My weblog ELECTRON BLUE, which concentrated on science and mathematics, ran from 2004-2008. It is no longer being updated. My current blog, which is more art-related, is here.

Fri, 14 Apr, 2006

Pagan Science

While physicists dash off to romantic Italian islands or cosmopolitan European cities or exotic Asian locales to talk about their particles and cosmology, I am going to Baltimore, Maryland for a conference this weekend. The conference is Ecumenicon 2006 and I will be doing art presentations there. This conference, as advertised, has been going on in one form or another for twenty years, and I have an Ecumenicon T-shirt that is about 15 years old. (I'm not sure I still fit into it, though.) I have been going to these events for quite a while, selling art and giving talks.

Ecumenicon is somewhat mis-named, because the "ecumenical" quality of the conference extends mostly to different types of neo-paganism or other esoteric spiritualities. At times, Christians, Jews, or Buddhists have shown up, but few of them are "mainstream" representatives of their faiths. In this way it doesn't resemble a physics conference at all, except perhaps one on string theory. However, I expect to talk about science and mathematics when I'm there, and hope to be on a panel discussion about science, fundamentalism, and neo-paganism.

I'm not a Neo-Pagan, but I know a large number of them and have learned about this multivariant "new religious movement" over the years. One thing which interests me is that as far as I know, Neo-Paganism has no complaints about evolution and embraces a scientific world-view along with its fondness for Goddesses and Celtic mythology. In fact, I even know some Pagan scientists. They seem to resolve the contradictions of belief and research by acknowledging that different forms of knowledge and experience take place on different levels of reality. This multi-level reality is a world-view that I also share, and I'll be talking about it in the future. I don't think that the physicists at those high-energy conferences worry about that. Their "multiple worlds" are in theory only, and will never be directly experienced. Nor does Neo-Paganism ever cross those busy physicist minds. In a way, the atheist scientists have it easier; they don't have to concern themselves with any other reality than the material one we all seem to inhabit. I hope to ask the Pagans some questions.

Posted at 3:00 am | link


Why the Title?
About the Author
What this blog is about: the first post
Email: volcannah@yahoo.com
Pyracantha Main Page

RSS Version

Archives:

November 2014 (4)
October 2014 (16)
September 2008 (5)
August 2008 (5)
July 2008 (7)
June 2008 (4)
May 2008 (6)
April 2008 (5)
March 2008 (8)
February 2008 (9)
January 2008 (8)
December 2007 (9)
November 2007 (9)
October 2007 (1)
September 2007 (7)
August 2007 (6)
July 2007 (10)
June 2007 (7)
May 2007 (10)
April 2007 (7)
March 2007 (11)
February 2007 (10)
January 2007 (6)
December 2006 (9)
November 2006 (9)
October 2006 (8)
September 2006 (8)
August 2006 (10)
July 2006 (9)
June 2006 (10)
May 2006 (10)
April 2006 (8)
March 2006 (12)
February 2006 (10)
January 2006 (11)
December 2005 (11)
November 2005 (9)
October 2005 (10)
September 2005 (10)
August 2005 (12)
July 2005 (9)
June 2005 (10)
May 2005 (8)
April 2005 (7)
March 2005 (8)
February 2005 (9)
January 2005 (7)
December 2004 (7)
November 2004 (7)
October 2004 (8)
September 2004 (5)
August 2004 (9)
July 2004 (9)
June 2004 (8)
May 2004 (6)
April 2004 (13)
March 2004 (12)
February 2004 (13)

Science

Cosmic Variance
Life as a Physicist
Cocktail Party Physics
Bad Astronomy
Asymptotia
Jennifer Saylor
Thus Spake Zuska

Listed on Blogwise