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...
The comments on the place of anger in a "social change movement" at 35:40 just got me laughing. Yes let's cherry pick all the social change movements that won or at least haven't yet been clearly defeated and the audience happens to mostly agree with! Hm I really can't imagine any angry "social change" movements that failed or I didn't like in the ... oh ... past 200 years.
Nope.
Getting a blank here.
She also really annoyed me in the death talk. She kept mentioning advantages atheists have over religious people, like that when it comes down to it we're less afraid of death. It seemed like she was just cheering for her (and my) team. But I'm not an atheist because it has social benefits or might be better for my mental heath. I'm an atheist because I think the religions are wrong. If there are benefits to being an atheist that doesn't make it more right to be one; the social benefits of religions certainly don't make them more true.