From the Bookshelf of Atheists and Skeptics…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

Well, this settles it once and for all. There is no God. Which turns out to be a good thing, considering the God most Americans believe in is a crazy, vengeful, ego-maniacal monster. Dawkins’ insights are so cunning and profound you can’t help feeling embarrassed for the believer.
Some of the main arguments:
Believer #1: The diversity of life is too complex to be random, so it must have been designed by someone even more complex.
Dawkins: If the designer is so complex, then it must’ve been created ...more
Some of the main arguments:
Believer #1: The diversity of life is too complex to be random, so it must have been designed by someone even more complex.
Dawkins: If the designer is so complex, then it must’ve been created ...more

Okay, so it starts off very dismissive, pedantic, and dickish, but in the last half, this book totally grew on me. There is some really decent information in here that could've only been written by Dawkins. I really had to get through about 150 or 200 pages to anything that spoke to me, but I really dug the section "Why There Almost Certainly Is No God" and especially loved the section on religious memes, comparing them to the selfish gene. Also very fascinating was the section on "cargo cults"
...more

Dawkins makes a comprehensive and effective case that God probably doesn't exist, but more importantly he discusses the way "belief", in the Christian tradition, and especially in the United States, has become sacrosanct and has intruded upon secular life in ways that could only make sense to the blindly faithful. However, Dawkins preaches to the choir (as usual), and in doing so loses an audience he hopes to influence, those who struggle with dogma imposed on them during formative years. He cri
...more

Apr 08, 2008
Aaron
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
faith-and-lack-thereof
I enjoyed the majority of this book... the latter half much more than the former. Although I'm a strong atheist myself, I'm not quite sold on Dawkin's argument against the probability of God. It is solid reasoning, of course, and he does a great job of destroying any logical argument for god in general, and for the God of Christianity/Judaism/Islam in particular. For those with faith, however, reason doesn't matter, and possibly never will. I don't get it, myself, but I understand that a lot of
...more

Jul 12, 2007
Krishan
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
science-math-and-philosophy
Here Dawkins explains why belief in God is incompatible with a reasonable scientific worldview. Dawkins spends more time on the science than Harris or Hitchens do. If you like 'The End of Faith' you like this too.
...more




Jul 18, 2007
siouxzee
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
philosophy-theology,
politics-social

Oct 26, 2007
Annie
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
recommended,
read-with-mike
![★ K ★ [In a slump but still here!]](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1740712564p2/718640.jpg)
Dec 27, 2007
★ K ★ [In a slump but still here!]
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition

Apr 15, 2008
Jason
is currently reading it