Entries Tagged as 'Personal'

Finally…

its the time to bid adeiu to this country (update: US) after a long stay spanning eight years, three universities and five cities.

I leave for airport in another hour or so. I start my position as an Assistant Professor in the Chemical Engineering department at IIT-M soon.

It was here that I found my sweetheart, made a lot of friends, got to know different cultures, observed my own views mature and outlook towards life undergo a sea change, and in the process got some good education.

Its been a fun journey so far… which will continue in the country of my birth.

In defence of “fundamental” atheists

Dan Gardner has an excellent piece in The Ottawa Citizen arguing why it is unfair to “equate those who question God with the worst kind of zealots.”

It is quite common to equate the “new atheists” to religious fundamentalists:

[…] As one English university dean said in the Guardian, Richard Dawkins is “just as fundamentalist as the people setting off bombs in the Tube.”

Less Olympian thinkers have portrayed strident atheists as hacking away at the bonds of morality, which must inevitably lead to various forms of depravity ranging from the sexual to the genocidal.

Don’t you know Stalin was an atheist? That’s the way it goes.

This, according to Gardner, “frames the debate in a pleasingly symmetrical way”: with “the insane religious fanatics who fly jets into skyscrapers” on one side and ”fanatical atheists” on the other.

However, this characterization falls apart at closer scrutiny:

But just what is the core of Dawkins’ radical message?

Well, it goes something like this: If you claim that something is true, I will examine the evidence which supports your claim; if you have no evidence, I will not accept that what you say is true and I will think you a foolish and gullible person for believing it so.

That’s it. That’s the whole, crazy, fanatical package.

When the Pope says that a few words and some hand-waving causes a cracker to transform into the flesh of a 2,000-year-old man, Dawkins and his fellow travellers say, well, prove it. It should be simple. Swab the Host and do a DNA analysis. If you don’t, we will give your claim no more respect than we give to those who say they see the future in crystal balls or bend spoons with their minds or become werewolves at each full moon.

And for this, it is Dawkins, not the Pope, who is labelled the unreasonable fanatic on par with faith-saturated madmen who sacrifice children to an invisible spirit.

The whole article is worth reading; I was finding it difficult to choose excerpts from it to quote in this post. Especially if you are a theist who agrees with the “fanatical atheist” characterization, you would do well to read Gardner’s piece to understand the position of “new atheists.”

Una Verdad Simulada

While thinking for a name for this blog, I thought of using “A Simulated Truth.” One, because I am a big Stephen Colbert fan, the same guy who popularized the term truthiness. Second, because I write about the perception of “truth” I glean after reading news reports and opinion pieces, a truth that actually passes through layers of filters. Finally, because my research involves building models and performing simulations.

“Una verdad simulada” was the term obtained using Google to translate from English to Spanish.

Back after a long haitus

This blog is back in its third avatar. This is perhaps the tenth time I am writing a “I am back” post. But this time, its slightly different.

Sometime last July or August, my previous host (mesopia.com, which got bought by webhostplus.com) claimed that their servers got hacked into and all their data was lost. I had a back-up on my laptop. Unfortunately, that backup was lost a month earlier when my harddisk crashed. So, I had no choice but to start afresh.

I contacted my web hosts, webhostplus.com, informing them that they could go ahead and restore my account if they could not retrieve the lost data. I didn’t hear from them for 5 to 6 weeks. Thats when I decided to take my business elsewhere. I signed up with http://www.godaddy.com and requested for the transfer of my previous domain kaisare.net to my new host. Unfortunately, my requests went unanswered for a while. So, I contacted the registrars of my domain, http://enom.com. They informed me that I wasn’t the only one facing this problem, it looked like a lot of customers had a similar problem. Unfortunately, since my previous hosting company was still in business, they were unable — legally — to transfer the domain to my name. That is how I landed with a new domain, http://kaisare.org/

Thanks to Google cache, I will try to restore some of the more popular posts from my previous blog. While I will try to regularly update my blog, only time will tell whether I actually manage to fullfil my intensions.