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Genre/Form: | Controversial literature Ouvrages de controverse |
---|---|
Material Type: | Internet resource |
Document Type: | Book, Internet Resource |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Richard Dawkins |
ISBN: | 0618680004 9780618680009 9780618918249 0618918248 9781784161927 1784161926 0593055489 9780593055489 9780552773317 055277331X |
OCLC Number: | 68965666 |
Awards: | Short-listed for British Book Awards: Book of the Year 2007 Short-listed for Independent Booksellers' Week Book of the Year Award: Adults' Book of the Year 2007 |
Description: | x, 406 pages ; 24 cm |
Contents: | A deeply religious non-believer -- The God hypothesis -- Arguments for God's existence -- Why there almost certainly is no God -- The roots of religion -- The roots of morality : why are we good? -- The "good" book and the changing moral Zeitgeist -- What's wrong with religion? : why be so hostile? -- Childhood, abuse and the escape from religion -- A much needed gap? A deeply religious non-believer. Deserved respect ; Undeserved respect -- The God hypothesis. Polytheism ; Monotheism ; Secularism, the Founding Fathers and the religion of America ; The poverty of agnosticism ; NOMA ; The great prayer experiment ; The Neville Chamberlain school of evolutionists ; Little green men -- Arguments for God's existence. Thomas Aquinas' "proofs" ; The ontological argument and other a priori arguments ; The argument from beauty ; The argument from personal "experience" ; The argument from scripture ; The argument from admired religious scientists ; Pascal's wager ; Bayesian arguments -- Why there almost certainly is no God. The Ultimate Boeing 747 ; Natural selection as a consciousness-raiser ; Irreducible complexity ; The worship of gaps ; The anthropic principle : planetary version ; The anthropic principle : cosmological version ; An interlude at Cambridge -- The roots of religion. The Darwinian imperative ; Direct advantages of religion ; Group selection ; Religion as a by-product of something else ; Psychologically primed for religion ; Tread softly, because you tread on my memes ; Cargo cults -- The roots of morality : why are we good? Does our moral sense have a Darwinian origin? ; A case study in the roots of morality ; If there is no God, why be good? -- The "good" book and the changing moral Zeitgeist. The Old Testament ; Is the New Testament any better? ; Love thy neighbour ; The moral Zeitgeist ; What about Hitler and Stalin? : weren't they atheists? -- What's wrong with religion? : why be so hostile? Fundamentalism and the subversion of science ; The dark side of absolutism ; Faith and homosexuality ; Faith and the sanctity of human life ; The great Beethoven fallacy ; How "moderation" in faith fosters fanaticism -- Childhood, abuse and the escape from religion. Physical and mental abuse ; In defence of children ; An educational scandal ; Consciousness-raising again ; Religious education as a part of literary culture -- A much needed gap? Binker ; Consolation ; Inspiration ; The mother of all burkas. |
Responsibility: | Richard Dawkins. |
More information: |
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Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
Written with all the clarity and elegance of which Dawkins is a master. It should have a place in every school library - especially in the library of every "faith" school -- Philip Pullman A resounding trumpet blast for truth... It feels like coming up for air -- Matt Ridley A spirited and exhilarating read... Dawkins comes roaring forth in the full vigour of his powerful arguments, laying into fallacies and false doctrines with the energy of the polemicist at his most fiery -- Joan Bakewell * Guardian * This is my favourite book of all time... a heroic and life-changing work -- Derren Brown One of the best non-fiction writers alive today -- Steven Pinker Read more...
WorldCat User Reviews (2)
Disapointingly Simplistic
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As an open-minded Christian, I make a point to listen to opposing views. It was disappointing to find that such an eminent scientist resorts to childish name-calling and condescending sneering to make his points. By the time I got to middle school I new that making nasty broad generalizations about people one doesn’t know is logically invalid and morally unsupportable. Bitching about religious people is not scholarship. The irony in the fact that he thinks religious people are stupid and delusional while making the same mistakes he attributes to us seems to go right over his head. Dr. Dawkins opening theses are that since there are some great scientists who are atheists and since religious people do bad things and can be evil, there must not be a God, or some such. He glories in trotting out great scientists who did not believe. Of course, one could make a list of who's-who of the greatest scientists and philosophers in history who did believe. The most laughable point he makes is that since believers have done bad things, religion is dangerous (no logical correlation, logic 101 stuff.) He loves to insist that evolution and creation are undeniably at odds. As an evolutionary biologist Dr. Dawkins thinks that natural selection and evolution somehow make God illogical. He is in the minority of scientists within his own discipline! Polls consistently show that solid majorities of scientists, even biologists, believe in God. He also sticks to the tired “who created the creator?” whine. Perhaps he should be helped to understand the idea that ‘supernatural’ means ‘beyond nature’ and not within it. He does use the word quite often. He actually continually suggests that theist are inherently ignorant. Another middle school generalization that is central to his entire thesis, and fatal to his credibility. I would be delighted to disprove this simply by presenting myself at his office.
If this is the brightest offering the atheist offer, faith is quite safe. There is nothing new here that hasn’t been dismissed by apologists centuries ago. Dr. Dawkins lacks sufficient depth of philosophy competently to refute the most basic philosophical and scientific arguments for the existence of God. It is probably futile to argue with a man who denies his own soul, but it is fun.
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Spawning an industry
This book is one of several recent works critical of religion and the role it plays in modern life. I really can't find too much fault with Dawkins' arguments although, Lord knows, there are plenty of others who have. Mostly, it seems, they accuse Dawkins of not being sufficently versed...
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This book is one of several recent works critical of religion and the role it plays in modern life. I really can't find too much fault with Dawkins' arguments although, Lord knows, there are plenty of others who have. Mostly, it seems, they accuse Dawkins of not being sufficently versed in theology to comment knowledgably about modern religion (by which they almost always mean modern Christianity). One wonders if they have actually read the book. Dawkins makes it perfectly clear he thinks theology is mostly junk - just makin' stuff up - and there is no reason for a sane man to spend much time on the subject.
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Related Subjects:(27)
- Atheism.
- Religion -- Controversial literature.
- Theology.
- Religion.
- Religion and science.
- Irreligion.
- God.
- Theology
- Religion
- Religious Philosophies
- Religion and Science
- Irréligion.
- Athéisme.
- Dieu.
- Religion -- Ouvrages de controverse.
- Théologie.
- Religion et sciences.
- atheism.
- theology.
- religion (discipline)
- Areligiosität
- Atheismus
- Gotteslehre
- Atheïsme.
- Religiekritiek.
- Athéisme.
- Irréligion.
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