Science, news, and religion podcast
Podcast
Point of Inquiry Hosted by Genre Updates Weekly Original release 2005 (2005 ) Ratings Non-explicit
Point of Inquiry is the radio show and flagship podcast of the Center for Inquiry (CFI) , "a think tank promoting science, reason, and secular values in public policy and at the grass roots".[ 1] Started in 2005, Point of Inquiry has consistently been ranked among the best science podcasts available in iTunes .[ 2] It has been celebrated for its guests and for the quality of its interviews.[ 3] Former guests include leading scientists, writers and public intellectuals such as Neil DeGrasse Tyson , Paul Krugman , Lisa Randall , Brian Greene , Oliver Sacks , Susan Jacoby , David Brin and Temple Grandin .
Point of Inquiry is recorded at the Center for Inquiry headquarters in Amherst, New York .[ 4] iTunes features over 200 free episodes of Point of Inquiry , averaging 30 to 35 minutes in length, with each consisting of a long form interview with a high-profile guest from the worlds of scientific skepticism , science , academia , and philosophy . The show focuses on traditional topics in scientific skepticism, such as psychic investigations, alternative medicine , alleged extraterrestrial visitations, ghosts, and cryptozoology . It also covers current events and public policy. The inaugural episode in December 2005 featured an interview with CFI founder Paul Kurtz , who spoke about the incompatibility of science and religion.[ 5]
In July 2012, Point of Inquiry produced their first video episode featuring Michael De Dora, Ed Brayton, Jessica Ahlquist , and Jamie Kilstein .[ 6]
Previously, Chris Mooney hosted half of the shows with the balance split between the other hosts.[ 7]
In October 2013, CFI announced the "new team who will take Point of Inquiry into its next exciting phase", Lindsay Beyerstein, Josh Zepps and producer Joshua Billingsley.[ 8]
On June 2, 2017, Point of Inquiry released its first episode with new host Paul Fidalgo. New hosts Kavin Senapathy and James Underdown were announced on October 15, 2018. The show is produced by CFI digital marketing strategist, Michael Powell.[ 9]
Staff
Host
Tenure[ 10]
Information
D. J. Grothe
December 2005 to March 2010
American author and public speaker
Robert M. Price
March 2010 to November 2011
Former host of CFI podcast The Human Bible
Karen Stollznow
March 2010 to December 2011
Australian writer, linguist and skeptic
Chris Mooney
March 2010 to September 2013
U.S. journalist and academic
Indre Viskontas
February 2012 to August 2013
Neuroscientist and opera singer
Lindsay Beyerstein
November 2013 to April 2017
Investigative journalist
Josh Zepps
November 2013 to April 2017
Journalist
Paul Fidalgo
May 2017 to May 2018
March 2022 to Present
CFI Communications Director
Kavin Senapathy
January 2019 – October 2019
Author, Journalist, Activist
James Underdown
October 2018 – Present[ 11]
Executive Director of CFI-West
Leighann Lord
April 2020 – March 2021[ 11]
Comedian, writer, actor
Producer
Tenure
Thomas Donnelly
2005 to 2009
Adam Isaak
2010 to 2013
Joshua Billingsley
2013 to 2014
Nora Hurley
2014 to 2017
Mike Powell
2017 to present[ 11]
Timeline
Popular Science Idol
Point of inquiry co-sponsored the "Popular Science Idol"[ 12] contest along with the National Science Foundation Office of Legislative and Public Affairs, Discover Magazine, and Popular Science as a science spoof of the reality television series American Idol . The event was hosted as a workshop to discover the next great science communicator. The event was hosted by Chris Mooney and Indre Viskontas served as one of the expert judges. The first event was won by Tom Di Loberto for a 3-minute presentation on the difficulties involved in predicting the weather.[ 13]
Select episodes
Guest
Topic
Air Date
Steven Pinker
The Decline in Violence
February 18, 2013[ 14]
Paul Krugman
Science and Pseudoscience in Economics
January 28, 2013
David Brin
Uplifting Existence
December 17, 2012
Oliver Sacks
Hallucinations
November 5, 2012
Lisa Randall
Knocking on Heaven's Door
October 8, 2012
Temple Grandin
The Science of Livestock Animal Welfare
August 27, 2012
Cara Santa Maria
Talk Nerdy to Us
June 11, 2012
Lawrence M. Krauss
A Universe from Nothing
February 6, 2012
Brian Greene
The Fabric of the Cosmos
January 2, 2012
Daniel Dennett
The Scientific Study of Religion
December 12, 2011
Austin Dacey
Rock the Theocrats
September 26, 2011
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Communicating Science
February 28, 2011
John Shook
The God Debates
October 15, 2010
S. Jay Olshansky
Can Science Extend Human Life?
September 10, 2010[ 15]
Adam Savage
Skeptic
July 9, 2010
S.T. Joshi
Fright and Free thought
May 28, 2010
Scott Lilienfeld
Real Self-Help
March 19, 2010
Andrew Revkin
The Death of Science Writing, and the Future of Catastrophe
March 12, 2010
Chris Hedges
I Don't Believe in Atheists
May 2, 2008
Lawrence M. Krauss
Seducing for Science
December 28, 2007
Paul Kurtz
Ethics for the Nonreligious
December 21, 2007
Richard Dawkins
Science and the New Atheism
December 7, 2007
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Communicating Science to the Public
November 16, 2007
Michael Behe
The Edge of Evolution
November 9, 2007
Steven Pinker
The Stuff of Thought
October 26, 2007
Alan Dershowitz
Blasphemy
October 5, 2007
Francis Collins
The Language of God
August 31, 2007
Carol Tavris
Mistakes Were Made
August 3, 2007
Ophelia Benson
Why Truth Matters
July 20, 2007
Philip Kitcher
Living with Darwin
July 13, 2007
Christopher Hitchens
God Is Not Great
July 6, 2007
Natalie Angier
The Canon
June 29, 2007
Tom Clark
Encountering Naturalism
June 22, 2007
Matthew C. Nisbet
Selling Science to the Public
April 20, 2007
Steven Pinker
Evolutionary Psychology and Human Nature
February 23, 2007
Barbara Forrest
The Wedge of Intelligent Design
February 16, 2007
Peter Singer
The Way We Eat
February 9, 2007
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Death by Black Hole
January 25, 2007
Ann Druyan
Carl Sagan and The Varieties of Scientific Experience
January 5, 2007
Susan Blackmore
In Search of the Light
December 15, 2006
Richard Dawkins
The God Delusion
October 16, 2006
Sam Harris
Letter to a Christian Nation
October 6, 2006
Ann Druyan
Science, Wonder, and Spirituality
September 15, 2006
Neil deGrasse Tyson
The Sky Is Not the Limit
August 17, 2006
Thomas Kida
Don't Believe Everything You Think
July 14, 2006
James Randi
Science, Magic, and Future of Skepticism
June 30, 2006
Tom Flynn
The Rise of the Non-Religious
June 23, 2006
Eugenie Scott
Evolution vs. Religious Belief?
April 28, 2006
Sam Harris
The Mortal Dangers of Religion
April 14, 2006
Sam Harris
The End of Faith
April 7, 2006
Jamy Ian Swiss
Psychics, Science, and Magic
March 24, 2006
Daniel Dennett
Breaking the Spell
March 3, 2006
Richard Dawkins
The Root of All Evil?
February 10, 2006
Eugenie Scott
The Dover Trial: Evolution vs. Intelligent Design
January 20, 2006
Max Maven
Magic and Skepticism
January 13, 2006
A full episode list is available on iTunes.[ 16]
Recognition
In May 2012, Point of Inquiry was named one of the "Top 10 Podcasts to Feed Your Brain" by Business Insider.[ 17]
Featured podcast suggestion by the Telegraph February 9, 2013.[ 18]
Awards
Award
Year
Category
Result
Ref.
Academy of Podcasters
2015
Spirituality & Religion
Finalist
[ 19]
References
^ This description appears at the beginning of most episodes.
^ "Top 50 Rated Podcasts 6/2010 – Society & Culture | Podcast Alley" . Archived from the original on February 23, 2012. Retrieved June 3, 2010 .
^ "Hot Needle of Inquiry" . Bad Astronomy at discovermagazine.com. Retrieved April 16, 2009 .
^ "About the Program | Center for Inquiry" . Retrieved June 3, 2010 .
^ Grothe, DJ (December 11, 2005). "Paul Kurtz – Science and Religion – Are They Compatible?" . Point of Inquiry Podcast . Center for Inquiry . Archived from the original on February 1, 2014. Retrieved January 17, 2014 .
^ "Point of Inquiry In Studio: Chris Mooney Talks to Jamie Kilstein, Ed Brayton, and More.| Center for Inquiry" . YouTube . Retrieved February 10, 2013 .
^ "Center for Inquiry Announces Three New Hosts for its Popular Podcast, 'Point of Inquiry' | Center for Inquiry" . February 2010. Retrieved February 14, 2010 .
^ "The Wait is Over: CFI Unveils New 'Point of Inquiry' Team!" . Center for Inquiry. October 17, 2013. Retrieved October 17, 2013 .
^ "Point Of Inquiry podcast announces new co-hosts Kavin Senapathy and James Underdown" . CFI . Center for Inquiry. October 15, 2018. Archived from the original on April 27, 2019.
^ "All Episodes" . Center for Inquiry . December 21, 2018. Retrieved June 1, 2020 .
^ a b c "Comedian Leighann Lord Joins Point of Inquiry Podcast as New Co-Host" . Center for Inquiry . April 9, 2020. Archived from the original on April 9, 2020. Retrieved April 9, 2020 .
^ "Do You Have What It Takes to Be America's Next Science Idol?" . March 10, 2013.
^ "Meteorologist wins first-ever America's Science Idol competition" . March 10, 2013.
^ "Steven Pinker – The Decline of Violence" . February 18, 2013.
^ Olshansky, Jay (September 10, 2010). "Can Science Extend Human Life?" . Point of Inquiry . Center for Inquiry. Retrieved September 18, 2016 .
^ "iTunes Archive" . Apple at apple.com. Retrieved February 10, 2013 .
^ Smith, Kevin (May 14, 2012). "Top 10 podcasts to feed your brain" . Business Insider at businessinsider.com. Retrieved May 15, 2012 .
^ Naughton, Pete (February 9, 2013). "Podcast and internet radio previews: The Secret Policeman's Ball, Point of Inquiry, Radio Three Sixty and The Jazz Groove" . The Telegraph . UK: Telegraph Media Group Ltd. ISSN 0307-1235 . Archived from the original on February 15, 2013.
^ "2015 AofP Winners and Finalists" . Academy of Podcasters . Podcast Movement . 2015. Archived from the original on October 14, 2016.
External links