
Given how poorly my predictions for post topics went last year, I won't be making any this year with one exception. Valve surgery in early February means fewer posts while I'm recovering and whatever I do get around to writing about will probably be more personal in nature, describing my peri-operative experiences. I do still plan to continue to criticize theism and to provide some personal insights into medicine and cardiology. I also plan to participate in the Calgary Run for Water again on June 11, 2016, aiming for a personal best in the 10k with my new valve, whatever it turns out to be.
I hope that you'll continue to stay tuned and make some time in your busy lives to consider my posts. While they are often written for the personal benefit of refining and organizing my own thoughts, and to leave a trail that my children can one day follow to know how I tended to think about at least some topics, I nevertheless do try to write them for the benefit of others as well.
I hope that 2016 brings you good health and a wealth of experiences that will make you as happy and fulfilled as I have so far been in my life. In the meantime, here's how Skepsis went down in 2015:

I included less content by other writers this year than last, but two pieces that I thought perfectly expressed my own thoughts were by Gordon Gibson on Charlie Hebdo and a short video by Robert Lindsay on the critical importance of secularism.

I continued my critique of anti-vaxxers by identifying one key question that they should have to answer. 2015 saw legal support for vaccine exemptions face major challenges in North America. The amazing Dr. Paul Offit wrote a great piece on religious exemptions: What would Jesus do about measles?
In February, I shared the work of my friend in Edmonton, Alexander Delorme, who wrote about the Chapel Hill murders. The perpetrator has since been charged and will undergo a death penalty trial. Very little has publicly been clarified about his motivations, but the notion that atheism could have contributed is as incoherent as the notion that science motivated the Nazis. I suspect that his trial will show that, too.


In What if you could travel back in time? I challenged our fascination with youth. Most middle aged and older people who've considerd this thought experiment conclude that this is the best time to be alive.

This was the year that my left ventricle showed significant but subtle signs of enlargement leading me to pull the trigger and decide to have aortic valve surgery. In Decisions, decisions, I weighed the options before me and made a difficult, tentative choice.
My last two posts of the year challenged an idea that is commonplace among non-believers, namely, that believers have the burden of proof. But given what most non-believers do believe, this idea is a deepity, and it's just plain false. Thanks to my invitation by Justin Scheiber (of Reasonable Doubts fame) to act as a contributor to the Facebook page for Real Atheology, these were among the most viewed posts of 2015.