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Posted on Apr 13, 2012 in faith, NEPA Freethought Society podcast, philosophy | 0 comments

Peter Boghossian to appear on NEPA Freethought Society Podcast

Peter Boghossian

Philosopher Peter Boghossian will be appearing on an episode of the NEPA Freethought Society Podcast that will be recorded on May 5 and released on a future date.

Boghossian will be discussing practical strategies that listeners can use to combat faith and promote reason and rationality. He will be specifically addressing effective strategies to challenge faith-based claims, discussing critical thinking and faith in prisons, and explaining effective ways for persons to engage people of faith.

This episode won’t be live to allow for viewer questions during recording, but fans of the podcast may submit questions prior to recording and we’ll try to address them (feel free to leave questions in the comment section of this post).


More information about the NEPA Freethought Society Podcast:

The NEPA Freethought Society Podcast is downloadable for free on the iTunes store, through the NEPA Freethought Society’s website, and has an associated RSS feed. ‘Like’ the NEPA Freethought Society Podcast’s page on Facebook, follow on Twitter at @NEPApodcast, and please share the podcast with friends. You may financially support the podcast by clicking the donate button on the top of the NEPA Freethought Society’s website.


More information about Peter Boghossian, from his bio:

Peter’s main focus is bringing the tools of professional philosophers to people in a wide variety of contexts. Peter has a teaching pedigree spanning more than 20 years and 30 thousand students–in prisons, hospitals, public and private schools, seminaries, colleges and universities, Fortune 100 companies and small businesses. His fundamental objective is to teach people how to think through what often seem to be intractable problems.

Peter’s primary research areas are critical thinking and moral reasoning. His doctoral research studies, funded by the State of Oregon and supported by the Oregon Department of Corrections, consisted of using the Socratic method to help prison inmates to increase their critical thinking and moral reasoning abilities and to increase their desistance to criminal behavior. Peter’s publications can be found in Diálogos, Education Policy Analysis Archives, The Clearing House: Educational Research Controversy and Practices, The Radical Academy; Offender Programs Report, Teaching Philosophy, Corrections Today, Informal Logic, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Educational Philosophy and Theory, Inside Higher Ed, Essays in Philosophy, Federal Probation Journal, and the Journal of Correctional Education. If you’d like to learn more about his scholarship, his podcast interview with Philosophy News is a great place to start.

His work has been noted on The Huffington Post and other media outlets; he’s been an invited guest on the Lars Larson show, and advocated via social media by the Executive Director of the Skeptic Society, Michael Shermer, and bestselling author and head of Project Reason, Sam Harris.

Peter was a Councilman for the State of Oregon (LSTA), an advisor to Sockeye Magazine and The Weekly Alibi, wrote national philosophy curricula for the University of Phoenix and was a research fellow for the National Center for Teaching and Learning. Currently, he is the Chairman of the Prison Advisory Committee for Columbia River Correctional Institution, teaches critical thinking and ethics at Portland State University, is an Affiliate Research Assistant Professor Oregon Health Science University, is Co-Director of PSU’s Center for Correction’s Research, and serves on the board of directors of various non-profits.

When he’s not working, Peter spends time with his family, practices jiu jutsu, watches science fiction movies and television (Stargate Universe, Battlestar Galactica, Misfits), and plays computer games (Star Craft 2, Fallout 3, Skyrim).

You can follow Peter on Twitter @peterboghossian. If you want to join Peter’s mailing list and learn about his upcoming public lectures and debates, from your mobile phone text “DELUSION” + your email address to 22333.