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L**D
These collected works go together very well.
I'm about 3/4 of the way through and I am very happy I bought this. I don't own any of christopher Hitchen's actual books, I have, however, watched his debates and speeches on Youtube, so I have a fairly good understanding of his arguments. This is not a book by Hitchens, but rather a selection of writings by other atheists.What I wanted from this book was a broad reading of atheistic literature through the ages, and this is exactly that. It is not thorough, but it does go through many of the well known atheists, and also through some lesser known ones. He touches briefly upon Marx, just show people the actual "religion is opium for the masses" quote in context. Apparently that was a pet peeve of Hitchen's, so he added a chapter of Marx's work for clarification.Not only are these selections from arguments, but he also has a chapter from a narrative novel, that highlights a common argument of the "apparent design of the universe" and "something cannot come from nothing", which made it interesting to read the argument in narrative form during a dinner party. There is also a memoir from a man who knew Billy Graham and was close to him; this was one of my favorite parts to read, because it got inside (second hand) the head of Graham and how one decision effected this man's life; a life of education vs a life of preaching to the masses. It was a poignant reflection and probably could've happened to anyone in those circumstances.There is plenty of arguments against the various notions of a god, which mostly focuses on christianity; so if you want the book for that it's definitely a good buy. Although, if you're familiar with all the arguments it won't really show you anything different or new. What it does do is give you the cream of the crop of the writing abilities of various atheists. The arguments may be old now, but their words give them such clarity that it's hard to put down. On the same point, there is this one selected work that had me going for the dictionary every paragraph, it was quite thick, not necessarily pompous, but if english is your second language or your vocabulary is just alright, then it might give you problems. Most the work in here is not difficult to understand, so one could skip over the hard parts and not miss out that much.
S**X
Fantastic, Great, Outstanding, Commentary on many different religions, background and history
Fantastic, Great, Outstanding, Commentary on many different religions, background and history. This book was recommended to me by a friend and at first I was hesitant to get it. I do consider my self a Christian but don't agree with the concept of a Christian theocracy which the ultraconservative Christian Right as tried to push on the United States citizens for the last 30 years in spite of the separation of church and state guaranteed by the constitution.I found this book to be really inspiring in the way it has helped me understand the foundations of many different world religions as well as Christianity. This book confirmed what I have long suspected. Religion has its roots, in superstition, magic and lack of science which over time, has progressed into a political system or theocracy.Some people have called religion the biggest business in the world and I have to agree. This book kinds of grows on you. I was a religion minor in college and thought I knew a lot but boy did I have a lot to learn. I left this book with a feeling that if I want to believe in superstition and magic I still have that choice but it is not anything I would want to base a government on. All the progress we have made in social equality and scientific understanding could be easily wiped away, not just by religions from outside the United States but also from our own Abrahamic religious roots. I consider this book an excellent primer on the origins of world religions as well as showing how religion and politics go hand in hand. I now agree entirely with the founders of our constitution in supporting the separation of church and state. If believing in the spiritual nature of life is comforting to you this book will not take away that feeling. What it may do is strengthen your ability to feel safe and secure in your belief set with out giving into supporting the religion others in power seem to insist on you accepting as authentic.Im happy to say I don't think we have any "God Given Rights" to guns or that we should hate birth control or gays. I also don't want to see us go back to the "good old days" before we knew the Earth was round and not the center of the universe or didn't know germs and viruses caused disease. I feel my sense of the spiritual nature of life most strongly when I am out in nature enjoying the trees and life that surrounds me, but funny, so called "primitive peoples" wiccans and pagans have been feeling the same for generations before the Catholic Church or Islam came into power.I think this is a very liberating collection of work from many diverse experts in all the primary religions of the world and is VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
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