I have on record joined over 20 meetup groups in the past 4-5 years. Most of them have gone dormant either because the group organizers stop holding events, or I lose interest or can no longer attend (e.g., those I signed up when I was in Taiwan). But here are a few I still remain active:
THINK was originally founded by a Christian seeking intellectual honesty in San Jose and now has chapters in many cities. It is a place for "people who want to engage more critically with their faith and those who have no faith but are interested in Christian theology and want to know whether it, or religious thought more generally, can be reconciled with modern science and philosophy." True to its "mission statement", topics we have covered in our monthly meetups include
Let's discuss logical fallacies -- Learn how to avoid types of reasoning that are seductive but logically flawed
Let's discuss physics and theology -- From quantum mechanics to the Big Bang the 20th century changed how humans view the physical world, are we finally getting close to discovering a "theory of everything"?
Let's discuss cafeteria religion -- Many people belong to a church or other religious group without accepting all the group's teachings. Why might someone take this "cafeteria" approach to faith and religion? Is the approach intellectually defensible?
How should I live? Three Chinese philosophers' answers -- Mozi 墨子 promoted "impartial care"; Mengzi 孟子, a follower of Confucius, taught that people are born with "sprouts" of goodness inside them and can become good by "extending" those sprouts; and Xunzi 荀子, another Confucian, asserted that humans are born selfish but can become good through practice
Why I believe what I believe -- A 7-part series presented by members who are atheist, agnostic, non-scriptural monotheist, Christian, ex-Christian, returning Christian...
Last Supper with XXX -- Similar to the "Why I believe" series, except the speakers are from the outside community whose perspectives and experiences may differ from those of most of THINK's members, and if we don't like what the guests have to say, then it's their last supper! :)
Our group organizer, Joseph, is a young community college philosophy professor, who picks the topics, provides supporting materials, and arbitrates the discussions with full knowledge, incisive views, and gentle manners. One key reason I think why this group has been successful and I enjoy attending it.
As for the group members, they run the gamut: We have Reba--an inquisitive Muslim woman--and Akbar--a composed Muslim businessman; Phil, a pharmacist and ex-Catholic who hosts a web forum for fact-belief debate; Caleb, a high school teacher whose knowledge and deep understanding of theology and philosophy amazes me; Dave, a gentle old man who often acts as a Christianity apologist even though he personally had been wronged by the church in his long journey of faith; and Rhett, an energetic, big-hearted man who became a born-again Christian in college, went to theological school, served at the church, then left and re-converted to an agnostic atheist and staunch humanist.
Forum for Humanist Association of Orange County is a chapter of American Humanist Association that focuses on the philosophy of secular humanism. It has often invited guest speakers (scholars, book authors, government officials) to address serious issues such as climate change, Mueller report, community relations development, or has its own members or those from sister organizations promote volunteer work (food bank, beach cleaning), social justice movement (poor people's campaign), etc., in addition to intellectual discussions on interesting concepts and ideas such as universal basic income, golden rule for humanism, etc.
Beginner's Practical Philosophy is a group I joined relatively recently in April, and was immediately drawn by its discussion topic ("How do scientists and artists make creative discoveries"), format (chatty discussions around tiny patio table under mid-morning sun), and the host, Richard, a retired ER surgeon doctor with whom I share very similar world views despite our very different backgrounds.
The group is now merged with another larger, older (14 years) "philosophy cafe" group led by a retired philosophy professor/minister and will focus their discussion on Existentialism starting September.
1 Million Cups has become my favorite and most regularly attended meetup group in the past 3 months even though I had joined it more than 2 years ago. It is a country wide public forum sponsored by a philanthropic foundation (Kauffman Foundation), Starbucks, who provides free coffee, and UC Irvine, who provides the venue, to help entrepreneurs and innovative businesses engage with local mentors, advisers, business people, and fellow entrepreneurs.
What I find most satisfying, besides hearing interesting startup ideas every week, is getting to know and bond with people of various backgrounds, such as
Rob, the owner of a 400-property real estate transaction and management company looking for good "PropTech" app for his business
Babak, a retired ophthalmologist screening for startup investment opportunities for his business network group
Cindy has a firm specializing in legal and intellectual property affairs for startup companies
Dan is developing a 3-D, holographic rendition software for big board advertisement while negotiating with a major web hosting company to sell the mail server business he's been holding on since the Linux days
Josh is building gear that monitors eye movement and brain wave to predict viewer preference for independent TV series studios
Liam is a local boy and newly graduate from an east coast university developing an event scheduling, life style app with a developer partner
Wolfgang is a German industrial designer who travels between offices here and Paris
RJ is a marketing consultant fine-tuning a social media platform targeting non-profit organizations he has been developing for the past 18 months since I first talked to him
We come, we meet, we connect... May the world be better for it!
One day Dan brought his daughter to the meetup, who was also entrepreneurial spirited and just started selling her own doggie cookies online. I tried the cookie she showed me and became one of her doggie food's first human consumers (after her father).
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