Seven Types of Atheism
From the provocative author of Straw Dogs comes an incisive, surprising intervention in the political and scientific debate over religion and atheism

When you explore older atheisms, you will find that some of your firmest convictions—secular or religious—are highly questionable. If this prospect disturbs you, what you are looking for may be freedom from thought.

For a generation now, public debate has been corroded by a shrill, narrow derision of religion in the name of an often vaguely understood “science.” John Gray’s stimulating and enjoyable new book, Seven Types of Atheism, describes the complex, dynamic world of older atheisms, a tradition that is, he writes, in many ways intertwined with and as rich as religion itself.

Along a spectrum that ranges from the convictions of “God-haters” like the Marquis de Sade to the mysticism of Arthur Schopenhauer, from Bertrand Russell’s search for truth in mathematics to secular political religions like Jacobinism and Nazism, Gray explores the various ways great minds have attempted to understand the questions of salvation, purpose, progress, and evil. The result is a book that sheds an extraordinary light on what it is to be human.

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Seven Types of Atheism
From the provocative author of Straw Dogs comes an incisive, surprising intervention in the political and scientific debate over religion and atheism

When you explore older atheisms, you will find that some of your firmest convictions—secular or religious—are highly questionable. If this prospect disturbs you, what you are looking for may be freedom from thought.

For a generation now, public debate has been corroded by a shrill, narrow derision of religion in the name of an often vaguely understood “science.” John Gray’s stimulating and enjoyable new book, Seven Types of Atheism, describes the complex, dynamic world of older atheisms, a tradition that is, he writes, in many ways intertwined with and as rich as religion itself.

Along a spectrum that ranges from the convictions of “God-haters” like the Marquis de Sade to the mysticism of Arthur Schopenhauer, from Bertrand Russell’s search for truth in mathematics to secular political religions like Jacobinism and Nazism, Gray explores the various ways great minds have attempted to understand the questions of salvation, purpose, progress, and evil. The result is a book that sheds an extraordinary light on what it is to be human.

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Seven Types of Atheism

Seven Types of Atheism

by John Gray
Seven Types of Atheism

Seven Types of Atheism

by John Gray

Paperback

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Overview

From the provocative author of Straw Dogs comes an incisive, surprising intervention in the political and scientific debate over religion and atheism

When you explore older atheisms, you will find that some of your firmest convictions—secular or religious—are highly questionable. If this prospect disturbs you, what you are looking for may be freedom from thought.

For a generation now, public debate has been corroded by a shrill, narrow derision of religion in the name of an often vaguely understood “science.” John Gray’s stimulating and enjoyable new book, Seven Types of Atheism, describes the complex, dynamic world of older atheisms, a tradition that is, he writes, in many ways intertwined with and as rich as religion itself.

Along a spectrum that ranges from the convictions of “God-haters” like the Marquis de Sade to the mysticism of Arthur Schopenhauer, from Bertrand Russell’s search for truth in mathematics to secular political religions like Jacobinism and Nazism, Gray explores the various ways great minds have attempted to understand the questions of salvation, purpose, progress, and evil. The result is a book that sheds an extraordinary light on what it is to be human.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250234780
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 12/10/2019
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 8.10(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

John Gray is the author of many critically acclaimed books, including The Silence of Animals, The Immortalization Commission, Black Mass, and Straw Dogs. A regular contributor to The New York Review of Books, he has been a professor of politics at Oxford, a visiting professor at Harvard and Yale, and a professor of European thought at the London School of Economics. He now writes full-time.

Hometown:

San Francisco, California

Date of Birth:

1951

Place of Birth:

Houston, Texas

Education:

B.A., M.A., Maharishi European Research University; Ph.D., Columbia Pacific University, 1982

Table of Contents

Introduction: How to be an Atheist

What religion is not

1. The New Atheism: A Nineteenth-century Orthodoxy

The Grand Pontiff of Humanity

Why science cannot dispel religion

The true threat to monotheism

New atheism and old illiberalism

2. Secular Humanism, a Sacred Relic

Progress, a Christian myth

Plato for the masses

John Stuart Mill, the saint of rationalism

Bertrand Russell, unwilling sceptic

From Nietzsche to Ayn Rand

3. A Strange Faith in Science

Evolution vs ethics

Racism and anti-Semitism in the Enlightenment

Mesmerism, the first religion of science

Science and the abolition of man

Transhumanism as techno-monotheism

4. Atheism, Gnosticism and Modern Political Religion

Millenarianism and Gnosticism in the western tradition

Jan Bockelson’s Münster: an early modern communist theocracy

Jacobinism, the first modern political religion

Bolshevism: millenarian hopes, Gnostic visions

Bockelson, Hitler and the Nazis

Evangelical liberalism

5. God-haters

The Marquis de Sade and the dark divinity of Nature

Ivan Karamazov hands back his ticket

William Empson: God as a Belsen commandant

6. Atheism without Progress

George Santayana, an atheist who loved religion

Joseph Conrad and the godless sea

7. The Atheism of Silence

The mystical atheism of Arthur Schopenhauer

Two negative theologies: Benedict Spinoza and Lev Shestov

Conclusion

Living without belief or unbelief

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