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> Camp Quest For Atheists And Free Thinkers
GuitarCrazyo
post 2 weeks ago
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Sounds good, although I wont use it. I already use Office on my desktop machine, and Google Docs for when Im not at home. They will have to really grab me by the eyeballs somehow if they want me to change from Google Docs.
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post Jul 28 2009, 03:26 PM
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The UK's first atheist summer camp for children opening this year is already fully booked with four enquiries for every place.

It's called Camp Quest, and has come to the UK from the US with the help of Britain's leading atheist, Richard Dawkins.

'It's beyond belief!' is the motto of the organisation, which was set up in the United States to counter the influence of faith based summer camps run by the Scouts and church groups. But the director of the camp in the UK, Samantha Stein, says its purpose is not to spread atheism - rather to encourage thinking: “The idea of Camp Quest is really to let the children decide what they think. So we're going to run some activities on philosophy for children. And we'll run activities on logical fallacies. So it's really a way of getting the kids interested in thinking, interested in philosophy and questions of religion and all sorts of scientific and critical thinking.”

Samantha explained. One of the games played at Camp Quest is called the Invisible Unicorn Challenge. Campers are told that unicorns live in the area around their tents, and are then asked to prove that they don't exist. The aim is to illustrate the difficulty of proving a negative.

But any children who manage to meet the challenge will win a ten pound note signed by Richard Dawkins, the author of The God Delusion, whose money also helps fund the camp.

It is also believed that at the end, children can then make a better informed decision about what they want to believe in a naturalistic rather than a supernatural world view.

Let us know what you think! Have your say in the forum now!

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Lo-Fi Version Time is now: 23rd November 2009 - 04:18 AM