Patheos

Patheos is a website serving as a multifaith portal, library and blogging platform. It was founded in 2008 as a collection of accessible writings on various religions. The name is a combination of "pathos" and "theos".

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Hosting the Conversation on Faith
—Patheos' current slogan

Patheos Blogs

The site hosts over 450 blogs divided into 11 "Channels" by worldview, covering everything from Buddhism to Catholicism to neo-paganism to the vague "spirituality". The 42 blogs in the Atheist Channel represent both the largest atheist online presence in the world and the highest number of monthly pageviews of any worldview on Patheos.

Atheists

The atheist blogs include:

Leah Libresco's Unequally Yoked was also in the atheist section, until June 2012, when she announced that she is converting to... Catholicism, of all possible things. Her blog was consequently moved to the Catholic section.

Patheos' poaching of Freethought Blogs' bloggers was noted and became something of a jocular meme on FtB.[3]

Others

Other good blogs are Science on Religion, a group blog that takes a scientific and/or scholarly look at the phenomenon of religion in humans individually as well as culturally. Among it's more interesting contributors is Connor Wood, a Ph.D. candidate at Boston University in religion and science. Wood's "research interests include religion and health, evolutionary science, public theology, and comparative religious inquiry." Also worthwhile is Slacktivist by Fred Clark, a liberal Christian who dissected at length the Left Behind series, and No Longer Quivering, a group blog collecting experiences of survivors of the Quiverfull movement.

Not everything on the network is sunshine and singing "Kumbaya," though. While the network has spent some effort to be inclusive, some individual participants are not necessarily an enlightened, tolerant bunch. And, among those of a secular hue, there can be varying levels of scientific knowledge. If you want to get your blood boiling, but FSTDT is too low-brow for you, just try browsing the "Evangelical" and "Catholic" channels.

So, other notable blogs filed under "Misc" are:

  • Bristol Palin blogs on the Family channel. Yes, you read correctly - that Bristol Palin, and yes, she's blogging in the Family channel.
  • Standing on My Head, by Dwight Longenecker, a Catholic priest (formerly Anglican, even more formerly Evangelical). In September 2012, he came to the attention of the atheist blogosphere after saying some really dumb things about atheists (a two word sample: "spiritual zombies", though the problems with what he wrote are a bit deeper than that)
  • Black, White and Gray, a group blog on the Evangelical channel. Among the contributors is Mark Regnerus, a social scientist notorious for a bad study on the effects of gay couples adopting children.[4]
gollark: Democratic ones theoretically allow more input from everyone, which should lead to decisions which consider their interests more and take into account information people know, but also run into whatever issues existing democracies have plus probably exciting new ones due to presumably having a direct democracy voting on a lot of things.
gollark: Hierarchical ones (theoretically) allow clear direction and management from the top but also lack input from lower levels and are vulnerable to the top people being wrong/bad.
gollark: Before trying to think of ideas for organization structure it might be good to clarify what exactly the organizational structure should do/allow/optimize.
gollark: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xA27x7GRMZQ
gollark: You can buy and sell tokens which will become $1 if event X happens and $0 otherwise.

References

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