Book Review: The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins - Page 3

He labels Mother Teresa a hypocrite for speaking out against abortion but never mentions exactly what the nature of her hypocrisy is. In fact, when Dawkins enters the squalor that Mother Teresa served in, perhaps then he might be fit to stand over her in judgment.

Dawkins never mentions that the religious give more in charity, volunteer more, and are generally active in trying to make their communities a better place to live. He brings up figures who have long been ignored or have shown themselves to be frauds, such as Jerry Fawell, Ted Haggert, Fred Phelps, and so on. He pre-selects the most scandalous religious figures and casually ignores the noblest ones. He makes sweeping generalizations that simply aren't true. Speaking only from the Catholic perspective, I know of no serious Catholic theologian or cleric who says unquestioned faith is a virtue.

Yet his rationality does creep in from time to time. He is skeptical of the onslaught against the Catholic Church in the wake of the sex abuse crisis. While one pedophiliac priest is one too many, there are many other institutions that have far greater problems with sex abuse and covering it up (e.g., Planned Parenthood, high school guidance counselors, etc). He doesn't subscribe to the widespread censorship in the name of "separation of church and state" either, realizing that the Bible is important for literature and a proper understanding of history.

Throughout the book you can see the internal unconscious struggle in Dawkins between irrational hate and reason. Occasionally his reason creeps to the surface only to be shoved back down again. This latest missive of antitheistic thought, while celebrated by cognoscenti as a defense of reason, is a radical departure from reason. Dawkins states he despises confrontational gladiatorial contests that substitute for intelligent discourse these days, yet he just can't help himself from descending into misanthropic zeal. The book remains a rehash of pop philosophy and loosely strung-together anecdotes, half-truths, and outright falsehoods. A defense of reason? Hardly.

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Article Author: John Bambenek

John Bambenek is a freelance columnist and author. He is a digitial forensics expert and owns his own cybercrime consulting firm, Bambenek Consulting.

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  • 1 - Ruvy in Jerusalem

    Dec 12, 2006 at 4:41 pm

    Nice review, John. You made this sound like a book Chris Rose would love to have... As for me, I'll stick to my Bible... I paid for it already.

    On a different topic; what is your take on the kidnapping of the Mortara kid?

  • 2 - John Bambenek

    Dec 12, 2006 at 5:27 pm

    Honestly, I don't know. I read Mortara's statement on the issue and some of the other stuff. It looks like the kid was stuck in the middle of a political conflict and possibly used by both sides as a club. At first glance, it's hard to tell what was BS political spin and what was legit. It doesn't appear anyone was innocent however.

  • 3 - zingzing

    Dec 13, 2006 at 4:14 pm

    "The book remains a rehash of pop philosophy and loosely strung-together anecdotes, half-truths, and outright falsehoods."

    ahem. which book?

    also, i don't doubt that your hatred for this so-called "antitheism" informed your reading and your review.

    like anything involving belief and a community, religion has done a lot of good and a lot of bad. it is responsible for a lot of good, but, as you point out (in a different context), maybe that would have happened anyway. people should be good to people. that's what's worth taking from the bible.

    it is also responsible for a lot of bad. religious persecution does not happen without religion. the battle between palestine and israel is most certainly about land, but it is fueled by religion. the "war on terror" is about western influence in the middle east, but it is, again, not without religious hatred.

    he has a point to make. of course, he is going to use those facts (be they real or perceived) that back up his point. it's also a book on religion. books on religion do not usually look at things from more than one angle, now do they?

  • 4 - John Bambenek

    Dec 13, 2006 at 5:56 pm

    Which book?

    It's a freaking book review, the name of the book is in the title.

  • 5 - beepbeepitsme

    Dec 13, 2006 at 6:52 pm

    RE Dawkins Richard Dawkins - Speaks in Lynchberg Virginia

  • 6 - Irony Alert

    Dec 13, 2006 at 7:17 pm

    "The book remains a rehash of pop philosophy and loosely strung-together anecdotes, half-truths, and outright falsehoods."

    Exactly like every article ever published by John Bambenek, academic "professional."

  • 7 - zingzing

    Dec 13, 2006 at 7:48 pm

    john, master of the oblivious: "Which book?

    It's a freaking book review, the name of the book is in the title."

    no, no. think a little. what other book is "a rehash of pop philosophy and loosely strung-together anecdotes, half-truths, and outright falsehoods?"

    thas right. maybe "irony alert" was more right than he thought.

  • 8 - zingzing

    Dec 13, 2006 at 7:51 pm

    did you bother to read the rest of the comment?

    i'm surprised you actually read this book... but i bet you coulda written the review without actually having done so.

  • 9 - Col. Mustard

    Dec 14, 2006 at 12:14 am

    I'll guess the Bible in the Library.

  • 10 - mn

    Dec 15, 2006 at 6:46 am

    "For that matter, he ignores many well-documented miracles revolving around Mary or the Eucharist."

    sapienti sat. dawkins might be unfair and harsh, but this review is anything else but rational.

  • 11 - Derwent

    Dec 19, 2006 at 11:55 pm

    "Dawkins never mentions that the religious give more in charity, volunteer more, and are generally active in trying to make their communities a better place to live."

    I assume this is simply an assumption. Even it it were true - and I won't take your word for it that it is - one mustn't mistake correlation with causation.

    Indeed, even if it were true AND the reason these people gave more to charity etc. was because they were religious, that would have no bearing on the truthfulness of their belief systems. I could give away everything I own for the sake of the poor, but that would not prove the Flying Spaghetti Monster exists. And if the ONLY reason I'm being generous is because my imaginary boss the FSM tells me to be, I don't see how that really makes me a more moral person.

    As for "making our communities better places to live" - a somewhat ambiguous goal - by what stretch of the imagination do you believe that atheists don't do this? Do you think we all want to live in squallor, surrounded by violent, drug-dealing rapists, ignoring the plight of those less fortunate than oursleves?

    Really, if you are going to critique someone's objectivity and rationality you should make sure your own house is in order first.

  • 12 - beepbeepitsme

    Jan 03, 2007 at 6:40 am

    They may give more to charity because they are pooping their pants about a non-existent hell.

  • 13 - Nathan Zimmerman

    Feb 13, 2007 at 10:12 am

    In the review, you claim that "it contains many of the same arguments that have been hashed and rehashed for centuries." However, most of the replies he has to philosophical arguments for god are arguments that simply do not work... They are arguments that have been refuted and left behind.

    I am not saying that there are no good arguments against the ontological argument. I am saying that there are no good arguments in Dawkins' book against the ontological argument. He puts Gaunillo's famous criticism of the "perfect island" in terms of a flying pig. Anselm had a response to that nearly 1,000 years ago.
    If you're going to try to debunk religion, you should probably use arguments which haven't already been shown to be faulty.

    For further analysis of the problematic logic within Dawkins' polemic.

  • 14 - Christopher Rose

    Feb 14, 2007 at 8:02 am

    There's no need to bother with any refutations of philosophical arguments for god - or any other type of argument either. The simple fact is that there is no evidence for the existence of any gods at all.

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