Ratings1
Average rating5
Wide-ranging, witty and sharp, this book provides a robust challenge to the anti-theism of Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and the New Atheist movement (not to mention my own 16-year-old self!). It blends its critique of New Atheism with an equally strong criticism of the ways in which Christianity in particular has betrayed it's revolutionary origins.
Two criticisms: Firstly, Eagleton is perhaps a little over-eager to use the mature, sophisticated, theological version of Christianity to excuse the errors of the more literalist varieties; secondly, his dismissal of post-modernism is both seemingly total, and relatively unjustified. Nonetheless, I give the book five stars simply because of how much I enjoyed it! If only all philosophy was this well-written....