Person of the Year 2006
This has been a big year for so many people across many fields, but in the field of religion, ethics and ideas, this is one man's year. Like him or loathe him, people are talking about him and his ideas. We recognise the Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University, as our Person of the Year 2006. This year also marks the 30th anniversary of the publication of his book The Selfish Gene. To some he's "Darwin's rottweiller" (echoing TH Huxley's nickname, "Darwin's bulldog"); to others he's "A Devil's Chaplain" (Darwin's phrase, now the title of one of Dawkins's books). You have voted overwhelmingly for Dawkins, and for many conflicting reasons:
For being everywhere this year, with the publication of his global bestseller, The God Delusion.
For proving that scientists can still change the way people think.
For writing a book (The God Delusion) which enabled Terry Eagleton to write the ever published.
For thinking clearly in a world that doesn't much value clear thinking anymore.
For saying what he thinks.
For defending the delusion that science and religious faith are incompatible.
For creating the Richard Dawkins for Reason & Science.
For writing the most overrated book of the year (in the judgment of magazine).
For making people talk about the dangers of religious fundamentalism.
For lobbying atheism and humanism into the headlines more than anyone else has done before.
For being the face of science on television across the western world.
For not having been given an honour by the Queen, while being a recipient of the Medal of the Presidency of the Italian Republic and many scientific and literary prizes.
For marrying the who played Romana in Doctor Who.
For raising questions that need to be answered by any intelligent religious believer wishing to develop a coherent worldview.
For being a scientific fundamentalist and the worst advert for atheism currently doing a book tour.
For raising a debate about the nature of "science" and how future generations of schoolchildren should be pretected from "pseudo-science".
For being rude and getting away with it.
For these, and many other reasons, Richard Dawkins is our Person of the Year 2006.

Professor Andy McIntosh's contribution to Sunday Sequence's recent Creation Wars special has provoked enormous debate here and in the national press, including a letter to the Guardian from Richard Dawkins. Andy McIntosh has written the following clarification and defence of his position for this blog.
The people of Iraq woke up this morning to the news that Saddam Hussein was at dawn local time, about 3 am GMT. His hanging was filmed and we can expect those images to soon be available across the world courtesy of the internet. 
Add your nominations here for our "person of the year" title - the man, woman or child who has most inspired us, challenged us, impressed, infuriated, or simply pre-occupied us in the past twelve months. The person, in short, who will be forever associated with this year. Who gets your nomination? Will it be a politician, a scientist, a religious leader, an entertainer, a military leader, a human rights campaigner, or an idea whose time has come? I'm accepting nominations for my blog's Person of the Year 2006 award. I'll announce the winner on December 31st.
The death of continues to overshadow Pope Benedict's Christmas. A breathing tube had kept the 60-year-old alive for nine years. Mr Welby died a week ago, after his doctor agreed to sedate him and remove the tube. Some commentators describe this action as "euthanasia" -- in fact, Dr Mario Riccio says he merely complied with his patient's legal right to refuse treatment. But the Vatican has argued that Mr Welby's action was tantamount to suicide and has refused his family the use of a church for a Christian burial.
That's what they call it in the United States: the "war on Christmas" is, according to some, a "strategy" to remove all references to Christmas throughout society. Cards avoiding the C-word, in favour of "Season's Greetings". A re-designation of the season as "Winter Festival". The avoidance of nativity and other biblical imagery in favour of secular images, such as Santa. Etc, etc.
Or, more accurately, quizzing about morality, I suppose. This is a victory for common sense. Helen and Joe Roberts have received £10,000 in compensation after they mishandled into comments made by the couple in a telephone conversation with a representative of Wyre Borough Council.
The historian and Holocaust denier David Irving , after being released from an Austrian prison. He served 13 months of a three-year sentence and has been banned from returning to Austria. Irving maintains that his views are based on a close reading of historical documents; he accepts the existence of Nazi death camps, but argues that their role has been overstated by subsequent historians. He also argues that a free society should permit him to raise questions and state conclusions which others find offensive or unpalatable.
Needless to say, we have been in touch with Professor Andy McIntosh of Leeds University to see if he wishes to comment on Richard Dawkins' letter in the Guardian about his comments on our Creation Wars special. I'd hoped to ask Dr McIntosh for his reaction to that letter, and also to try to spell out more clearly where exactly he stands on the second law of thermodynamics.
News just in. Mr Justice Deeny has ruled that Northern Ireland's new gay rights legislation should be introduced, as planned, on New Year's Day. The Christian Institute and a number of other Christian groups asked the High Court to make an order postponing the introduction of the Regulations pending a judicial review.
Jenni Murray and Women's Hour are together a national institution. She is a giant of broadcasting. On today's programme, that she has been diagnosed with breast cancer and will undergo treatment in the new year. The prognosis is excellent -- and that's a tribute to the enormous hard work of researchers and clinicians over the past few decades. Women's Hour is really Jenni's hour; and I am one of many male listeners and fans of the programme. Have a happy Christmas, Jenni.
A follow-up to Prospect magazine's list of the most overrated and most underrated books of 2006. I've already interviewed the author of their most overrated book, Richard Dawkins (The God Delusion). For completion, we've arranged an interview with the author of their most underrated book of the year. On January 7th, Jeremy Stangroom, co-author with Ophelia Benson of will be my guest on
This letter, from Professor Richard Dawkins, which refers to our recent Creation Wars special on Sunday Sequence, was published in yesterday's Guardian:
Bishop Tom Butler presented
Michael Stone's lawyers are arguing that his attempted invasion of Parliament Buildings at Stormont was "a piece of ".
Is this the face of a serial killer? Tom Stephens, a 37-year-old supermarket assistant by police investigating the murder of five women in the Ipswich area. As I write, he is being questioned by detectives at an unnamed police station in Suffolk. Only time -- and the continuing investigation -- will tell if Tom Stephens is the man who killed Gemma Adams, Anneli Alderton, Tania Nicol, Paula Clennell and Annette Nicholls. Without prejudice to that investigation, we can only hope that an end is in sight for the families of those young women whose lives were taken from them.
Sunday is the third annual "End Violence Against Sex Workers Day". The murder of five women working as prostitutes in Suffolk is prompting a debate about how we protect sex workers in the United Kingdom. Is it time to further decriminalise this business -- by, for example, legalising brothels or introducing official "red light zones"?
A couple of years ago, I visited in North Carolina, the site of the original Billy Graham training centre. I stood behind the lectern Dr Graham used in some of his most famous crusades, with his actual speaking notes in front of me. I also saw the site Billy Graham had chosen for his final resting place, just beside the little Cove church. We were told that many of the leaders of the Billy Graham Organisation had planned to be buried here too; they are lifelong friends and wanted to be buried together.
This is a dreadful story. A Presbyterian minister in Pittsburgh has , and has left a final letter to his congregation explaining why. The Reverend Brent Dugan, 60, was found dead in November. It appears that KDKA, a local television channel, was about to broadcast an "expose" of the pastor's sex life, and Mr Dugan discovered this by watching a trail on television. In desperation, to his church then committed suicide. The letter was read to his this week.
Thanks to Helen-ann Hartley for blog-sitting for me yesterday. From the response to her post, I can tell that she really got some of you going. I'm just back from London. It was a pretty busy day. The venue for the interviews I was conducting (apparently that's the correct term, even though I avoided waving my arms around) was a terrific exhibition space in Whitechapel Art Gallery (which will look wonderful on TV), and my guests were the broadcaster Melvyn Bragg and Ruth Lea, director of the Centre for Policy Studies (the right-wing think-tank founded some years ago by Margaret Thatcher).
The guest blogger today is the Oxford biblical scholar Dr Helenann Hartley.
It's hard to know what the result was. , from the creationist group proved to be more evasive in our interview than I'd expected. At times, it seemed like he didn't want to any answer questions directly, if at all. Then launched a pretty personal attack on his credibility by saying -- essentially -- that it was a disgrace that a great British university should employ as a professor someone with Andy McIntosh's views. McIntosh is professor of chemical engineering at Leeds University's school of engineering and technology, so one would expect that his personal views on evolutionary biology never make an appearance in his teaching. 
Apparently, the path to the White House passes through in southern California, whose pastor, Rick Warren, is one of America's evangelical leaders. The author of , and other books with a similar teleological verve, Rick Warren's endorsement for the presidency could help a great deal. Especially when a potential candidate happens to be a liberally-minded Democrat like . Senator Obama gave a at Saddleback marking World Aids Day, which began:
Tomorrow's programme will provoke a little debate here and there. In a programme running from 8.30 to 10.15 am you can expect a lot of topics to be covered. Let me mention just a few: two books, a play and a goat.