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The End of Faith |
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An analysis of the clash of faith and reason in today's world. Harris offers a vivid historical tour of mankind's willingness to suspend reason in favor of religious beliefs, even when those beliefs are used to justify harmful behavior and sometimes heinous crimes. [W. W. Norton]
W.W. Norton & Company, 256 pages
08/16/2004
$24.95
ISBN: 0393035158
Nonfiction
Current Events & Politics
All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...
The average user rating for this book is 8.6 (out of 10) based on 26 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Taran R gave it a10:
The most refreshingly rational and lucid book written on the topic. Harris has an astonishing talent for stating the obvious about the absurd.
Chris H gave it a9:
Most people assume all atheists are left-wing - but if there was ever a right-wing atheist, Sam Harris is it! Rejecting tolerance as a dangerous 'bleeding heart' virtue, and promoting a war of Islam & moderate religious leaders he still manages to come across as rational and thoughtful. The last chapter, however, is as if it was from another book. Promoting 'mysticism' with broad justifications (that he destroyed earlier in the book) like "No one knows if there is life after death" and "Western readers may not understand" seem out of place. I was expecting a chapter on meditation based on psychological & rational benefits, not a call to the faithful. Overall, an excellent and thoughtful read.
Clint S gave it a9:
This is a pretty remarkable book; very easy to follow yet very difficult to put down. Sam presents a crucial message that deserves to be spread about the inanity of organized religion and the value of skepticism and reason. I'm going to try to get my born-again mother-in-law to read it, wish me luck.
Tom W gave it a10:
I do have faith in SAM HARRIS. It needed be said and he did a great job!
Frank R gave it a10:
This book is one of the most compelling treatises on religion I've ever read. Sam paints an interesting portrait, one by one, of each of the World's major religions and, in greater detail, many of the World's sects and denominations with a critical but altogether fair eye. He paints into his picture of these belief systems a critique that compares and contrasts them philosophically and later as to how they have evolved ethically. I can understand how one might be offended when his cold light of reason falls upon one's own particular religion, but I cannot understand how one could not be compelled by his tight logical construction or could put aside his arguments completely. His final conclusions begin to seem rather dismal and anxiety provoking, especially in his treatment of Islam, as being stuck rather where Christianity was stuck in the fourteenth century, yet with potential access by Muslim governments to weapons of mass destruction being a near certainty. Yet from begins to seem the virtual certainty of the ashes of civilization as we know it, he produces, phoenix-like a prescription for global redemption that is at once simple and persuasive. This is a must read volume in any thoughtful person’s bookcase.
Ron B gave it a9:
Harris wields a hammer against the taboo of questioning the faithful, and for this alone his book is important. When he indicts religious "moderates" for their complicity, he is equally unrelenting, pointing out that "...a religious moderate is a failed fundamentalist." His alternative? Reason. Amen to that.
Joseph gave it a10:
Tim W is a fool for not reasoning that he has been blinded by his religious beliefs. Muslim fanatics are chopping peoples' heads off, including two eatchers in Bhagdad, in front of their elementary students, in the name of allah... Jews are co-ercing non jews to fight each other, gotta love Mossad ( by deciet shall we wage war)... Christians? well they are the most dangerous of them all... as they have proven time and again.

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