ABSTRACT

This book addresses the flaws and fallacies in the grounds for atheism and theism – flaws and fallacies that contaminate the arguments of non-believers and believers alike. Focusing on the highly visible debates between the New Atheists – such as Christopher Hitchens, Daniel Dennett, Richard Dawkins, and Sam Harris on the one hand – and their main theist opponents – including Frank Turek, John Lennox, and William Lane Craig on the other – it approaches these debates from the perspective of the sociology of religion and science.

With entire worldviews at stake, it explores various failings in the logic, language, and knowledge of the protagonists, revealing mistaken and oversimplified understandings of both science itself and the sociocultural and symbolic roles of religion on both sides. Advancing a secular and humanist worldview unburdened by the problems that beset both atheism and theism, the author argues for a sociological perspective on religion, God, and science as a practice, together with a critical realist approach to the nature of the real world as we experience it.

Beyond New Atheism and Theism will therefore appeal to scholars and students of sociology and cultural studies with interests in the conflicting worldviews of science and religion.

chapter 1|7 pages

Genesis

chapter 2|8 pages

In the Grasp of Secular Reason

chapter 3|10 pages

The Science Turn and Sociology

chapter 4|14 pages

The New Atheist Worldview 1

chapter 5|8 pages

The Dawkins Delusion

chapter 6|13 pages

Case Study

The Tangled Logic of Frank Turek 1

chapter 7|22 pages

Case Study

John Lennox and the Unholy Alliance Between Mathematics, Logic, and God 1

chapter 8|4 pages

Case Study

William Lane Craig – Not Even the Illusion of Reason

chapter 9|12 pages

Hans Küng

A Case Study in the Vicious Circles of Theist Logic 1

chapter 10|5 pages

Case Study

Alvin Plantinga – The Unbearable Absurdity of Christian Philosophy

chapter 11|22 pages

Religion and God in Sociological Perspective

chapter 12|8 pages

Godless but Good

chapter 13|31 pages

The Knowing Society

A Secular Moral Order