Media Interviews and Appearances: Print
The Smart List 2012: 50 people who will change the world
Welcome to the first Wired Smart List. We set out to discover the people who are going to make an impact on our future… So we approached some of the world’s brightest minds—from Melinda Gates to Ai Weiwei—to nominate one fresh, exciting thinker who is influencing them, someone whose ideas or experience they feel are transformative.
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The Unbelievers
By Emily Brennan
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Is Neuroscience the Death of Free Will?
by Eddy Nahmias
Many neuroscientists are employing a flawed notion of free will.
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Four ways 9/11 changed America’s attitude toward religion
By John Blake
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Articles of Faith: The Importance of Understanding Religion in a Post-9/11 World
By Amy Sullivan
Some thought leaders and policymakers embraced Samuel Huntington’s idea that the West was engaged in a “clash of civilizations” with Islam. Meanwhile, neo-atheists led by Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens put forward their own theory of a world split between civilized secularists and dangerous religionists.

Inside the List: Reading September 11th
An article last month in The Christian Century explored the role of 9/11 in giving birth to so-called New Atheists like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris, who got things going with “The End of Faith” (2004), which spent 33 weeks on the paperback list.
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The New Atheism
By James Wood
In the last 10 years or so, the rise of American evangelicalism and the menace of Islamist fundamentalism, along with developments in physics and in theories of evolution and cosmogony, have encouraged a certain style of aggressive, often strident atheistic critique.
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The Invisible Big Kahuna
By Andrew Zak Williams
Andrew Zak Williams discusses this week’s New Statesman article in which prominent atheists told him their reasons for non-belief.
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Same Old New Atheism: On Sam Harris
By Jackson Lears
[Note: This may be the most idiotic and unbalanced response to my work I have ever come across.—SH]
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An Interview with Sam Harris
By Jonathan Derbyshire
Given the amount of interest and comment that my profile of Sam Harris has attracted, I thought it’d be useful to post the complete and unedited transcript of my conversation with him. The interview took place on 11 April, at the headquarters of Random House in London.
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The Science of Right and Wrong
by H. Allen Orr
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War on weak tea Christians
By Jonathan Derbyshire
Sam Harris, one of the “Four Horsemen” of new atheism, believes that science can never be reconciled with religion, and that it is dangerous even to try.
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Is there any place for religious faith in science?
By Emine Saner
Can scientists be religious? Sam Harris argues science and faith are completely incompatible, while Robert Winston would like to be more inclusive. Emine Saner adjudicates
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Debating God: Atheist and Evangelical Face Off at Notre Dame
By Nathan Schneider
Sam Harris and William Lane Craig pack the house, talk over each other, leave audience wanting more…
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The Moral Landscape
By John Lloyd
“[T]his is an inspiring book, holding out as it does the possibility of a rational understanding of how to construct the good life with the aid of science, free from the accretions of religious superstition and cultural coercion.”

The moral formula: How facts inform our ethics
Can science help us tell right from wrong? Sam Harris certainly thinks so. Julian Baggini sits down with one of the ‘four horsemen of atheism’ to learn how facts can inform our ethics
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The Good Book can’t be bettered
By Genevieve Fox
This week, too, the American neuroscientist and philosopher Sam Harris, author of The End of Faith, publishes The Moral Landscape, which argues that religion is not the chief authority on meaning, values and a good life.
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Finding faith amid disaster
By Jessica Ravitz
Around the world, people are still struggling to come to terms with the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, which have left more than 8,000 dead, thousands more missing and hundreds of thousand others homeless. In times like these, many people find comfort in their faith. But disasters can also challenge long-held beliefs. The CNN Belief Blog asked some prominent voices with different views on religion how they make sense of such suffering, where they see inspiration amid destruction and how they respond to people who wonder, “How could God let this happen?”
Responses from Rabbi Harold Kushner, Thich Nhat Hanh, Sam Harris, and others.
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The Science of Right and Wrong
By Michael Shermer
Ever since the rise of modern science, an almost impregnable wall separating it from religion, morality and human values has been raised to the heights….

The Facts Fetish
By Thomas Nagel
Sam Harris’s first two books, The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason and Letter to a Christian Nation, attacked religious faith. His new book, interestingly enough, attacks not faith but a form of skepticism—moral skepticism.
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Sam Harris Believes in God
By Lisa Miller
Sam Harris, a member of the tribe known as “the new atheists,” wishes the headline to this story said something else. How about “Sam Harris Believes in Spirituality,” he suggests over lunch. Or “Sam Harris Believes in ‘God,’ ” with scare quotes?
“The Moral Landscape”: Why science should shape morality
By Katherine Don
Sam Harris, the notorious atheist, explains his controversial stance on religion—and his provocative new book.

Atheists Debate How Pushy to Be
By Mark Oppenheimer
Energized by a recent Pew Research Center poll showing that atheists are more educated about religion than religious people, 370 atheists, humanists and other skeptics packed a ballroom at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel last weekend to debate the future of their movement.
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Morality: ‘We can send religion to the scrap heap’
By Sam Harris
Sam Harris says that science can show us the best ways for human beings to thrive – and we can then junk religion forever.

Religious skeptics disagree on how aggressively to challenge the devout
By Mitchell Landsberg
‘New atheists’ encourage open confrontation; ‘accommodationists’ prefer a subtler, more tactical approach. At a Council for Secular Humanism conference, tension is evident.
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Sam Harris on the science of ethics
By Martin Levin
It’s not as difficult to tell right from wrong as people think, Sam Harris says. The issue is whether those who are wrong will ever admit it. An interview with the author.
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Science Knows Best
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Sam Harris heads the youth wing of the New Atheists. “The End of Faith,” his blistering take-no-prisoners attack on the irrationality of religions, found him many fans and, not surprisingly, a great body of detractors
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God, Science and Philanthropy
By Nathan Schneider
Considering the dubious work of the Templeton Foundation…
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Author Sam Harris joins plot to have Pope arrested
By Sam Harris
Sam Harris has launched an appeal to fund a legal bid to have the Pope arrested when he visits Britain.
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TED 2010: The Price in Human Suffering of Being Open-Minded
By Kim Zetter
A summary of Sam Harris’s talk at TED 2010
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Belief in the Brain: Sacred and secular ideas engage identical areas
By Allison Bond
Religious belief may seem to be a unique psychological experience, but a growing body of research shows that thinking about religion is no different from thinking about secular things—at least from the standpoint of the brain. In the first imaging study to compare religious and nonreligious thoughts, evaluating the truth of either type of statement was found to involve the same regions of the brain.
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Heaven and Nature
By Ross Douthat
Richard Dawkins has called pantheism “a sexed-up atheism.” (He means that as a compliment.) Sam Harris concluded his polemic “The End of Faith” by rhapsodizing about the mystical experiences available from immersion in “the roiling mystery of the world.”
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Atheists need a different voice
By Stephen Prothero
We all know the names (Dawkins, Harris, Hitchens) of those angry white men who tend to antagonize the world’s believers. But the most persuasive voices for the ‘new New Atheism’ tend to be women.

The Anti-God Squad
BY Robert Wright
Why even some of the most zealous non-believers may abandon the crusade against religion.
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The Religious Wars
By Nicholas D. Kristof
Just a few years ago, it seemed curious that an omniscient, omnipotent God wouldn’t smite tormentors like Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris. They all published best-selling books excoriating religion and practically inviting lightning bolts.
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Since the dawn of time
By Dan Jones
Two hundred years after Darwin’s birth, scientists still can’t agree on whether evolution and religion can happily coexist
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Two White Guys Walk Into a Bar …
By Lisa Miller
For five years, since the publication of Sam Harris’s The End of Faith, the so-called faith-versus-reason debate has been a favorite pastime of certain secularists and intellectuals, the subject of innumerable books and lecture series…
Think Again: God
By Karen Armstrong
So-called new atheists such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens have denounced religious belief as not only retrograde but evil; they regard themselves as the vanguard of a campaign to expunge it from human consciousness.
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Atheist clubs are springing up in American high schools, warns head of US Catholic bishops
By Damian Thompson
A “triumphalistic, self-righteous atheism” inspired by the work of Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris is winning a following among American young people, leading to “atheist clubs” in high schools, according to Cardinal Francis George of Chicago.
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Fact Impact
By Lisa Miller
New study of the brain shows that facts and beliefs are processed in exactly the same way.
Religion: The heart believes what it will, but the brain behaves the same either way
By Melissa Healy
Religious believers may seem to share little with nonbelievers when it comes to thinking and judgment. But a new study by UCLA researchers finds that both Christians and nonbelievers use the same parts of the brain when asked to label articles of religious faith as true or false. A report summarizing the study is published today in PLoS ONE.
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Out, Out, Damned Atheists
By Lisa Miller
The Case for God, which comes out this month, is Armstrong’s 19th book, and it rides the crest of a wave of books meant to dismantle the arguments of the atheists Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens, and Richard Dawkins.
The Myth Of A Moderate Malaysia
By Sadanand Dhume
In America, the so-called new atheists—most prominently Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins—don’t need to think twice about ridiculing religious beliefs or savaging the most powerful priest or pastor. But in Malaysia, as elsewhere, secular liberals tend to tip-toe around Muslim religious sensibilities.
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God in the Quad
By James Wood
In recent years, a resurgent evangelical Christianity has been contested by a resurgent atheism. For Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens, among others, the God most worth fighting against seems to be a hybrid of a cheaply understood Old Testament, a prejudicially scanned Koran, and the sentimentalities of contemporary evangelicalism.

Fighting for Francis: Faith, reason, and the NIH nominee.
By Lisa Miller
In opinion pieces, scientists Sam Harris and Steven Pinker express strong reservations about the ascension of Collins to this office.
All quiet on the God front
By Simon Blackburn
Simon Blackburn discusses the argument that religious experience can’t be discussed

God and Science Don’t Mix
By Lawrence M. Krauss
My practice as a scientist is atheistic. That is to say, when I set up an experiment I assume that no god, angel or devil is going to interfere with its course; and this assumption has been justified by such success as I have achieved in my professional career. I should therefore be intellectually dishonest if I were not also atheistic in the affairs of the world.
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Let’s Talk About God
By Lisa Miller
The atheist writers Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens have presented us with a choice: either you don’t believe in God or you’re a dope.
How much reason do you want?
By Philip Ball
The ‘war’ between science and religion is stuck in a rut. Can we change the record now, asks Philip Ball?
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Atheists: No God, no reason, just whining
By Charlotte Allen
Superstar atheists are motivated by anger—and boohoo victimhood.
[Harris’ Note: This is, without a doubt, one of the most embarrassingly stupid attacks on the “new atheists” to be published in a major newspaper.]
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