Dawkins is possibly the greatest mind in biology today. Some could, rightly, argue that he has no position to talk about religion and I’m fine with that argument. I think another valid argument is that nobody has any right to talk about religion - not priests or anyone. I don’t venture to choose either side of those two arguments for I don’t think they are necessary to this discussion.
Having said that, I’ve read The God Delusion, The Selfish Gene, Dawkins God, The Dawkins Delusion, Case for The Creator (I think the whole case series), the Bible (many times), the Koran, etc., etc. and, in reading the responses here, I’m clear that, for the most part, none of you have read either of them completely.
I’m not an atheist because of Dawkins and I personally don’t like the idea that people claim he is a spokesperson for atheism. The fact that we don’t believe in god does not make us a “group”. I disagree with Dawkins on a lot of things, I disagree with Lee Strobel on a lot of things.
The point that Dawkins makes in his book is probably the most compelling case for giving up faith. Contrary to his hope that believers will put down his book as nonbelievers, I think the book is useless when it comes to converting people who aren’t willing to look at the possiblity that there isn’t a god. One of the earlier posters said it right, the person who was “converted” already didn’t believe. (I will say that I read Lee Strobel’s books while I was a believer - and it made me question too many more things. If you believe what Lee Strobel does, the book might be good to read if you want to nod your head in agreement - otherwise, it makes some pretty silly and completed debunked claims.)
Harris is extremely well read in the major world religions - and we all accept that there are three major world religions (and a number of smaller, less prominent ones), I hope. I don’t think Harris has any greater ability to speak about religion. It’s hardly a steadfast topic with agreed limits and agreed truths. One could argue that it isn’t even something that one can be proficient/knowledgeable or an expert in.
What my post is really about is how quickly we are to talk about a book we have never read and, even more amazing, take a small clip from a movie (that was HEAVILY edited) and take it out of context. (Yes, I have seen Expelled and as much as I wanted it to be good - for the purpose of having people ask questions and be willing to talk about religion - I think Ben Stein did more harm to the movement than good.) When I got home from the theatre, I searched to see what other people thought about Richard Dawkins’ comment about the aliens seeding earth - I came across this -
Lying For Jesus.
I suspect nobody will read it but, Expelled, like Michael Moore “documentaries” uses editing to achieve a specified goal. If that is the strongest argument you can make against Richard Dawkins, you are the weakest of opponents to him.
The priest at my wife’s church has read The God Delusion (and Sam Harris’ Letter to a Christian Nation) and thought the book was well written - I haven’t heard what he has to say about Sam Harris’ book, yet. The God Delusion serves a purpose for people on both sides of the argument (if one is to assume there are only two sides) - it gets people talking about religion again. If it is all it is cracked up to be, it’ll get more followers.