticon. I doubt that many people from LW have seen it.
But yes some blatantly ideological material gets a free pass or at least much less scrutiny than is warranted (such threads show up in discussion once every week or two) because of the demographics of Lesswrong. Like any group of people we bring our politics with us at least implicitly (even if it is explicitly banished), which translates into ideological sympathies and the vocabulary of applause lights we use and recognize.
In addition most users here have a warm fuzzy feeling when they hear atheism, which might mean they misidentify to which contrarian cluster someone actually belongs to.