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M**O
Compelling read
Although I've always considered myself as an atheist, I can't say I've actually read that much on the subject, just opinions I've formed myself. To this day it completely baffles me that so many people in this world believe in a god. Anyway, this book is absolutely fascinating. Although originally written in the 70's, a lot of what's said obviously hasn't dated. Not only did this book make my atheist beliefs stronger, but it gives me more depth to my reasons behind my beliefs. The book deals with just about every argument there is for a god, from the basic concept of a "god", and the many contradictions of an alleged god's "characteristics", to deeper themes of faith, the cosmological arguments, and morality. Whatever the argument is that the theist will throw at you, this book refutes every single one of them, which is one of the reasons why this book is so handy for the atheist. If you are an atheist then you no doubt already have your own thoughts/reasons for being so, but this book will give you a stronger foundation to work from when standing your ground against a theist/christian. The book gets a little heavy going the further you get into it (and bogs down a little during the chapters on faith), but they are all important arguments you should be aware of, and the author always goes out of his way to simplify things by giving analogical examples. During some chapters I was even making notes of interesting points I could use!. Overall, a fascinating read that all atheists' should be "armed" with. And as most should know, although most arguments with theists ultimately prove to be futile, you'll have a lot more interesting (and valid) points to throw at him/her after reading this book.
M**2
Best Atheist Book
Move over Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris, Mencken, Nietzsche, Feuerbach and everyone else; this is the best book promoting atheism.Smith covers, and expertly refutes, everything from natural theology, to skepticism, to religious existentialism (very funny quotes), and even has time for a direct attack on Jesus, something which we see all too rarely, even amongst non-believers.It is very rare that I come across a book where I agree with pretty much everything that the author says. Since Smith is an Aristotelian, he is free from what Nietzsche called 'der moraline', that horrible, Christianity-inspired, altruistic, moralistic edge which penetrates the works of most atheists.Morality in the service of man. Man's mind in the service of himself. This is what Smith upholds.
J**S
Comprehensive demolition of the very idea of god(s)!
Smith's book dates from 1979. You might expect it to be peppered with scientific arguments that might now be out of date, but in fact he doesn't use any. Arguing that atheism is the default and remaining position if theism does not hold up, Smith spends the whole of his 300 pages hacking away at theism from a purely philosophical perspective.This is a rigorous, trenchant attack on the evasions and smoke-clouds of theology. Although he focuses on christianity for cultural reasons, Smith's arguments are as readily applicable to any theistic religion. The philosophical approach sounds dry and dusty, but in fact the author's irritated slam-dunks make for a very entertaining read: sometimes you can almost hear his eyes roll:"Anything asked in the name of Jesus will be granted, including the miraculous transportation of a mountain. It would take very few examples of mountain moving to convert the atheists of the world, but the modern Christian is reluctant to defend these grandiose claims of faith, much less attempt an actual demonstration."A particular pleasure was Smith's brisk and effortless demolition of the Argument from Design and the Argument from Life - in each case not even mentioning evolution!The book does get a little boggy towards the end, when he outlines a meta-ethics based on Ayn Rand's work. But the fun returns for some welcome pops at the rarely-criticised precepts of Jeebus at the end. Those theists who (spuriously) dismiss the likes of Dawkins as insufficiently versed in theology might find Smith's book an uncomfortable riposte.
M**E
This book is brilliant
I am already of the opinion that all organised religions are anti-human and George Smith explains clearly why this is so.In a simple and straightforward style the author describes the tricks of religious arguments and exposes its supporters for what they are - anti-human advocates of irrationality.If you have ever questioned why you feel uncomfortable about religion this author is an excellent resourceGeorge H Smith's book 'Ayn Rand And Other Heresies' is also excellent reading.
M**Y
Five Stars
Excellent book, very clearly written and Mr Smith makes some very good points against religion.
K**S
Atheist
As an Atheist myself, I need ammunition to fight off the inane questions from the religious nutters!
S**N
Excellent
An excellent guide in logic and philosophical principles. The author uses his skills to highlight the so-called biblical inerrencies and demolish them. I would happily walk into any church armed with this book.
N**2
Atheism: The Case Against God
In "Atheism: The Case Against God", Smith makes a very good case against God and for atheism. He also shows that many of those who call themselves agnostics really are atheists.He points out many inconsistencies in the Christian god and shows that it can not possibly exist, and also gives many good arguments against gods in general. He makes a good case against faith as an alternative method to reason of acquiring knowledge.The book almost deserves five stars, but it tends to get a bit repetitive at times and some parts are a bit heavy handed. Anyway, this is definately a book that everyone interested in religion or atheism should read.
P**D
Une leçon de rigueur
Ouvrage passionnant surtout dans ses premiers chapitres. Une approche déductive irréprochable. Par moments le texte se complique et le lecteur se trouve largement dépassé. On apprend énormément mais on n’est pas mécontent d’arriver à la dernière page. Des prises de position claires et parfois excessives. A lire en compte-gouttes mais à lire quand même.
A**E
Very usefull and interesing
I Always had an interest in critical thinking and atheism. This book provides just that. It is certainly useful and full of interesting arguments. A must have book on the Bookshelf if you want to have reasons not to believe.
R**H
Brilliant, Wonderful, A Rational Minded Treat
Smith's book is brilliant (Good End Notes too). Rational arguments against the existence of god are solid and irrefutable. Maintaining faith in this fiction (xanity) has no rational basis. Smith asserts. "Atheists have long contended that the concept of god is unintelligible, this being a major reason why it cannot be accepted by any rational man. The theist who openly admits this cannot expect to be taken seriously. The idea of the unknowable is an insult to the intellect, and it renders theism wholly implausible." (Smith p.45) Smith shows how all definitions of god reduce to religious agnosticism. The agnostic's & xantian's common belief in the unknowable nature of god as expressed in alleged qualities such as ineffable, inexpressible, transcendent and unfathomable support the foregoing conclusion. This allows us to learn that "If god is completely unknowable, the concept of "god" is totally devoid of content, and the word "god" becomes a meaningless sound." (Ibid p.44) Therefor since "Religious agnosticism suffers from the obvious flaw that one cannot possiblly know that something exists without some knowledge of what it is that exists." (Ibid p.43) Smith delivers to the reader the inescapable conundrum of Xanity. Two choices present themselves to the believer. Quit the defense of the supernatural, or broadcast belief in the existence of a supernatural being "while arguing that this being is knowable, at least to some extent, by the human mind." (Ibid p.46) To claim god is unknowable yet knowable is to forsake the keep of reason.Chapter three explores various characteristics of god, so the reader learns that "...the attributes of the Christian God cannot withstand critical examination; the concept of God is permeated with ambiguities, contradictions and just plain nonsense." (Ibid p.50) Both positive and negative theology are failures in alleviating these logical inconsistencies. Negative theology defines what god is not while positive theology asserts what god is. Both fail because of the Laws of Logic, The Law of Identity: A is A or anything is itself; The Law of Excluded Middle: Anything is either A or not-A; The Law of Contradiction: Nothing can be both A and not-A. (Ibid p.143)On page 47 Smith lists the attributes of god from the National Catholic Almanac: "...According to this source, God is "almighty, eternal, holy, immortal, immense, immutable, incomprehensible, ineffable, infinity, invisible, just, loving, merciful, most high, most wise, omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, patient, perfect, provident, supreme, true." How is it possible for the Catholic writers to declare god is incomprehensible yet list twenty-two other traits? Smith found a xantian explanation. Thomas in "Philosophy and Religious Belief" asserts that god is not only ineffable but also immanent. God cannot be ineffable and immanent for to be incapable of being expressed or indescribable is to not exist while existing or remaining within and being restricted to the mind are contradictory. No being as depicted in the National Catholic Almanac can exist any more than can a square circle. Thomas fails to reconcile god's incomprehensiblity with other attributes. Xanity and agnosticism share the same irrationality. The agnostic has advantage over the xantian. She knows better than to assign qualities to god, for to say anything about god is to limit god. To assert god possesses characteristic A is to say that does not have attribute not-A. (paraphrased from John Hospers, "An Introduction to Philosophical Analysis") "Existence entails a finite nature, and if God exists, then God must be a finite being." (Smith p.49) Smith concludes that no attempt to define god succeeds. "After judging religious agnosticism - the belief in a unknowable god - to be indefensible, we examined Christianity's attempt to escape from the irrationalism of agnosticism while retaining the notion of a supernatural being. The escape was a total failure. The attributes of the Christian God are merely a disguise, an elaborate subterfuge designed to obscure the fact that the Christian God is also unknowable. God's characteristics, while supposedly giving us information about God's nature. Actually accomplish the reverse: they plunge us further into agnosticism." (Smith p.87)The only flaw was in chapter nine "The Cosmological Arguments" While Smith succeeds in refuting "The First Cause Argument" for god by demonstrating decoupling of causality from the epistemological context of existence, for "To demand a cause for all of existence it to demand a contradiction: if the cause exists, it is part of existence; if it does not exist, it cannot be a cause ... Causality presupposes existence, existence does not [presuppose causality ... Existence - not God - is the First Cause." he implies the Steady State model of Cosmology. We now know through observational data of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation and the accelerated expansion of the Universe that the Steady State model fails. Smith wrote Atheism The Case Against God in 1979, at least two years prior to Alan Guth's Inflation theory. Inflation is now established as a leading theory of cosmic origins. The Universe began uncaused by a Quantum Vacuum Fluctuation that gave rise to the energy potential of a Higgs inflationary field. This resulted in a rapid(10^-32 second) expansion of space-time of the order of magnitude of 10^50. There was no cause or causality associated with this primordial or indeed any other Quantum Vacuum Fluctuation. All the energy of the entire Universe was compressed into a Planck sized region at the inception of the Inflationary period much like a similar sized Black Hole. This means the Universe began in a state of maximum entropy; thus, no information from any time prior to the Inflationary epoch could have survived. Additionally, the rapid expansion created much room for order to form. As the fundamental forces decoupled from one another via spontaneous symmetry breaking, the nature of energy, matter, and the dark energy/matter congealed into what we see or infer. This well known and verified scenario solves/refutes all of the cosmological arguments for god. A new afterward addendum to the book would thus seem to be needed.
S**D
Best book on athiesm so far
I own several books on the topic, this is my favourite by far.
B**K
Enduring Knowledge
Atheism: The Case Against God by George H. Smith"Atheism: The Case Against God" is an accessible, scholarly philosophical book that makes compelling arguments against the concept of a supreme being. It's a book that offers cogent arguments to the question of god() in a logical manner. This 355-page book is composed of the following four parts: 1. Atheism and God, 2. Reason, Faith and Revelation, 3. The Arguments for God, and 4. God: The Practical Consequences.Positives:1. A thorough, well-written book that dissects the most common arguments for god().2. Great wisdom throughout this book. Ideas explained in a lucid manner. Consider the following, "While one may assert that something is presently unexplained, one may never conclude that something is inherently unexplainable." Excellent!3. Great systematic approach of defining concepts and conveying ideas.4. Provides great ammo for debates.5. Good use of sound logic.6. The problem of evil dissected.7. In defense of science.8. Reason and faith as exclusive terms.9. Everything you wanted to know about the limitations of faith.10. What theology entails.11. The misology of the Bible.12. Arguments for god() logically dissected.13. What the Second Law of thermodynamics pertains to.14. The difference between rational and religious morality.15. How Christianity thrives on guilt.16. Excellent reading list.Negatives:1. In spite of Mr. Smith's excellent approach, philosophy can be difficult to follow at times.2. The book may be uneven at times, spending too much time dissecting faith while spending less time on say debunking souls.3. Since the book was written some time ago, some ideas have evolved. The use of skeptic and anti-skeptic comes to mind.In summary, Mr. Smith takes on a freethinking journey of reason. His accessible yet profound approach makes a very strong case for atheism. I really enjoyed his style of writing which is lucid and compelling and he has clarified many concepts for me. This a wonderful book to introduce someone new or someone like me who is seeking philosophical clarity. A true classic and like fine wine gets even better with time.Further recommendations: "Sense and Goodness Without God" by Richard Carrier, "Decoding the Language of God..." by George C. Cunningham, "50 Reasons People Give for Believing in a God" by Guy P. Harrison, "Godless..." by Dan Barker, and "Why I became an Atheist" by John Loftus.
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