John Figdor
Jonathan Figdor | |
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File:JohnFigdorJPEG.jpg | |
Residence | San Francisco Bay Area |
Alma mater | Vassar College, Harvard Divinity School |
Occupation | Humanist Chaplain at Stanford University |
Website | www |
John Figdor is the current Humanist Chaplain at Stanford University[1][2] where he organizes events and programs for both students and community members of the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the first Humanist Chaplain on the West Coast serving a university community.[3] As a Humanist officiant he also oversees non-theistic weddings, funerals, and baby-naming ceremonies.[2][4]
Humanism at Stanford University
The Humanist Community at Stanford includes Humanists, Atheists, and Agnostics, who believe in values such as reason, science, pluralism, compassion, empathy, and altruism.[5][6] The organization holds a variety of different events, from dinners, to public lectures, to art gallery tours, to pub nights, to discussions and debates, and game nights.[5] Previous notable speakers have included Richard Dawkins.[7]
The Stanford Humanist Community played an essential role in the creation of Darwin Day. The first celebration of the event took place on April 22, 1995, and included a lecture given by famed anthropologist Dr. Donald Johanson to over 600 attendees.[8]
Biography
John Figdor received his B.A. with honors in Philosophy from Vassar College[2] and holds a master’s degree (MDiv) in Humanism and Interfaith Dialogue from Harvard Divinity School.[3][4] John was an Organizing Fellow of the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard University[4] and former Assistant Humanist Chaplain at Harvard,[9] working with Greg Epstein.
In 2014, John coauthored, together with Lex Bayer, the book Atheist Mind, Humanist Heart: Rewriting the Ten Commandments for the Twenty-First Century (Rowman & Littlefield, 2014)[10][11] and organized the Rethink Prize: a crowdsourcing competition to rethink the Ten Commandments. The contest drew more than 2,800 submissions from 18 countries and 27 U.S. states. Winners were selected by a panel of judges.[12][13]
John is a former Board Member of the Secular Student Alliance.[4] John and his work have been featured in the San Francisco Chronicle,[9] the Huffington Post,[1][14] the Washington Post.,[10][15] Salon,[16] CNN,[12] and TIME.[17]
References
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