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Counterknowledge: How We Surrendered to Conspiracy Theories, Quack Medicine, Bogus Science and Fake History
 
 
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Counterknowledge: How We Surrendered to Conspiracy Theories, Quack Medicine, Bogus Science and Fake History [Paperback]

Damian Thompson
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 176 pages
  • Publisher: Atlantic Books (1 July 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1843546760
  • ISBN-13: 978-1843546764
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 13 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 50,136 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Damian Thompson
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Review

"'An invigorating trumpet blast against the monstrous regiment of twenty-first-century quacks, flat-earthers and mumbo-jumbo merchants, loud enough to wake reason from its sleep.' Francis Wheen 'This excellent little book... should be put in the satchel of every secondary school child, in the departmental pigeonhole of every undergraduate, and in the hands of every officer of every quango called Ofsomething. Widely enough read and clearly enough understood, it might save us from the tsunami of misinformation, falsity, error and distortion that infects our culture.' A C Grayling, New Humanist * 'Powerful, compelling and necessary - in this book Damian Thompson takes a blowtorch to sloppy thinking and stands up for enlightenment values with dash, authority and aplomb.' - Michael Gove * 'The few hours it will take you to read this passionate, angry, wise and witty book will be well spent. You will have a lot of fun and at the same time be armed to the teeth against the many modes of quackery that are abroad today and the ethos that has permitted them to flourish.' - Raymond Tallis * 'Counterknowledge is more than just a thoroughly enjoyable demolition job of every type of modern quackery. Damian Thompson shows how what to us appears harmless pseudo-science breeds nationalism, race hatred and disease.' - Nick Cohen"

A. C. Grayling, New Humanist

'Excellent... Widely enough read and clearly enough understood, 'Counterknowledge' might save us from the tsunami of misinformation, falsity, error and distortion that infects our culture... Superb.'

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 20 people found the following review helpful
By Stucumber VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
A good read but quite slight. Although I did agree with most of the author's arguments it was mostly because I was familiar with them already. I can't imagine that this would likely convince anyone who believes in 'alternative' notions of reality as it doesn't really examine them with any real rigour.

I'm still looking for the definitive book on all things 'woo' and though this is not it, it's still a decent primer into the world of 'Counter-Knowledge'.

Where the subject of this book -counter-knowledge- begins and ends I don't know and from the author's definition I'm still not entirely clear. Given the author's occupation as a writer for a christian publication, what defines orthodox knowledge for him may not chime with everyone else's definition.

Still, I believe at least he is nominally on the side of rationality and reason. Even if some of his personal beliefs, for me, make him a target of his own argument.
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45 of 60 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Firstly, the good points. This book points out many of the more dubious beliefs held by sections of society, and indeed justifiably, it seems, calls for people to open their eyes to many of the highly suspect techniques used by pioneers of 'counterknowledge' in the conveying of their work: 'Loose Change', for example, taking situations out of context and cropping photos to bias their account of events, thus encouraging sceptism of such notions as 9/11 conspiracy theories.

However, the book's downfall is ironically preset in its own approach to 'facts'. Unfortunately, Thompson's reasoning, scattered citations and poorly disguised subjectivity in his portrayal of counterknowledge ultimately mirrors his criticism of how counterknowledge is spread in the first place. For example, in the same paragraph of describing how the 'cultic milieu', in their stupidy, basically think everything is conspiratorial and unrealistic once they accept one conspiracy, he goes on to make the generalisation that since 9/11 is supposedly an unjustified conspiracy, so must be the case with ESP, UFOs, Bible Prophesy, near-death experiences, and so on. This sort of generalisation becomes ubiquitous as the book progresses; and thus Thompson forms his own 'cultic milieu', which should probably be renamed 'sceptic milieu' - as it seems just about as valid to presume that all conspiracies and unlikely events are false as it is to presume that all are true. I see this book as a piece of counterknowledge in itself by the way it arrogantly presents all its inferences and conclusions as fact, thus being as misleading to the weaker-minded reader as the likes of Dan Brown - only on the opposite end of the spectrum.

This said, 'Counterknowledge' does have SOME valid points and, albeit at the expense of its integrity, is an entertaining read.
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36 of 48 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Everyone always goes on about this and that being a 'necessary' book. It is rare to find one that really is necessary as well as being hugely entertaining and thought-provoking.
Thompson writes in clear, elegant prose which belies his deep research of the subject matter. The argument put forward is clear, ratonal and of interest to anyone who's dismayed by the conspiracy theory and easy answer culture of our decade. Previous reviews have mentioned the author's (purported)Catholicism but these purely ad hominem attacks miss the point. Even if you don't agree with Thompson's targets (and with holocaust denial, homeoipathy and creatonism - you'd be remiss not to) then this book is still a valuable treasure trove of methodology. Thompson lays out a process by which all 'knowledge' can be emprically tested. This is so essential that it's a surprise no one teaches it to kids in school.
Oh, did I also mention that te book is funny? well, that it is; acerbic and witty in all the right places. In an age where believeing in UFOs and believing in DNA are accorded the same credibility by the masses, this is that rare thing, a truly necessary book whose lessons you can take with you and apply to anything. In the years to come, this will be seen as a ground-breaking text on destroying dogma and piffle....make sure you read it now and arm yourself against the exigencies of fiction masquerading as fact.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Lightweight Rubbish
A pointless book. The author makes claims that evolution is true, but presents no evidence to substantiate it. The fossil record of course contradicts the claims of evolutionists. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Johns
I can't agree with the author about homeopathy
I borrowed a copy of this book from the public library a couple of years ago, and when I read it, I was very disappointed with the author's attitude toward homeopathy. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Jonathan Davies
Yet another propaganda book
Two quotes spring to mind here:

"You can fool some of the people all of the time; and those are the ones you have to concentrate on." -- George W. Read more
Published 15 months ago by whale.to
Not worth the money?
I came late to this book and what a disappointment. The author has written a derivative pot boiler which draws heavily on well known works and arguments by the likes of Wheen and... Read more
Published 22 months ago by M. Haynes
Completely Useless
I can't believe A C Grayling gave this book a good review. 'Counterknowledge' will not save us from the tsunami of misinformation, falsity, error and distortion that infect our... Read more
Published on 10 Jan 2010 by mysterioustraveller
Attack the Quacks
If conspiracy theories annoy you, bogus 'experts' bother you, and pseudo history frustrates you - here's why it is the credulous fall for so much untested stuff, and why the spread... Read more
Published on 16 Nov 2009 by Dilberto
very skewed
Damian is a good spin doctor at his job praising the Vatican for the Catholic Herald. I suppose there are two kinds of truth for Damian, The Truth and Catholic Truth, but they... Read more
Published on 4 April 2009 by G. Wigmore
Good, but ...
The book is well writen, etc. and I share all of the author's misgivings about counter knowledge, conspiracy theories, etc. Read more
Published on 1 Mar 2009 by Christian Heyde Petersen
Good but bad
Much of this may be excellent, but anyone who lumps together all complementary and alternative medicine as 'quack medicine' and makes no intelligent, fact-based distinction between... Read more
Published on 8 Feb 2009 by amantedofado
Thought-provoking but too short
I thought Mr Thompson's book was a very entertaining and enlightening read. Other reviewers have given a good flavour of what this book is about so I have little to add. Read more
Published on 25 Jan 2009 by Mr X
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