Description

Book Synopsis
The Athiest’s Primer is a concise but wide-ranging introduction to a variety of arguments, concepts, and issues pertaining to belief in God. In lucid and engaging prose, Malcom Murray offers a penetrating yet fair-minded critique of the traditional arguments for the existence of God. He then explores a number of other important issues relevant to religious belief, such as the problem of suffering and the relationship between religion and morality, in each case arguing that atheism is preferable to theism. The book will appeal to both students and professionals in the philosophy of religion, as well as general audiences interested in the topic.

Trade Review
This book is excellent. Well-written, masterfully concise, easy to follow, and correct in nearly every detail, with an occasional hint of intellectual humor on almost every page. Well-sourced, with helpful notes and up-to-date citations of scholarship, Murray takes on not just conservative theism, but knocks down all the leading props of liberal theism, too. Though not attempting to be comprehensive, Murray nails the core basics, making it the ideal place to start for anyone considering the God question. Theists will be deeply troubled by it. Atheists will find in it new arguments, and new ways to phrase old ones. And for anyone on the fence, it's a must-read." – Dr. Richard Carrier, author of Sense and Goodness without God.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Preface

PART 1. PRELIMINARIES

Chapter 1: Why Not Agnosticism?

  • Proving Non-Existence
    The Burden of Proof
    Fallibilism
    The Common Sense View
    Is Atheism Itself a Metaphysical Belief?
    Summary

Chapter 2: Which God Are You Denying?

  • Kidneys and Hearts
    What Is God?
    Magenta and Pink
    Tolerable Misdescriptions
    Life Force
    The Argument from Experience
    Our Natural Being
    The Point

Chapter 3: Religion without God?

  • Religious Atheism
    Spirit
    The Backdoor God
    Conclusion

Chapter 4: Metaphor and Sacred Texts

  • Inconsistencies
    Improbabilities
    Ignored Dictums
    Partial Literalism
    Metaphorical Reading
    Ricœur and Company

PART II. “PROOFS”

Chapter 5: Ontologic Illogic

  • A Priori and A Posteriori Arguments
    The Ontological Argument
    Null Sets and Hypotheticals
    Barretteless and Imaginary Dolls
    Necessary Existence
    Summary

Chapter 6: Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?

  • The Cosmological Argument
    Inconsistency
    Infinity
    The Kala‾m Argument
    Necessary Beings
    Best Explanation
    Conclusion

Chapter 7: Design or Evolution?

  • The Design Argument
    The Appeal
    The Evolutionary Account
    Chance and Fruit Flies
    Intelligent Design?

Chapter 8: Fine Tuning and Analogy

  • The Design Argument (Again)
    Fine Tuning and Biogenesis
    Analogical Argument Structure
    Watches and Astrolabes
    Summary

Chapter 9: The Moral Argument

  • Aquinas’s Version
    Kant’s Version
    Summary

PART III: ATTRIBUTES

Chapter 10: The Problem of Suffering

  • Inscrutability
    Free Will
    Eschatological Recompense
    Moral Fortitude
    Summary

Chapter 11: Omnipotence

  • The Paradox of the Stone
    No Impossible Powers
    Two Impossible Acts Are Easier Than One
    Mortal Comprehension

Chapter 12: Omniscience and Free Will

  • The Basic Problem
    Weakening Knowledge
    Out of Time
    Different Necessities
    Other Worlds
    Summary

Chapter 13: Time and Immutability

  • Problems with Immutability
    Anthropomorphizing
    Time Revisited
    Summary

Chapter 14: Is God Love?

  • Different Kinds of Love

PART IV. FAITH

Chapter 15: Faith and Reason

  • God Is Special
    Secular Faiths
    Conclusion

Chapter 16: Fideism

  • Kierkegaardian Fideism
    Wittgensteinian Fideism

Chapter 17: Ultimate Concern

  • Ontological, Not Cosmological
    Three Ambiguities
    The Problem

Chapter 18: Po-Mo Theo

  • A Monkey in a Box?
    Summary

Chapter 19: Pascal’s Wager

  • Two Problems
    Defending Pascal

Chapter 20: Non-Falsifiability

  • Flew’s Garden
    Not Logical Positivism
    Falsification and Verification
    Objections
    Replies
    Summary

PART V. IMPLICATIONS

Chapter 21: Mysticism

  • Common Components
    Content
    Method
    Self-Confirming
    Judging by the Effects
    Conclusion

Chapter 22: God and Morality

  • Moral Principles
    The Euthyphro Argument
    Innate Morality?
    Sin and Moral Intuition
    Strategic Interaction
    Conclusion

Chapter 23: The Meaning of Life

  • The Problem of Nihilism
    Reductio Ad Absurdum
    The Argument from Consistency
    The Non Sequitur
    Death
    Rephrasing the Question

Chapter 24: Death

  • Platonic Arguments
    Ghosts in the Machine
    Brain Damage
    Near-Death Experiences
    The Identity Argument
    Summary

Chapter 25: Error Theory

  • Religion’s Success
    Psychological and Sociological Accounts
    The Evolution of Belief
    Conclusion?

Notes
Bibliography
Author Index

The Atheist's Primer

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    A Paperback / softback by Malcolm Murray

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      View other formats and editions of The Atheist's Primer by Malcolm Murray

      Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/04/2010
      ISBN13: 9781551119625, 978-1551119625
      ISBN10: 1551119625

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Athiest’s Primer is a concise but wide-ranging introduction to a variety of arguments, concepts, and issues pertaining to belief in God. In lucid and engaging prose, Malcom Murray offers a penetrating yet fair-minded critique of the traditional arguments for the existence of God. He then explores a number of other important issues relevant to religious belief, such as the problem of suffering and the relationship between religion and morality, in each case arguing that atheism is preferable to theism. The book will appeal to both students and professionals in the philosophy of religion, as well as general audiences interested in the topic.

      Trade Review
      This book is excellent. Well-written, masterfully concise, easy to follow, and correct in nearly every detail, with an occasional hint of intellectual humor on almost every page. Well-sourced, with helpful notes and up-to-date citations of scholarship, Murray takes on not just conservative theism, but knocks down all the leading props of liberal theism, too. Though not attempting to be comprehensive, Murray nails the core basics, making it the ideal place to start for anyone considering the God question. Theists will be deeply troubled by it. Atheists will find in it new arguments, and new ways to phrase old ones. And for anyone on the fence, it's a must-read." – Dr. Richard Carrier, author of Sense and Goodness without God.

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements
      Preface

      PART 1. PRELIMINARIES

      Chapter 1: Why Not Agnosticism?

      • Proving Non-Existence
        The Burden of Proof
        Fallibilism
        The Common Sense View
        Is Atheism Itself a Metaphysical Belief?
        Summary

      Chapter 2: Which God Are You Denying?

      • Kidneys and Hearts
        What Is God?
        Magenta and Pink
        Tolerable Misdescriptions
        Life Force
        The Argument from Experience
        Our Natural Being
        The Point

      Chapter 3: Religion without God?

      • Religious Atheism
        Spirit
        The Backdoor God
        Conclusion

      Chapter 4: Metaphor and Sacred Texts

      • Inconsistencies
        Improbabilities
        Ignored Dictums
        Partial Literalism
        Metaphorical Reading
        Ricœur and Company

      PART II. “PROOFS”

      Chapter 5: Ontologic Illogic

      • A Priori and A Posteriori Arguments
        The Ontological Argument
        Null Sets and Hypotheticals
        Barretteless and Imaginary Dolls
        Necessary Existence
        Summary

      Chapter 6: Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?

      • The Cosmological Argument
        Inconsistency
        Infinity
        The Kala‾m Argument
        Necessary Beings
        Best Explanation
        Conclusion

      Chapter 7: Design or Evolution?

      • The Design Argument
        The Appeal
        The Evolutionary Account
        Chance and Fruit Flies
        Intelligent Design?

      Chapter 8: Fine Tuning and Analogy

      • The Design Argument (Again)
        Fine Tuning and Biogenesis
        Analogical Argument Structure
        Watches and Astrolabes
        Summary

      Chapter 9: The Moral Argument

      • Aquinas’s Version
        Kant’s Version
        Summary

      PART III: ATTRIBUTES

      Chapter 10: The Problem of Suffering

      • Inscrutability
        Free Will
        Eschatological Recompense
        Moral Fortitude
        Summary

      Chapter 11: Omnipotence

      • The Paradox of the Stone
        No Impossible Powers
        Two Impossible Acts Are Easier Than One
        Mortal Comprehension

      Chapter 12: Omniscience and Free Will

      • The Basic Problem
        Weakening Knowledge
        Out of Time
        Different Necessities
        Other Worlds
        Summary

      Chapter 13: Time and Immutability

      • Problems with Immutability
        Anthropomorphizing
        Time Revisited
        Summary

      Chapter 14: Is God Love?

      • Different Kinds of Love

      PART IV. FAITH

      Chapter 15: Faith and Reason

      • God Is Special
        Secular Faiths
        Conclusion

      Chapter 16: Fideism

      • Kierkegaardian Fideism
        Wittgensteinian Fideism

      Chapter 17: Ultimate Concern

      • Ontological, Not Cosmological
        Three Ambiguities
        The Problem

      Chapter 18: Po-Mo Theo

      • A Monkey in a Box?
        Summary

      Chapter 19: Pascal’s Wager

      • Two Problems
        Defending Pascal

      Chapter 20: Non-Falsifiability

      • Flew’s Garden
        Not Logical Positivism
        Falsification and Verification
        Objections
        Replies
        Summary

      PART V. IMPLICATIONS

      Chapter 21: Mysticism

      • Common Components
        Content
        Method
        Self-Confirming
        Judging by the Effects
        Conclusion

      Chapter 22: God and Morality

      • Moral Principles
        The Euthyphro Argument
        Innate Morality?
        Sin and Moral Intuition
        Strategic Interaction
        Conclusion

      Chapter 23: The Meaning of Life

      • The Problem of Nihilism
        Reductio Ad Absurdum
        The Argument from Consistency
        The Non Sequitur
        Death
        Rephrasing the Question

      Chapter 24: Death

      • Platonic Arguments
        Ghosts in the Machine
        Brain Damage
        Near-Death Experiences
        The Identity Argument
        Summary

      Chapter 25: Error Theory

      • Religion’s Success
        Psychological and Sociological Accounts
        The Evolution of Belief
        Conclusion?

      Notes
      Bibliography
      Author Index

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