Dawkins' GOD: Genes, Memes, and the Meaning of LifeISBN: 978-1-4051-2539-0
Hardcover
212 pages
November 2004, Wiley-Blackwell
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“In this book McGrath does a good job of condemning aspects of Dawkins’ zealotry but in the process does much to condemn his own arguments as well.” (Journal of Religious History, 20 January 2014)
"The book is important for a number of reasons ... Dawkins' God ends with a valuable and more general chapter on science and religion, emphasising the limitations of the human mind." (The Journal of SJT, 2012)
"Dawkins is disposed of with panache, and with McGrath's ususal clarity and conciseness." (Theology)
"Lucid and brief, without being perfunctory or dismissive, and fulfils the role of guide to the educated layperson without eliciting boredom from the academic familiar with the field ... The end result of this effort by McGrath is that, once again, I would have no hesitation in recommending the book as a basic text for A-level or first-year undergraduate students looking for their appetite to be whetted for a number of connected fields of scholarship, or indeed for the 'educated layperson' seeking a grasp of the issues without having to wade through hundreds of pages of science and theology ... A very finely judged piece of writing." (Kaleidoscope)
"With clear and incisive argumentation, McGrath takes Dawkins on and exposes many of the weaknesses in his case for atheism." (Reformed Theological Journal)
"In Dawkins' God, McGrath has written a brilliant book, and it is difficult to think that the exposition of Dawkins' writings and their religious implications, will ever be better stated, explored and criticised... at once dispassionate, robust and readable."–Richard Harries, Times Higher Education Supplement
"Alister McGrath's book Dawkins' God: Genes, Memes and the Meaning of Life does a fair and sophisticated job of summarising my position." –Richard Dawkins, Times Higher Education Supplement
"Wielding evolutionary arguments and carefully chosen metaphors
like sharp swords, Richard Dawkins has emerged over three decades
as this generation's most aggressive promoter of atheism. In his
view, science, and science alone, provides the only rock worth
standing on. In this remarkable book, Alister McGrath challenges
Dawkins on the very ground he holds most sacred - rational argument
- and McGrath disarms the master. It becomes readily apparent that
Dawkins has aimed his attack at a naive version of faith that most
serious believers would not recognize. After reading this carefully
constructed and eloquently written book, Dawkins' choice of atheism
emerges as the most irrational of the available choices about God's
existence."
–Francis Collins, Director of the Human Genome
Project
“In this tour-de-force Alister McGrath approaches
the edifice of self-confident, breezy atheism so effectively
promoted by Richard Dawkins, and by deft dissection and argument
reveals the shallowness, special-pleading and inconsistencies of
his world-picture. Here is a book which helps to rejoin the
magnificence of science to the magnificence of God’s good
Creation.”
–Simon Conway Morris, Professor of Evolutionary
Palaeobiology, Cambridge University
“This is a wonderful book. One of the world’s
leading Christian contributors to the science/religion dialogue
takes on Richard Dawkins, Darwinism’s arch-atheist, and
wrestles him to the ground! This is scholarship as it should be
– informed, feisty, and terrific fun. I cannot wait to see
Dawkins’s review of Alister McGrath’s
critique.”
–Michael Ruse, Lucyle T. Werkmeister Professor of
Philosophy, Florida State University
“A timely and accessible contribution to the debate
over Richard Dawkins’s cosmology which exposes philosophical
naivety, the abuse of metaphor, and sheer bluster, left, right and
centre. Here Alister McGrath announces what every Darwinian
Fundamentalist needs to hear: that science is and always has been a
cultural practice that is provisional, fallible, and socially
shaped – an enterprise to be cultivated and fostered, but
hardly worshipped or idolised. A devastating critique.”
–David N. Livingstone, Professor of Geography and
Intellectual History, Queen’s University, Belfast
“Alister McGrath critically examines the places where
Richard Dawkins’ well-established biological science changes
into the speculations which undergird Dawkins’ own
anti-religious faith. In his appreciative examination and ruthless
analysis of Dawkins writings and the polemics associated with them,
McGrath has done a marvellous apologetic job, as well as providing
a particular service for those daunted by scientific
authoritarianism. We are all in his debt for rigorously identifying
and exposing the weaknesses of some of the commonly used arguments
against the Christian faith.”
–R. J. Berry, formerly Professor of Genetics, University
College, London and President of the Linnean Society
“Alister McGrath subjects the atheistic world-view of
Richard Dawkins to critical analysis and finds it severely lacking
in intellectual rigour. As a former atheist himself, and a
biochemist turned theologian and philosopher, the author is well
placed to appreciate Dawkins’ well-deserved reputation as a
populariser of evolutionary theory, but equally well qualified to
assess his stratagem of using a biological theory for ideological
purposes. This book is essential reading for those interested in
the traffic of ideas between science, philosophy and
religion.”
–Dr Denis Alexander, Chairman, Molecular Immunology
Programme, The Babraham Institute and Fellow of St. Edmund’s
College, Cambridge