Atheist Universe by David Mills (Review)

Released August 2006 (Ulysses Press) * 272 pages * ISBN 13: 9781569755679

Atheist Universe: The Thinking Person’s Answer to Christian Fundamentalism by David Mills is exactly what it says it is. Mills is a Bible-quoting atheist who rebuts the most common arguments used by Christian fundamentalists for the required existence of God. Many readers will be surprised to find out that Mills is a former “Jesus-freak” (his term, not mine) who used to try to convert his high school classmates to Christianity before he became an atheist.

Atheist Universe covers the following topics:

  • Is the origin of the universe natural or supernatural?
  • Does the universe show evidence of design?
  • Is the miracle of planetary clockwork proof of God?
  • Is the miracle of life on Earth proof of God?
  • Can Genesis be reconciled with modern science?
  • Do miracles happen?
  • Is there a Hell?
  • Was America founded on Christian principles?
  • Can intelligent design reconcile the Bible with science?

These are all questions that make for heated debate and Mill’s book is firmly on the side of atheism. Mills deconstructs the religious arguments with science and rhetorical analysis.

I found the book interesting, since I am occasionally on the receiving end of efforts to convert me to Christianity. It helped me put my finger on the rhetorical fallacies used in some religous arguments that had previously escaped me. It also made me aware of some of the distortions of both science and scripture that are carried out in an effort to reconcile the two.

Unlike having a discussion with someone on this topic (which often ends badly unless you are talking to someone who shares your views), reading a book on the topic lets you take the information in as large or small of a dose as you want, gives you time to think about the information presented, and doesn’t harangue you when you want to do something else.

I would unhesitatingly recommend this book to atheists and agnostics who are interested in being able to better articulate the counter-arguments to religion. While it might be useful to some people of faith who need or want to know the arguments against religion and God (either to understand atheists better or to learn an opponent’s views and thinking), it is one of those books that you have to come to of your own volition.

Buy at amazon.comBuy at amazon.caBuy at amazon.co.uk

This entry was posted in Book Review, Nonfiction, Philosophy & Religion. Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

One Comment

  1. Posted October 10, 2008 at 1:53 am | Permalink

    It is amazing the amount of fallacies that make it into arguments for the existence of a divine being. In college, I used to be astounded by the amount of absurd arguments for the existence of a god coming from students who had sat in the class all semester and knew how to logically form their arguments.

    Thanks for pointing this book out, I’ll be adding it to my wishlist to checkout. ^_^

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*

Subscribe without commenting

  • Recent Posts On My Other Blogs

  • Looking for older posts? Miss something?

    Check out my handy review index for past book reviews by author, title or date. Go to the bottom of the page to see links to the last 10 posts. You can also browse posts by date or category down there. Or just use the search box that's right here.
  • Testing Google Site Search

    I'm testing a new search option. If you have problems viewing results from this search, please let me know at booklorn@gmail.com.
  • Don't Miss An Update

    Subscribe in a  reader or subscribe by e-mail and join the multitudes (hee!):

    TwitterCounter for @Booklorn

    Or if you don't want to commit yet, bookmark me so you can find me again:

    Bookmark and Share Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Site Sponsor

  • Support this blog

    Buying through these vendor links helps me pay my hosting costs (or heck, even if you're just browsing -- you never know when you'll find something):


  • My Reading Challenges for 2009

    I'm hosting my first reading challenge: The Health & Fitness Read It, Live It, Blog It Reading Challenge

    I'm also doing these challenges: