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I would like to add some material about Dr. Gerald Schroeder's scholarship, who, according to the late Professor Antony Flew, heavily influenced Dr. Flew's conversion to deism. My edit was, however, reversed. Jehannette 15:16, 16 May 2020 (UTC)Jehannette
Instead, I suggest you to write a biography of Gerald Schroeder on Wikipedia, if you can find reliable sources about him.--GenoV84 (talk) 23:03, 16 May 2020 (UTC)
Political Philosophy.
The article badly needs a section on Antony Flew's political philosophy (the opinions that reach their fullest expression in "Equality in Liberty and Justice", but which cover many works over many years). Antony Flew spent a great deal of his time opposing the views of both the socialists and the supporters (socialist and non socialist) of "social justice" (John Rawls and so on).
Indeed Antony Flew was perhaps the most important critic of social justice egalitarian (and semi egalitarian) ideas in political philosophy, in the generation after that of M.J. Oakeshott and F.A. Hayek.
Perhaps I should write such a section for the article - but Antony Flew was a friend of mine, and so what I would write would be biased.91.107.81.8 (talk) 17:12, 19 July 2010 (UTC)
Anthony Flew was not "on the right" he was a libertarian and wrote articles for The Journal of Libertarian Studies. I have amended this. Libertarianism is of course neither left nor right, but "leftish" on social issues and for the free market without state-cronyism of public-private partnership so not exactly "right" either since the right are all for government greasing big business. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.241.171.179 (talk) 10:37, 5 October 2015 (UTC)
OK, let's restate our cases
The primary issue is as to which of two introductions (which I shall call A and B) are preferred:
INTRODUCTION A:
INTRODUCTION B:
Please will everyone state which version (if either) they prefer.
— Hyperdeath(Talk) 22:52, 23 December 2008 (UTC)
Prefer A
Prefer A
— Hyperdeath(Talk) 23:25, 23 December 2008 (UTC)
Prefer A
Prefer A
Strongly prefer A. Option B jumps straight into the "was an atheist, now a deist" stuff, as if that's all he is known for, and then goes on in an accusatory tone ("This book, however, is according to a journalist, Mark Oppenheimer and some atheists a matter of controversy, some of them going as far as maintaining that ..."). Option A is more balanced and neutral, both in tone and in content, a well as far more informative. SNALWIBMA ( talk - contribs ) 10:49, 24 December 2008 (UTC)
Prefer A I already stated before I had problems option B. Jeff5102 (talk) 13:15, 24 December 2008 (UTC)
A, Hyperdeath, I'm curious to know why you try intentionally to cast doubt on Flew' deism. Why do you try to relate Flew's deism to his recent book? Hopefully, Wikipeida keeps all the previous editions and your attempts to distort the facts are still there. WHY do you still keep doing that? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Khamosh (talk • contribs) 04:30, 25 December 2008 (UTC)
Prefer A I think it shows his career, though I'd like the third paragraph above the second, feature the controversy after that. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.4.185.221 (talk) 10:02, 8 January 2009 (UTC)
Regarding Flew's criticism of Richard Dawkins and the God Delusion, the inclusion of two pieces of text is disputed:
Section A:
Section B:
Please would you give your opinions below. — Hyperdeath(Talk) 16:07, 10 January 2009 (UTC)
Remove both A and B
— Hyperdeath(Talk) 16:45, 10 January 2009 (UTC)
Remove A, shorten B
Remove both A and B – Why do some editors seem to think that the main function of Wikipedia is to make as many anti-Dawkins comments as possible? This is an article about Flew, not about Dawkins. SNALWIBMA ( talk - contribs ) 09:23, 11 January 2009 (UTC)
References
Note: Khamosh decided to remove the votes from Huon, Snalwibma, Hrafn and myself (see revision), and added the comment:
I believe that the article, although imperfect, is now reasonably neutral. Therefore, I propose that the NPOV tag be removed. What do people think? — Hyperdeath(Talk) 19:41, 18 January 2009 (UTC)
Agree. Jeff5102 (talk) 22:57, 18 January 2009 (UTC)
Agree. SNALWIBMA ( talk - contribs ) 08:24, 19 January 2009 (UTC)
i'm pretty bad at wikipedia but i just happen to dislike antony flew enough that i have to make a factually correct but undeniably bias-influenced edit. Western Goals Initiative supported apartheid and not as the article asserts opposed it and was an organization with strong ties to many truly despicable terrorist organizations worldwide. regardless of the latter point i'm just going to change the one word opposed to supported and suggest that you consider rewording at least the section that refrences the WGI 24.191.219.186 (talk) 23:42, 25 January 2009 (UTC)Some Guy who doesn't have an account
It's been a week since I sent a message to Khamosh informing him about the proposal. He has not responded, and so I assume that he's given up. As there have been no objections, I have removed the POV tag (although I have created a new tag in the "political Commitments" section, as mentioned above.). — Hyperdeath(Talk) 10:22, 26 January 2009 (UTC)
I understand that there's a huge controversy over his conversion from atheism (due to him previously being a Dawkins-esque atheist, you could say), but does this really need to be the basis of this entire article? This article should be about Flew - His early life, education, views on philosophy, etc. I think, like most causual viewers to this page, we aren't told enough about Flew himself to really care much about the conversion section. 98.198.83.12 (talk) 19:22, 24 October 2009 (UTC)
In 2004, Flew announced his conversion to deism, a position he affirmed a number of times and did not recant before his death in 2010. The significance of Flew's change in positions is disputed by parties alleging that Flew's ability to reason was impaired by his advanced age.
Given the lack of response over the last couple weeks to my discussion request, above, I propose that the large body of text that presents as arguing over Flew's deism in the body of this article be replaced with the following.
In 2004, Flew announced that he had changed his position from atheism to deism, a position he affirmed a number of times with an evolving explanation of his reasons forwarded over the next six years, until his death at age 87 in 2010. The significance of Flew's change in positions is disputed by some atheist interests alleging that Flew's conversion may not have been meaningful because his ability to reason was impaired by his advanced age.
I'm very open to suggested changes in the above, my only interest is in seeing a debate over Flew's conversion not be embedded in this encyclopedia entry. Flew had many accomplishments that appear to have been neglected. I covered one of these adding a section on Flew's "Presumption of Atheism.
KSci (talk) 13:14, 19 October 2016 (UTC)
There is now a facebook group dedicated to Antony Flew, so those interested in posting non-wikipedia discussion on Mr.Flew may like to look it up. I don't believe this is needing a mention in the article.Let's keep it NPOV, thanks folks.Ern Malleyscrub (talk) 05:00, 18 May 2010 (UTC)
Placing the vast bulk of the article into a single section does not strike me as useful. HrafnTalkStalk(P) 11:15, 20 July 2011 (UTC)
I edited the article and made it alot more tidy and neat, easier on the eyes to read and with a better layout. Your thoughts compared to the older version please. Portillo (talk) 06:41, 21 July 2011 (UTC)
Specific recommendations:
HrafnTalkStalk(P) 07:25, 21 July 2011 (UTC)
Im not going to cease and desist doing anything. Ill wait for a consensus. Here and here. Portillo (talk) 05:13, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
HrafnTalkStalk(P) 08:33, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Awards should be included, he was given these awards for his work so it makes sense to reference them, but as part of a career section. i.e. a section that says things like worked at university X date to date awarded X by Y on date published book X etc etc. ordered chronologically. If you want to then put at the end 'the most notable points are' or some summary then fair enough TM-86 (talk) 01:15, 16 December 2011 (UTC)
Although it is supported with a reference, when I checked this reference I found nothing that supports this claim. So, I decided to create an account to edit this part and participate in Wikipedia's community. Considering I'm new here, I can't figure how things work on here, but I found that there is a user named [Dwpaul] who retrieved this part again and asked gently why I had to remove this part, and if I have a question I can contact him on his page. But I couldn't find a message button or a comment button there to contact him and to tell him why I found this last part in 'converting to deism section' inaccurate.
The reference no. 26 leads to no clear back-up for this part, rather, something that looks like an email. It could be my lack of understanding how this other website work though. So, if anyone know where can I find what supports that part in this reference [no.26], or any other reference, I will be glad to get informed. Otherwise, I suggest removing this part. Even reference no. 25 leads to a not found page.
I'm reading his book now anyway, maybe I can find in it what supports this claim. Till then, if anyone can feedback, it will be appreciated.
Regards. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Migrant2light (talk • contribs) 02:25, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
There is an RfC on the question of using "Religion: None" vs. "Religion: None (atheist)" in the infobox on this and other similar pages.
The RfC is at Template talk:Infobox person#RfC: Religion infobox entries for individuals that have no religion.
Please help us determine consensus on this issue. --Guy Macon (talk) 17:05, 21 April 2015 (UTC)
In the section Antony Flew#Controversy over his position, 2nd para. from bottom, there was this misquotation:
The last phrase above in the original source was "extraordinarily offensive". That’s easy enough to check by going to the external link for that source (by Flew) in the footnote and doing a Ctrl+F[ind] search of "extraordinary". The phrase "extraordinarily offensive" appears but not the misquotation above.#
So, how could the misquotation have persisted so long?
Comments welcome.
# The author of the phrase was User:Khamosh. I located the phrase as occurring from Nov. 8, 2008 to today. --Thomasmeeks (talk) 14:14, 6 March 2016 (UTC)
'he was friendly with the raelism'(sic) Really? Evidence? Notreallydavid (talk) 00:23, 22 June 2016 (UTC)
Since the Brexit vote is done I am hoping that putting this info here would not be too controversial. I understand that primary sources should not be used on Wikipedia but I wanted the feedback of others to know if we should or should not add information regarding this topic. I have a digital copy of a letter (https://archive.org/details/antony_flew_letter) that was written in 2005. This is the contents of the letter: "12 January 2005 Dear Peter ***** Thank you for your most friendly letter of January 3. I will put this on file. For the foreseeable future all my political energies will be devoted to a struggle with which my Deist heir, Thomas Jefferson, author of the American Declaration of Independence would be 100% sympathetic it is the struggle to get my country out of the European Union - into which we have been betrayed by mediocre politicians." I was the one who censored the name of the recipient. There is a stamp on the letter so at least two copies of the letter should exist. Nekdolan (talk) 17:18, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
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It is quite obvious editors have stressed and emphasised that he is not Christian. We don't know this. Just because there is no evidence that he was Christian, is not evidence that he was not a Christian. Remove it :) 2001:8003:6A23:2C00:64C0:B2C6:AD1D:AA24 (talk) 00:03, 11 May 2018 (UTC)
The usage of the skeptical-science.com blog as a source in the final paragraph of the 'Book with Varghese and authorship controversy' section appears inappropriate according to Wikipedia policies. My removal of this source has been reverted several times. While blogs are sometimes acceptable, in this case the author has no apparent claim to authority on the subject, nor are their claims repeated in any other reputable source. These claims appear to be wholly the unverifiable, speculative personal opinion of the author. No documentary evidence is given for any of the claims in this section beyond the author's speculative claim that Flew's arguments were 'crass' and therefore must not be his own. This is entirely unverifiable it is inappropriate that they be included on Wikipedia.76.97.77.25 (talk) 19:36, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
In regards to the above discussion (note by Vaticidalprophet: this was moved from below the 3O to avoid being mistaken for a response to it)... all of those sources that you referenced are previously cited in the article. There is no need to cite the blog, which is an anonymous opinion piece, in addition to those. The article is most professional and reliable if it cites those reliable sources for the controversy and removes the paragraphs which rely solely on the polemical blog. Just because it follows the same line of discussion does not make it a reliable, verifiable, or meritorious source. Notice that I have not objected to or attempted to remove those valid sources, only the blog post. The blog post also makes additional claims, such as Flew being psychologically manipulated or ‘love bombed.’ 76.97.77.25 (talk) 18:07, 8 January 2021 (UTC)
Flew's "conversion," first reported in late 2004, has cast him into culture wars that he contentedly avoided his whole life. Although Flew still rejects Christianity, saying only that he now believes in "an intelligence that explains both its own existence and that of the world," evangelicals are understandably excited. For them, Flew has become very useful, very quickly. In late 2006, Flew was among the signers of a letter to Tony Blair asking that intelligent design be included in the British science curriculum. Flew's fame has reached even to small-town Pennsylvania, where in 2005 Judge John E. Jones cited Flew in his landmark decision prohibiting the teaching of intelligent design in the town of Dover. Referring to a publication of the Dover School Board, Jones wrote that "the newsletter all but admits that I.D. is religious by quoting Anthony [sic] Flew, described as a 'world famous atheist who now believes in intelligent design.'"
But is Flew's conversion what it seems to be? Depending on whom you ask, Antony Flew is either a true convert whose lifelong intellectual searchings finally brought him to God or a senescent scholar possibly being exploited by his associates. The version you prefer will depend on how you interpret a story that began 20 years ago, when some evangelical Christians found an atheist who, they thought, might be persuaded to join their side. In the intellectual tug of war that ensued, Flew himself — a continent away, his memory failing, without an Internet connection — had no idea how fiercely he was being fought over or how many of his acquaintances were calling or writing him just to shore up their cases. For a time, Flew hardly spoke to the media, leaving evangelicals and atheists to trade interpretations of his rare, oracular pronouncements. Was he now a believer in intelligent design? In Christianity? In some vague, intelligent "life force"? With the publication of his new book, Flew is once again talking, and this summer I traveled to England to speak with him. But as I discovered, a conversation with him confuses more than it clarifies. With his powers in decline, Antony Flew, a man who devoted his life to rational argument, has become a mere symbol, a trophy in a battle fought by people whose agendas he does not fully understand.
A long article in The New York Times Magazine by Mark Oppenheimer suggested that Mr. Flew, his mental faculties in decline, had been manipulated by his co-author and other Christian proselytizers. Mr. Flew, in a statement issued through his publisher, reaffirmed the views expressed in the book, which did not include belief in an afterlife. "I want to be dead when I'm dead and that's an end to it," he told The Sunday Times of London. "I don't want an unending life. I don't want anything without end."--GenoV84 (talk) 18:53, 8 January 2021 (UTC)
Varghese is a 49-year-old American business consultant of Indian ancestry, a practitioner of the Eastern Catholic Syro-Malankara rite and a tireless crusader for (and financial backer of) those who believe that scientific research helps verify the existence of God. Through the Institute for MetaScientific Research, his one-man shop in Dallas, he sponsors conferences and debates, and it was at a Dallas conference in 1985 that Varghese first met Flew. "I've been involved with him for 20 years or more," Varghese told me in August. Since meeting Flew, Varghese "had him down to Dallas several times," talked with him often and periodically sent him readings in theism. When Varghese convened the N.Y.U. discussion, he said he hoped that Schroeder and Haldane, both skillful advocates for belief in God, might carry Flew further in the direction Varghese had been leading him. "I knew that he was in that frame of mind — that there was no naturalistic explanation for the world," Varghese said. "But at that event, he went further, saying the only explanation was that there was a God."--GenoV84 (talk) 19:13, 8 January 2021 (UTC)
It was Varghese who sent the DVD to the media, for which he was rewarded, in early December 2004, with articles from the A.P.'s Ostling and from Fox News, ABC News and a host of religious news wires. On Dec. 16, Varghese contributed an op-ed article to The Dallas Morning News that read, "Last week, The Associated Press broke the news that the most famous atheist in the academic world ... now accepts the existence of God." Varghese did not mention that the AP "broke" the news thanks to his own press release, which accompanied the DVD (which he helped pay for) of the conversation (which he paid for).
As Flew's profile in the Christian world rose, he was also courted by Biola University, the conservative Christian school outside Los Angeles. On May 11, 2006, Biola awarded Flew the second Phillip E. Johnson Award for Liberty and Truth, named for the author of "Darwin on Trial." At the Biola ceremony, Flew mocked the revealed religion of his audience and flaunted his allegiance to deism: "The deist god, unlike the god of the Jewish, Christian or, for heaven's sake, the Islamic revelation, is neither interested in nor concerned about either human beliefs or human behavior," he told the small crowd. Jim Underdown, who was there reporting for a skeptics' think tank, said he was surprised that the Christians would want him. But the Christians, it turned out, were not concerned.
[...] But it seems somewhat more likely that Flew, having been intellectually chaperoned by Roy Varghese for 20 years, simply trusted him to write something responsible. Varghese had done him so many kindnesses. He introduced Flew to Gerald Schroeder and John Haldane, and, I learned, he flew to England to chauffeur Flew to meetings with Leftow and the Christian philosopher Richard Swinburne (although when Leftow and Swinburne appear in the book, the conversations are described as if Varghese were not present). Varghese also gave Flew adventures, jetting him to Dallas and New York, putting him in a DVD documentary, getting his name in the papers. If at times Flew could be persuaded, by a letter or a phone call from an American atheist, that Varghese and his crew were not the eminent authorities on science they made themselves out to be, he was always happy to change his mind back. These Christians were kind and attentive, and they always seemed to have the latest research. To believe that Flew has been exploited is not to conclude that his exploiters acted with malice. If Flew in his dotage was a bit gullible, Varghese had a gullibility of his own. An autodidact with no academic credentials, Varghese was clearly thrilled to be taken seriously by an Oxford-trained philosopher; it may never have occurred to him that so educated a mind could be in decline. Habermas, too, speaks of Flew with a genuine reverence and seems proud of the friendship.
Vaticidalprophet (talk · contribs) wants to offer a third opinion. To assist with the process, editors are requested to summarize the dispute in a short sentence below.
In "There Is a God" he explained that he now believed in a supreme intelligence, removed from human affairs but responsible for the intricate workings of the universe. In other words, the Divine Watchmaker imagined by deists like Isaac Newton, Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.
In a letter to The Sunday Telegraph of London in 2004, he described "the God in whose existence I have belatedly come to believe" as "most emphatically not the eternally rewarding and eternally torturing God of either Christianity or Islam but the God of Aristotle that he would have defined – had Aristotle actually produced a definition of his (and my) God – as the first initiating and sustaining cause of the universe".
In some interviews, and in subsequent publications, Flew made it clear that he had not become a Christian; he had moved from atheism to a form of deism. This is important: it is a mistake to claim that Flew embraced classical theism in any substantial form; rather, he came to believe merely that an intelligent orderer of the universe existed. He did not believe that this "being" had any further agency in the universe, and he maintained his opposition to the vast majority of doctrinal positions adopted by the global faiths, such as belief in the after-life, or a divine being who actively cares for or loves the universe, or the resurrection of Christ, and argued for the idea of an "Aristotelian God". He explained that he, like Socrates, had simply followed the evidence, and the new evidence from science and natural theology made it possible to rationally advance belief in an intelligent being who ordered the universe. In 2006, he even added his name to a petition calling for the inclusion of intelligent design theory on the UK science curriculum.
As he himself conceded, he had not written his book.
"This is really Roy's doing", he said, before I had even figured out a polite way to ask. "He showed it to me, and I said O.K. I'm too old for this kind of work!"
When I asked Varghese, he freely admitted that the book was his idea and that he had done all the original writing for it. But he made the book sound like more of a joint effort – slightly more, anyway. "There was stuff he had written before, and some of that was adapted to this", Varghese said. "There is stuff he'd written to me in correspondence, and I organized a lot of it. And I had interviews with him. So those three elements went into it. Oh, and I exposed him to certain authors and got his views on them. We pulled it together. And then to make it more reader-friendly, HarperCollins had a more popular author go through it".
So even the ghostwriter had a ghostwriter: Bob Hostetler, an evangelical pastor and author from Ohio, rewrote many passages, especially in the section that narrates Flew's childhood. With three authors, how much Flew was left in the book?
There are a couple of things going on here, but the 3O I am ultimately inclined to give is that @76.97.77.25 has, though I would not say the correct interpretation of WP:BLOG (because it's so contextually dependent), the interpretation of WP:BLOG relevant to this discussion, and therefore @GenoV84 should use a different source for this information if one can be found, or omit it entirely if not. By the looks of it, GenoV84 has found other sources that include the information he wants to add in this article, and accordingly can use them instead (and should have done so in the first place). The IP's statement re. "Just because it follows the same line of discussion does not make it a reliable, verifiable, or meritorious source" is correct, and the reliable sources that make similar claims take precedence over the self-published opinion piece.
More generally, this looks to be a pretty heated argument with the potential to get nasty, which is unfortunate because you both seem to be very dedicated, caring people working in good faith. Importantly, the matter of "what is an appropriate citation for Wikipedia?" seems to be getting wrapped up in the issue of "what is the truth about this man's underlying positions and the statements he made towards the end of his life?", one of which is far more relevant to building an encyclopedia than the other. I think by the point vandalism accusations and block evasions are coming in, it's time to take a step back. I think you both have the opportunity to contribute well to the Wikipedia project (and to @76.97.77.25, may I recommend making an account? As well as all the other good reasons to, I think some near-future WMF changes may be seriously disruptive to unregistered editors), and that you also seem to be taking this dispute quite personally in a way it shouldn't be taken. Be kind to yourselves and one another. Vaticidalprophet (talk) 20:31, 8 January 2021 (UTC)
In Political Philosophy the main interest of Antony Flew was his opposition to the concept of "Social Justice", i.e. the idea that income and wealth should be "distributed" by political authority according to a principle of "fairness". According to Antony Flew the concept of "Social Justice" leads to state tyranny and is contrary to the traditional concept of justice as to each-their-own. There should be a section on this - after all many of the articles and books of Antony Flew were on this subject - especially from 1980 onwards. Such works as "The Politics of Procrustes" and "Equality in Liberty and Justice".2A02:C7E:1CA8:CE00:7CD2:2D64:DF0A:6E1C (talk) 15:06, 31 May 2022 (UTC)