An Intelligent Person's Guide to Religion

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Religion
Author: John Haldane
Publisher: Overlook Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2005-10-25
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9781585677221

We live, allegedly, in a postmodern age in which we have cast aside the narrative fantasies of the pre-modern era. If postmodernism represents the final abandonment of all grand theories, where does religion stand? If religion is a particularly unbelievable form of explanation, why does it power still affect social and political change? Here, like the skeptics of our age, the author asks, What has theology ever had to say that was of the slightest use to anyone? He argues that religion without God is like a car without an engine, and draws on many aspects of human culture to offer a defense of religion that is not only credible but necessary in an age when postmodernism itself has been exposed as a cruel illusion.

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Religion

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Religion
Author: John Haldane
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2003
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN:

This polemical book argues that philosophy's silencing of religion as irrational thinking is wrong and that only religion can offer cogent answers when it comes to understanding life

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Atheism

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Atheism
Author: Daniel Harbour
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2003
Genre: Atheism
ISBN: 9780715632291

A controversial study that argues for the value of atheism in modern society. The debate about atheism has staled since the time of Bertrand Russell. In this work, Daniel Harbour returns to its core issues - the existence of God, the values of faith, the role of religion in society - and casts them in an entirely new light. The real question, he argues, is how we should consider our urge to understand the world. Only then can we ask ourselves whether atheism or theism forms part of a coherent worldview. This new debate between atheism and theism forces us into an investigation of philosophy, science, history, ethics and aesthetics, and a desire for intellectual integrity and commitment to truth. It is far removed from the usual listing of the errors of theism. Not can atheism be equated with denialism. It holds real and practical implications for the place of religion and the obligations of atheists in our society.

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Catholicism

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Catholicism
Author: Alban McCoy
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 162
Release: 2005-05-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780826476722

Addresses the key questions that non-Catholics—and even Catholics—have about Roman Catholicism.

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Philosophy

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Philosophy
Author: Roger Scruton
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 177
Release: 1999-02-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1101174056

"Philosophy's the 'love of wisdom', can be approached in two ways: by doing it, or by studying how it has been done," so writes the eminent philosopher Roger Scruton. In this user-friendly book, he chooses to introduce philosophy by doing it. Taking the discipline beyond theory and "intellectualism," he presents it in an empirical, accessible, and practical light. The result is not a history of the field but a vivid, energetic, and personal account to guide the reader making his or her own venture into philosophy. Addressing a range of subjects from freedom, God, reality, and morality, to sex, music, and history, Scruton argues philosophy's relevance not just to intellectual questions, but to contemporary life.

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Medicine

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Medicine
Author: Theodore Dalrymple
Publisher: Gerald Duckworth & Company Limited
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2001
Genre: Medical care
ISBN: 9780715629734

Health is on of those subjects that seems easy to define and then, the closer one gets, is more and more difficult to understand. Does the health of a schizophrenic really improve by being sedated and kept in an asylum? Is a course of Prozac or psychotherapy aimed to make someone happy really a medicine? These incompatible views are most visible in the NHS which has over the decades become the focus of all these projections of health. At the expense of the taxpayer many are being cured while there is no money for some of those who have physical ailments in a real sense. In this book, Theodore Dalrymple sets out to tear into the myths that he believes our politicians have created, with anecdotes from his own experience as a doctor.

Finding Faith

Finding Faith
Author: Brian D. McLaren
Publisher: Harper Collins
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2000-06-27
Genre: Apologetics
ISBN: 0310238382

Is there a God? - What might God be like? - What is the relationship between faith and certainty? - Can intelligent people believe in spiritual realities? - Why are there so many religions? - Is it possible to experience a relationship with God--and if so, how? If you've asked questions like these, you're in good company. From songwriters such as Bob Dylan and Jewel Kilcher to TV shows such as The X Files and Touched by an Angel, the media and the arts reflect postmodern men and women's search for a living faith and a spiritually oriented life. Real faith isn't blind believism. It is a process that engages your intellect as well as your emotions. If you think faith requires turning your back on truth and intellectual honesty, then Finding Faith is one book you really ought to read. With logic, passion, and even-handedness that the thinking person will appreciate, this book helps you face your obstacles to faith by focusing not on what to believe, but on how to believe. Whether you want to strengthen the faith you have, renew the faith you lost, or discover faith for the first time, Finding Faith can coach, inspire, encourage, and guide you, and help you discover more in life than you'd ever imagined or hoped for.

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Understanding Islam and Muslims

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Understanding Islam and Muslims
Author: Ikram Hawramani
Publisher: Independently Published
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2018-12-28
Genre:
ISBN: 9781792815331

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Understanding Islām and Muslims is a multidisciplinary study of Islam as it is lived and experienced by Muslims, presenting an alternative way of seeing Islam that dispels the myths popularized by such works as The Crisis of Islam, The Closing of the Muslim Mind and other attempts that leap from theory to practice without taking real-world Muslims into account.

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Judaism

An Intelligent Person's Guide to Judaism
Author: Shmuel Boteach
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Total Pages: 184
Release: 1999
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN:

Argues that Judaism possesses a core of wisdom that appeals to Jews and non-Jews alike

Religion for Atheists

Religion for Atheists
Author: Alain De Botton
Publisher: Signal
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2012-03-06
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0771025998

From the author of The Architecture of Happiness, a deeply moving meditation on how we can still benefit, without believing, from the wisdom, the beauty, and the consolatory power that religion has to offer. Alain de Botton was brought up in a committedly atheistic household, and though he was powerfully swayed by his parents' views, he underwent, in his mid-twenties, a crisis of faithlessness. His feelings of doubt about atheism had their origins in listening to Bach's cantatas, were further developed in the presence of certain Bellini Madonnas, and became overwhelming with an introduction to Zen architecture. However, it was not until his father's death -- buried under a Hebrew headstone in a Jewish cemetery because he had intriguingly omitted to make more secular arrangements -- that Alain began to face the full degree of his ambivalence regarding the views of religion that he had dutifully accepted. Why are we presented with the curious choice between either committing to peculiar concepts about immaterial deities or letting go entirely of a host of consoling, subtle and effective rituals and practices for which there is no equivalent in secular society? Why do we bristle at the mention of the word "morality"? Flee from the idea that art should be uplifting, or have an ethical purpose? Why don't we build temples? What mechanisms do we have for expressing gratitude? The challenge that de Botton addresses in his book: how to separate ideas and practices from the religious institutions that have laid claim to them. In Religion for Atheists is an argument to free our soul-related needs from the particular influence of religions, even if it is, paradoxically, the study of religion that will allow us to rediscover and rearticulate those needs.