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RE: Dawkins-If Religion worked like science....
October 12, 2010 at 6:04 am
Quote:I'm not being sarcastic-but it seems pretty hardcore for a layman's book on atheism. So what would you recommend for more hardcore atheism reading?? Because I've read both of Sam Harris's books.
Not really. When I read it, it nearly made me become an Agnostic Deist. But its rather weak. He attempts to dismantle the ontological argument (very poorly) He spends too much time attacking fundamentalism than being a storng book. He starts with saying there could be a God and then ends with saying anyone who believes in God is as irrational as an 8 year old.
Dont get me wrong, he is a great scientists, I have a lot of respect for him, but when he comes to Apologetics and philosophy, its too simplistic and rushed to be powerful...
Its ok to have doubt, just dont let that doubt become the answers.
You dont hate God, you hate the church game.
"God is not what you imagine or what you think you understand. If you understand you have failed." Saint Augustine
Your mind works very simply: you are either trying to find out what are God's laws in order to follow them; or you are trying to outsmart Him. -Martin H. Fischer
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RE: Dawkins-If Religion worked like science....
October 12, 2010 at 7:30 pm
I don't know who else has read it, but I really enjoyed "The Case Against God" - by George R. Smith. It must be for the 'layman', since I completely understood it, but it is a more philosophical take on the arguments than a scientific one. I liked it... and I'm not a big fan of philosophy in general. If you haven't read it, I do recommend it.
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RE: Dawkins-If Religion worked like science....
October 12, 2010 at 8:18 pm
By layman all i essentially meant was 'not in any great detail'. That is pretty much the new atheists topics, they sometimes touch on the philosophical arguments in a semi formal style, although not all that often or all that well, most of their good arguments are against objections to atheism or design arguments (Which are usually just personal incredulity fallacies), their moral responses are mainly objections to theists claiming more morality or an argument that atheist morality is superior, rather than addressing the actual questions (See Hitchens vs Craig debate). Dawkins and Hitchens always bring up historical atrocities too, which isn't really an argument against anything, they start by pointing out that x believed y and also did horrible things but then say therefore y = cause of x, which is just poor reasoning.
That is essentially what is the layman atheism is imo, a general understanding of the basic arguments and knowledge about what makes a good argument and what is poor reasoning, the objections to the common arguments for theism, an understanding of why their beliefs are unsubstantiated etc. I think most people here are well above that level, like when you read Dawkins book and don't really do much but agree on tons of points that you already understand or have opinions of, or think of ways he could have rephrased it to be more coherent, or see some mistakes in it. That is imo when you have more than a layman understanding of the subject. That doesn't mean any of the guys writing these books are laymans, because they clearly are not, they could all talk about each point in their book to an extend that could probably fill another book... It's just the book it's self that is mostly aimed at layman understandings of the arguments (in most but not all cases).
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