Atheist mind, humanist heart Rewriting the Ten commandments for the twenty-first century

Lex Bayer, 1978-

Book - 2014

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Subjects
Published
Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield [2014]
©2014
Language
English
Main Author
Lex Bayer, 1978- (-)
Other Authors
John Figdor (-)
Physical Description
x, 178 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 169-171) and index.
ISBN
9781442236790
  • Introduction: Questioning Everything
  • 1. Rewriting the Ten Commandments
  • Part I. A Framework for Facts
  • 2. The Paradox of Belief
  • 3. The Reasoning behind Reason
  • 4. Beliefs about the Unknown
  • 5. The Assumption of a God
  • 6. Putting Factual Beliefs to the Test
  • Part II. A Framework for Ethics
  • 7. From Beliefs to Behavior
  • 8. How "Ought" One Behave?
  • 9. Moral Happiness
  • 10. Societal Happiness
  • 11. Putting Ethical Beliefs to the Test
  • 12. Finding Your Own Non-commandments
  • Appendix A. Common Religious Objections
  • Appendix B. Our Ten Non-commandments
  • Appendix C. Theorem of Belief
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Authors
Review by Booklist Review

Bayer and Figdor begin their book by acknowledging that the existence of a god or transcendent being can be neither proved nor disproved. Atheism and religious faith are, therefore, both belief systems. While religious traditions are good at defining the tenets of their faith, atheists too often define themselves merely by what they reject, failing to articulate affirmatively what they believe and why. This book sets out to right this wrong. The epistemological and ethical positions, presented in a highly readable and nontechnical fashion over several chapters, form the basis of the authors' 10 noncommandments, which state in part that there is no god or universal moral truth. Although the authors do not chart any new intellectual or philosophical territory, they should be commended for encouraging critical self-reflection and the examination and articulation of one's beliefs. Skepticism, rigorous logic, compassionate ethics, personal integrity, and morals may well be characteristics of atheist minds and humanist hearts. They are also characteristics of people of faith. Readers may contemplate whether the two camps are more alike than different.--McConnell, Christopher Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.