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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
what a disappointment,
This review is from: The Six Ways of Atheism: New Logical Disproofs of the Existence of God (Paperback)
It would be nice if some clever atheist could come up with a proof of the non-existence of God. It would have to be good enough to convince all the religious people as otherwise noone would actually be changing their minds. Or at least it would have to be full of erudite information about what was written in the past on the subject. Sadly this book has only a few nods to discussions of the past and is quite frankly a boring and repetitive read. Still that could be forgiven it really was a convincing logical disproof of God's existence.If I were attempting such an argument I guess I would start by writing down some assumptions about God that are believed by all monotheists and argue from that point. Indeed the author does attempt to do that. However he seems to throw in an unstated and implicit assumption that God exists within our universe rather than outside of space-time. Most monotheists seem to believe the latter - and usually explicitly. It is also a concept the author ought to have been aware of since it is the perspective one needs to take at least some of the time to understand the theories of relativity. Several of his arguments crumble fairly quickly once you spot this error. It would also presumably help to not make the evangelist's point for them. The author tries to argue that God needs to be supremely "good". He points out that the concept of "good" incorporates the concepts both of "mercy" and "justice" and that you cannot be supremely merciful and just. However the Christian would argue that God did just that in the person of Jesus. There is another facile argument implying that in order to be saved one has to get every single aspect of ones doctrine correct. Religion, or at least the mainstream bits of it, do not work like that. This book is a brave and valiant sortie into the battle against irrationality. Just too bad it is firing blanks.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
hmnn... really?,
By
This review is from: The Six Ways of Atheism: New Logical Disproofs of the Existence of God (Paperback)
This book begins by making some very bold claims, and in a way this is admirable. The author, subtly listed as "a graduate of the university of Cambridge, England" tries to account for his obscurity by claiming that it is simply because of intellectual snobbery that books from people such as him don't get widely recognised. This is a clever but unconvincing disclaimer; the movers and shakers in philosophy are widely known and ridiculously qualified for a reason - and this has nothing to do with snobbery.The ambitious claims in the introduction soon turn into arrogance. The arguments Berg puts forward are unconvincing, and no new ground is broken as the book claims it would. There is constant misuse of the words 'logical' and 'entity' among many others; and it is written in an infuriating quasi-philosophical manner which isn't in the least bit convincing and is bordering on the self-indulgent. The arguments themselves are nothing new, really - anybody with a little bit of common sense could reason them out, so claims of two of them being 'entirely original' are unfounded. The arguments themselves constantly invoke 'logic' to gloss over centuries of valid theological argument - even though nothing about the arguments is logical (they're just set out in a mock-Aquinas style). Berg's concept of God and philosophy, and the often irrelevant name-checks of famous thinkers, are primitive and fundamentally have the essence of a naive student - furthermore, the book is riddled with typos, breaks in flow, clumsy sentences and irrelevant exclamation marks. Why Blackwells priced this at £10 (or even sell it) is beyond me. Even if the very same arguments were presented in a less snotty, more reasonable style and actually WERE acceptable, they would not provide any basis for a belief in atheism. As an atheist and theology student myself I am a little disconcerted that such arguments are branded under the title '...ways of atheism'. A fundamental tenet of the nonbelief system is that the burden of proof lies elsewhere, within the theism camp. This book ignores this, and so ends up looking rather like an idealistic apology - rather like a great number of irrelevant Christian books.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Logically logical logic.,
This review is from: The Six Ways of Atheism: New Logical Disproofs of the Existence of God (Paperback)
Geoffrey Berg has written a book providing six succinct but profound arguments for the view that belief in god is contrary to logic.The six arguments are as follows: 1) The aggregate of qualities argument 2) The man and god comprehension gulf argument 3) The 'god has no explanatory value' argument 4) The 'this is not the best possible world' argument 5) The universal uncertainty argument 6) The 'some of god's defining qualities cannot exist' argument The arguments put forward are logical and all contain at least some elements are original. An important and welcome addition to the atheism debate.
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