The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
|
Book Reviews of The God Delusion
Scientific American
Richard Dawkins, in The God Delusion,
tells of his exasperation with colleagues who try to
play both sides of the street: looking to science for
justification of their religious convictions while evading
the most difficult implicationsthe existence of
a prime mover sophisticated enough to create and run
the universe, "to say nothing of mind reading millions
of humans simultaneously." Such an entity, he argues,
would have to be extremely complex, raising the question
of how it came into existence, how it communicates through
spiritons!and where it resides. Dawkins is frequently
dismissed as a bully, but he is only putting theological
doctrines to the same kind of scrutiny that any scientific
theory must withstand. No one who has witnessed the
merciless dissection of a new paper in physics would
describe the atmosphere as overly polite.
Book Description
Discover magazine recently called Richard
Dawkins "Darwin's Rottweiler" for his fierce
and effective defense of evolution. Prospect magazine
voted him among the top three public intellectuals in
the world (along with Umberto Eco and Noam Chomsky).
Now Dawkins turns his considerable intellect on religion,
denouncing its faulty logic and the suffering it causes.
He critiques God in all his forms, from the sex-obsessed
tyrant of the Old Testament to the more benign (but
still illogical) Celestial Watchmaker favored by some
Enlightenment thinkers. He eviscerates the major arguments
for religion and demonstrates the supreme improbability
of a supreme being. He shows how religion fuels war,
foments bigotry, and abuses children, buttressing his
points with historical and contemporary evidence. In
so doing, he makes a compelling case that belief in
God is not just irrational, but potentially deadly.
Dawkins has fashioned an impassioned, rigorous rebuttal
to religion, to be embraced by anyone who sputters at
the inconsistencies and cruelties that riddle the Bible,
bristles at the inanity of "intelligent design,"
or agonizes over fundamentalism in the Middle Eastor
Middle America.
Book Excerpts from The God Delusion
|
"A study in
the leading journal Nature by Larson and
Witham in 1998 showed that of those American scientists
considered eminent enough by their peers to have
been elected to the National Academy of Sciences
(equivalent to being a Fellow of the Royal Society
in Britain) only about 7 per cent believe in a
personal God. This overwhelming preponderance
of atheists is almost the exact opposite of the
profile of the American population at large, oh
whom more than 90 per cent are believers in some
sort of supernatural being."
-- Page 100
|
| |
| |
Please consider joining our book
discussion and reading group!
The
God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
|