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The Brights Movement

Skeptics & Atheists

I'd rather be called gay than homosexual (queer is fine, fag too, if you are a friend) but I'm not sure that the monosyllable has made my life better. Some years back I started calling myself an atheist instead of an agnostic. My skepticism is too strong to pretend to agnosticism's impartiality. Can't imagine calling myself a bright. It'll be interesting to see if it makes it from neologism to received English. Bright has a few influential backers like Richard Dawkins writing in Wired.

I am a bright. You are (quite probably) a bright. Most of the people I know are brights. The majority of scientists are brights. Presumably there are lots of closet brights in Congress, but they dare not come out. Notice from these examples that the word is a noun, not an adjective. We brights are not claiming to be bright (meaning clever, intelligent), any more than gays claim to be gay (meaning joyful, carefree). Whether there is a statistical tendency for brights (noun) to be bright (adjective) is a matter for research. I would dearly like to see such research undertaken, and I know the result I am betting on, but it is no part of the definition of the noun.

Religion Be Damned (via William of The daily trudge)

An earlier essay by Dawkins noted: Cheerful atheism

The Brights Movement website: The Brights' Net

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» Bright = gay = humanist = fag? from Pansexual Sodomite
I think Richard Dawkins may overestimate how much the word gay itself has changed the lives of homosexual men. And he inhabits too rarified a world to have every heard a teenager say that’s so gay!. “Humanism” from the mouth... [Read More]