










Review of 'The Quotable Atheist'The world (not just America) is deeply divided.The main fault line is where the tectonic plates of religion and of reason/secularism/ modernity/science/Enlightenment meet and grind against each other,making an absolutely unbearable noise. It's sort of like ... forget it, I can't describe it.
My aim in compiling The Quotable Atheist was to heal our broken planet, essentially by eliminating the religious part. Not with nuclear weapons or lesser acts of mass murder, no -- that's the religious style, nowadays, in certain quarters -- but through argument, persuasion, and most of all (since I know perfectly well that argument is utterly useless against dumb, blind faith, and just wanted to pay it lip service), the steady application of powerfully abrasive ridicule which will slowly but surely erode away the offending continent. I'm serious. Do I really believe this book will convert believers and turn them from the path of self-righteousness to the path of righteousness? Yes. A few. Three, I estimate. Two for sure. But the point is this:
For years, millions of fine, upstanding American atheists and agnostics have watched and stewed as the religious right expanded its influence throughout public life, and as America closed its mind and opened its heart to angels, aliens, ghosts, psychics, Jesus, astrology, Kabbalah, Genesis, Revelation. ... As Sam Harris wrote in The End of Faith, "Unreason is now ascendant in the United States -- in our schools, in our courts, and in each branch of the federal government. Only 28 percent of Americans believe in evolution; 68 percent believe in Satan. Ignorance in this degree, concentrated in both the head and belly of a lumbering superpower, is now a problem for the entire world."
Meanwhile, religion continues to be granted far too much respect and too little critical examination in our culture and mainstream media.We need to change the cultural climate so as to make supernatural, occult, and faith-based claptrap feel unwelcome and to make adults ashamed of the blithe surrender of their otherwise sound minds to idiocy.We need climate change. Bullshit levels are rising globally, threatening to submerge intellectually low-lying areas. Much of the United States is already inundated.Temperatures are rising; IQs are dropping. Four of the five stupidest years on record have occurred since 2000.
I would of course have preferred a declaration by the president of the United States -- purportedly God's messenger on earth -- stating that neither God nor WMDs ever existed and that most religious beliefs are untrue and harmful, and urging citizens to bring their minds back up at least to an eighteenth-century stage of development. (I have proposed this plan in a letter to George W. Bush, but haven't heard back yet. They must be hashing out the details.) Failing that, it is up to atheist/secularist groups and individuals to do what we can to stop global worming (people groveling like worms before nonexistent deities). That's where this book comes in.
As a number of these collected quotes say (far more wittily): Religion in general is based on falsehoods -- comforting beliefs in a heavenly parent or big brother; hopes of surviving death -- and on utility or expedience: socially cohesive tribal myths; politically useful codes of law and behavior; divine ordination of rulers (including certain presidents); attempts to explain, influence, or placate nature and the elements; the wish to raise ourselves above (i.e., deny our place among) the animals. Religion may help people feel their lives have a loftier purpose than the mere satisfaction of material wants and sensual desires, but it does it with smoke and mirrors, at the cost of our respect for truth and of our integrity and dignity.
2. Comment #22061 by hoops mccann on February 12, 2007 at 8:56 pm
3. Comment #22174 by GeoffreyDinosaurs on February 13, 2007 at 6:21 am
This is an email I sent to Rook from the RRS on Huberman's weird translations, check it out:4. Comment #22235 by CaptainShiny on February 13, 2007 at 4:32 pm
5. Comment #22244 by Caesar Best on February 13, 2007 at 4:55 pm
Dunno Geoff, guess the biggest problem with the bible is the way it's totally open to interpretation. Plus, might have to do with the version of the bible, the content and wording can really differ from version to version and language to language.6. Comment #22249 by John Pritzlaff on February 13, 2007 at 5:21 pm
I doubt he made that up. It's probably just a different version, translation, etc.7. Comment #22474 by madpatriot on February 19, 2007 at 7:39 am
Verses 4-10 of any Psalm would be a much longer text than that quote. It's definitely not any part of Psalm 5. Or any Psalm. In fact, I've searched several translations of the entire Bible (thanks to biblegateway.com) and can't find anything like that quote. I even tried Googling some of the phrases, and get no hits.8. Comment #22901 by woe-monger on February 24, 2007 at 1:58 am
Hi Geoffrey9. Comment #40131 by speedwell on May 13, 2007 at 8:39 am
Here's the source for the quote:This article is reposted from a website that accepts comments.
Why not share your comment on the article there as well? CLICK HERE
1. Comment #22053 by John Pritzlaff on February 12, 2007 at 8:13 pm
I bought this book more than a month ago from Barnes and Noble. It's very good, and I advise anyone reading this to get it. It's only a book of quotes, and yet the quotes are so well picked and researched that it is well worth the money.Other Comments by John Pritzlaff