Interview with the Author
What is unique about your book compared to other critical treatments on the “new atheists”?
The
new atheism is characterised by the propositions that belief in God is
false and evil. The new atheists believe that at the core of even the
most outwardly benign theism is an immoral commitment to flouting one’s
intellectual responsibilities. That means that the new atheism
presupposes both an account of rationality and an account of morality.
What’s unique about my book
is that I examine those accounts and turn the results of this analysis
against the new atheism. By systematically reviewing their major
arguments, I show how the new atheism is grounded in incoherent
accounts of knowledge and morality.
It’s not just that the new
atheists are wrong to define ‘faith’ as ‘belief without evidence’ or
‘belief against the evidence’. It’s that their positive account of what
it means to live up to one’s intellectual responsibilities is
self-contradictory. I counter with an epistemology that isn’t
self-contradictory, which frowns upon both ‘blind faith’ and belief
despite overwhelming counter evidence, but which opens up the
possibility of a faith in God that’s compatible with living up to one’s
genuine intellectual responsibilities.
Then again, the new
atheists put a lot of emphasis on arguments against belief in God, as
opposed to arguments against the existence of God, and these arguments
all have a moral dimension. For example, the argument that faith means
being committed to ignoring one’s intellectual responsibilities
presupposes that we have an objective moral responsibility to reason in
a certain way. However, for the new atheists to invoke objective moral
responsibilities is self-contradictory, since the naturalistic
worldview of the new atheism excludes the reality of any objective
moral values. For example, Dawkins says both that there are no
normative facts, no good, no evil, and that faith is an evil that leads
people to do evil things. These claims form an in consistent set.
Read the rest of the interview...
Reviews
'Williams's reply to the emergence of militant public atheism is as timely as it is devastating.' - Dr. Angus J. Menuge, Professor of Philosophy, Concordia University, Wisconsin, USA
'Peter S. Williams' new book A Sceptic's Guide to Atheism... takes the arguments of "The New Atheists" to pieces.' - Dr. Robin Parry, Editorial Director at Paternoster Publishing
'The
new atheism is like the Titanic leaving Southampton. Richard Dawkins,
Daniel Dennett, and her other captains proclaim her unsinkable. Surely
she will obliterate all obstacles in her path - especially religious
faith. In this insightful book, Peter Williams shows that a carefully
articulated, philosophically grounded faith is to the new atheism what
hitting an iceberg was to the Titanic. The lesson is clear and urgent:
get off while you still can!' ~ Dr. William A. Dembski, senior fellow with Seattle's Discovery Institute, author of The Design Inference (Cambridge University Press)
'Williams'
painstaking analysis attempts to get inside the atheist mindset by
investigating a potpourri of charges against Christianity, constructed
from a wide range of atheological perspectives. He responds with
excellent rejoinders and counterarguments, producing a highly
instructive give-and-take. The overall effort is a coherent,
well-reasoned defence of Christian Theism that challenges the best
atheist attacks. As Williams concludes, he has seen nothing that comes
close to undermining the Christian faith.' - Dr. Gary R. Habermas, Distinguished Research Professor, Liberty University



