Sign up
Forgot password?
FAQ: Login

Baggini J. Atheism. A Very Short Introduction

  • pdf file
  • size 2,48 MB
  • added by
  • info modified
Baggini J. Atheism. A Very Short Introduction
New York: Oxford University Press Inc., 2003. — 125 p. — (Very Short Introductions).
It has been a pleasure and a privilege to write this book for the (until now at least) excellent Very Short Introductions series. In keeping with the ethos of this series I have aimed to keep the book readable and enjoyable, avoiding academic dryness, whilst at the same time endeavouring to maintain a high standard of intellectual rigour and integrity. It is for others to judge whether I have succeeded.
To avoid scholastic sterility, I have not followed strict academic conventions of referencing and footnotes. Instead, I have listed at the end of the book my main sources along with suggestions for further reading. I hope that these provide sufficient credit to the many writers and thinkers whose ideas have informed this work.
This book is intended for a variety of different readers, including atheists looking for a systematic defence and explanation of their position, agnostics who think that they might be atheists after all, and religious believers who have a sincere desire to understand what atheism is all about. The guiding idea has been to produce a book which atheists will be able to give to their friends by way of explanation for their beliefs, after having used it themselves to help organize their
thoughts.
There are many people to thank for their contributions to making this book happen. Primarily, they are Marilyn Mason for her initial suggestion that I might give it a go, Shelly Cox for commissioning it, and Katharine Reeve and Emma Simmons for seeing it through to publication. Marsha Filion deserves special mention for fighting the flab in the penultimate draft. Colleagues in the Humanist Philosophers' Group have also helped enrich my understanding of positive atheism over recent years. I would also like to thank David Nash and Roger Griffin for their advice on reading for the history chapter.
What is atheism?
The case for atheism
Atheist ethics
Meaning and purpose
Atheism in history
Against religion?
References and further reading
  • Sign up or login using form at top of the page to download this file.
  • Sign up
Up