Centre for Inquiry Canada
Founded | 2007 |
---|---|
Type | Not-for-Profit Educational Organization |
Focus | Public understanding of science, secular ethics, skepticism |
Location | |
Method | Research, education, outreach, and advocacy |
Key people |
Current: Eric Adriaans, Kevin Smith, Former: Michael Payton, Justin Trottier, Pam Walls, Derek Pert, John Xu, Katie Kish |
Website |
www |
The Centre for Inquiry Canada (CFIC) is a not-for-profit educational organization with headquarters in Toronto, Canada whose primary mission is to provide education and training to the public in the application of skeptical, secular, rational and humanistic inquiry through conferences, symposia, lectures, published works and the maintenance of a library.[1] It is the Canadian affiliate of CFI Transnational.
History
CFI Canada was originally established as a branch of CFI Transnational in Toronto, Canada in 2007.[2] Initially supported in part by CFI Transnational, CFIC has become an independent Canadian national organization with branches in several provinces. Justin Trottier served as the first national director from 2007 to 2011,[3] followed by Michael Payton until June 2013,[4][5] and by Eric Adriaans from March 2014.
Structure
CFI Canada is governed by a Board of Directors to whom the National Executive Director reports. The ancillary Council of CFI Canada is a quasi-governance body responsible for the election of the Board and for approval of changes to CFIC by-laws. Branch directors (leaders) report to the National Executive Director.[6]
Branches
CFI Canada has branches in Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Saskatoon, Calgary, Sudbury, Kelowna, and Vancouver.
Committee for the Advancement of Scientific Skepticism (CASS)
The Committee for the Advancement of Scientific Skepticism (CASS) is a science-focused working group of CFI Canada, acting as a national Canadian science advisory group that encourages evidence-based inquiry into scientific, medical, technological and paranormal claims using scientific scepticism.[7] CASS conducts research, provides educational programs in schools, and publishes papers on a variety of scientific topics in a proactive approach to public outreach, and also acts reactively to non-evidence based scientific, medical, and paranormal claims in public discourse.
CASS was formed in 2010 to act as point of contact for science outreach for the organization. The committee is a volunteer driven panel of experts and enthusiasts. CASS is run by two co-chairs, with one chair currently held by Iain Martel, a University of Toronto contract lecturer with a background in the metaphysics of physics, and one chair currently vacant after the departure of Michael Kruse, a contributor to Skeptic North with a background in health, in late 2011.
Three Priority Areas
Drawing on the success of CASS, in 2014 CFIC developed the Committee For the Advancement of Human Rights (CAHR) and the Committee for the Advancement of Education. The three priority areas, human rights, education and science are championed at CFIC's Board of Directors by the committee Chairs.
Campaigns and outreach activities
CFI Canada branches host a public education series across the country featuring leading academics, scientists, authors, performers and artists. National campaigns on relevant themes are also a key focus for the organization's activities.
Secular Library
CFIC houses a library of approximately 7000 secular books available for loan to members for research and study purposes. Members of the public may visit the library collection at the CFIC office in Toronto. Large portions of the library were in storage from 2011 to 2014 with a repatriation of the full collection occurring in June 2014.
Extraordinary Claims
The Extraordinary Claims Campaign is a series of advertisements developed in 2010 based on the Carl Sagan quote "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence".[8][9] It is designed to be a follow-up to the Freethought Association of Canada's Atheist Bus Campaign in 2009. The ads feature a list of "extraordinary claims" on topics of pseudoscience, religion, and alternative medicine, including Allah, Christ, Bigfoot, Chiropractic, and many more.[10] The campaign also focuses on public education, running a series of events and publishing articles throughout the campaign that explored each extraordinary claim in more detail. The campaign received coverage in The National Post,[11] The Toronto Star.[12]
10:23
CASS takes part in the annual 10:23 campaign, an international campaign aimed at raising awareness about what homeopathy is with the slogan: "There's nothing in it."[13] In cities around the world, individuals get together to take an 'overdose' of homeopathic pills to highlight their dilution and ineffectuality. In 2011, members of CASS in Vancouver were featured taking their overdose on a CBC Marketplace episode dedicated to homeopathy called: "Cure or Con?"[14]
In March 2011, CASS sent an official complaint to Ontario Health Minister Deb Mathews (Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care), to express concern over a move in the province of Ontario to create a college of homeopaths as a regulated health profession. Key demands have been to ensure that the term "doctor" remain and be enforced as a protected term and to ensure public health safety with particular reference to the promotion of homeopathic vaccines.
Public education and events
During the Canadian federal election of 2011, CASS sent questionnaires asking candidates their position on public health as it relates to homeopaths and alternative medicine practitioners, scientific integrity and political influence, climate change, and critical thinking education. Responses received were posted publicly.
In the summer of 2011, CASS sent a team of four members to speak on a variety of skeptical science topics at Polaris 25 in Toronto.[15] The panel was the first of its kind at a Canadian science fiction conference and was modelled after Skeptrack at DragonCon in Atlanta.
Good Without God Billboard Campaign
CFIC launched a Good without God Billboard campaign in 2013 with billboards appearing in Vancouver and Calgary. CFIC also supported a bus ad in Sudbury, Ontario. The campaign featured secular "verses" promoting secular ethics.
Kids For Inquiry
Kids for Inquiry was launched by the Okanagan Branch of CFIC as a program to bring the values of critical thinking and science education to families with young children.
Secular Seminar Series
In 2014, CFIC launched its Secular Seminar series as an educational tool targeted to increase awareness and knowledge of targeted topic of Canadian secularism. The first two seminars focused on Prayers in Public Spaces and Canada's Blasphemous Libel law (Criminal Code Section 296). Each seminar is a collaborative participation session where members learn while contributing new content.
Criminal Code Section 296: Canada's Blasphemous Libel
Following the brutal murders at Charlie Hebdo in France and the imprisonment and torture of Raif Badawi in Saudi Arabia CFIC launched initiatives to educate Canadians regarding Canada's blasphemous libel law, Criminal Code Section 296. CFIC was a leading organization in the formation of the International Coalition Against Blasphemy Laws (ICABL), a group of organizations from around the world working together to educate and oppose blasphemy laws around the world. The International Humanist and Ethical Union collaborated with ICABL with the End blasphemy Laws website.
Affiliate organizations
References
- ↑ "About". Center for Inquiry. Retrieved 2012-06-18.
- ↑ "Ditching God". www.nationalpost.com. 2007-07-23. Retrieved 2012-02-17.
- ↑ "Letter from the Board" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-06-18.
- ↑ "CFI National Director Announced". canadianatheist.com.
- ↑ "CFI: Looking Forward". canadianatheist.com.
- ↑ CFIC website: cficanada.ca
- ↑ "Committee for the Advancement of Scientific Skepticism | Centre for Inquiry". Cficanada.ca. Retrieved 2012-06-18.
- ↑ "Skeptics plan to bring controversial atheist ads to Calgary buses". Globaltvcalgary.com. 2010-12-02. Retrieved 2011-01-17.
- ↑ "Encyclopaedia Galactica". Carl Sagan (writer/host).Cosmos. PBS. December 14, 1980. No. 12. 01:24 minutes in.
- ↑ "Extraordinary Claims". Extraordinary Claims. 2010-09-21. Retrieved 2012-06-18.
- ↑ "Kelly McParland: Atheists’ only faith is in not having faith | Full Comment | National Post". Fullcomment.nationalpost.com. 2010-12-03. Retrieved 2012-06-18.
- ↑ "New bus ads to take on Bigfoot, Christ". The Star (Toronto). 2010-12-07.
- ↑ "Homeopathy: there's nothing in it | The 10:23 Campaign | #ten23". 1023.org.uk. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
- ↑ "Cure or Con?". CBC News.
- ↑ IFRS Learning says: (2011-06-25). "Skeptical Track at Polaris 25 « Critical Thinking « Skeptic North". Skepticnorth.com. Retrieved 2012-06-18.