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A Manual for Creating Atheists Paperback – Illustrated, November 1, 2013
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- Print length280 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPitchstone Publishing
- Publication dateNovember 1, 2013
- Dimensions6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101939578094
- ISBN-13978-1939578099
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"If we want to live in world that is safer and more rational for all, then this is the guidebook we have been waiting for. Relying on extensive experience and a deep concern for humanity, Peter Boghossian has produced a game changer. This is not a book to read while relaxing in a hammock on a sunny afternoon. This is the how-to manual to take into the trenches of everyday life where minds are won and lost in the struggle between reason and madness." --Guy P. Harrison, author of 50 Simple Questions for Every Christian and Race and Reality
"I wouldn't be surprised if ten years from now we realized that this book's publication was a turning point in the decline of Christianity in the West..." Tom Gilson, Christian apologist and author, Thinking Christian
"A 'how to' book for the ages. Boghossian manages to take a library's worth of information and mold it into a concise and practical tome to guide through the murky waters of magical thinking, docking the reader safely on the shores of reason, logic and understanding. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this, and highly recommend it."--Al Stefanelli, author of A Voice of Reason In An Unreasonable Word-The Rise of Atheism On Planet Earth and Free Thoughts-A Collection Of Essays By An American Atheist
"A book so great you can skip it and just read the footnotes. Pure genius." —Christopher Johnson, cofounder, the Onion
"There is nothing else on the market like this book that helps atheists talk believers out of their faith. Every atheist interested in doing so, or who talks to believers about faith at all, should read it. It's both needed and brilliant!" —John W. Loftus, author, Why I Became an Atheist and The Outsider Test for Faith
"Boghossian has provided an indispensable chart book for all of us who must navigate the rising sea of magical thinking that is inundating America today." —Victor Stenger, PhD, author, God: The Failed Hypothesis and God and the Atom
From the Author
--Michael Shermer, from the foreword to A Manual for Creating Atheists
From the Back Cover
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
A Manual for Creating Atheists
By Peter BoghossianPitchstone Publishing
Copyright © 2013 Peter BoghossianAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-939578-09-9
Contents
Foreword by Michael Shermer Born-Again Atheist,Chapter 1: Street Epistemology,
Chapter 2: Faith,
Chapter 3: Doxastic Closure, Belief, and Epistemology,
Chapter 4: Interventions and Strategies,
Chapter 5: Enter Socrates,
Chapter 6: After the Fall,
Chapter 7: Anti-Apologetics 101,
Chapter 8: Faith and the Academy,
Chapter 9: Containment Protocols,
Acknowledgments,
Appendixes,
Glossary,
References,
About the Author,
Other Titles from Pitchstone,
CHAPTER 1
STREET EPISTEMOLOGY
* * *
street /stret/
Noun: A public thoroughfare.
e·pis·te·mol·o·gy /i-pis-t[??]-'mä-l[??]-je/
Noun: The study of knowledge.
This book will teach you how to talk people out of their faith. You'll learn how to engage the faithful in conversations that help them value reason and rationality, cast doubt on their beliefs, and mistrust their faith. I call this activist approach to helping people overcome their faith, "Street Epistemology." The goal of this book is to create a generation of Street Epistemologists: people equipped with an array of dialectical and clinical tools who actively go into the streets, the prisons, the bars, the churches, the schools, and the community — into any and every place the faithful reside — and help them abandon their faith and embrace reason.
A Manual for Creating Atheists details, explains, and teaches you how to be a street clinician and how to apply the tools I've developed and used as an educator and philosopher. The lessons, strategies, and techniques I share come from my experience teaching prisoners, from educating tens of thousands of students in overcrowded public universities, from engaging the faithful every day for more than a quarter century, from over two decades of rigorous scholarship, and from the streets.
Street Epistemology harkens back to the values of the ancient philosophers — individuals who were tough-minded, plain -speaking, known for self-defense, committed to truth, unyielding in the face of danger, and fearless in calling out falsehoods, contradictions, inconsistencies, and nonsense. Plato was a wrestler and a soldier with broad shoulders. He was decorated for bravery in battle (Christian, 2011, p. 51). Socrates was a seasoned soldier. At his trial, when facing the death penalty, he was unapologetic. When asked to suggest a punishment for his "crimes," he instead proposed to be rewarded (Plato, Apology).
Hellenistic philosophers fought against the superstitions of their time. Lucretius, Sextus Empiricus, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and others combated the religious authorities of their period, including early versions of Christianity (Clarke, 1968; Nussbaum, 1994). They thought the most important step was to liberate people from fear of tortures of the damned and from fear that preachers of their epoch were spouting. Hellenistic philosophers were trying to encourage stoic self-sufficiency, a sense of self-responsibility, and a tough-minded humanism.
Street Epistemology is a vision and a strategy for the next generation of atheists, skeptics, humanists, philosophers, and activists. Left behind is the idealized vision of wimpy, effete philosophers: older men in jackets with elbow patches, smoking pipes, stroking their white, unkempt beards. Gone is cowering to ideology, orthodoxy, and the modern threat of political correctness.
Enter the Street Epistemologist: an articulate, clear, helpful voice with an unremitting desire to help people overcome their faith and to create a better world — a world that uses intelligence, reason, rationality, thoughtfulness, ingenuity, sincerity, science, and kindness to build the future; not a world built on faith, delusion, pretending, religion, fear, pseudoscience, superstition, or a certainty achieved by keeping people in a stupor that makes them pawns of unseen forces because they're terrified.
The Street Epistemologist is a philosopher and a fighter. She has savvy and street smarts that come from the school of hard knocks. She relentlessly helps others by tearing down falsehoods about whatever enshrined "truths" enslave us.
But the Street Epistemologist doesn't just tear down fairytales, comforting delusions, and imagined entities. She offers a humanistic vision. Let's be blunt, direct, and honest with ourselves and with others. Let's help people develop a trustfulness of reason and a willingness to reconsider, and let's place rationality in the service of humanity. Street Epistemology offers a humanism that's taken some hits and gained from experience. This isn't Pollyanna humanism, but a humanism that's been slapped around and won't fall apart. Reason and rationality have endurance. They don't evaporate the moment you get slugged. And you will get slugged.
The immediate forerunners to Street Epistemologists were "the Four Horsemen," each of whom contributed to identifying a part of the problem with faith and religion. American neuroscientist Sam Harris articulated the problems and consequences of faith. British evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins explained the God delusion and taught us how ideas spread from person to person within a culture. American philosopher Daniel Dennett analyzed religion and its effects as natural phenomena. British-American author Christopher Hitchens divorced religion from morality and addressed the historical role of religion. The Four Horsemen called out the problem of faith and religion and started a turn in our thinking and in our culture — they demeaned society's view of religion, faith, and superstition, while elevating attitudes about reason, rationality, Enlightenment, and humanistic values.
The Four Horsemen identified the problems and raised our awareness, but they offered few solutions. No roadmap. Not even guideposts. Now the onus is upon the next generation of thinkers and activists to take direct and immediate action to fix the problems Harris, Dawkins, Dennett, and Hitchens identified.
A Manual for Creating Atheists is a step beyond Harris, Dawkins, Hitchens, and Dennett. A Manual for Creating Atheists offers practical solutions to the problems of faith and religion through the creation of Street Epistemologists — legions of people who view interactions with the faithful as clinical interventions designed to disabuse them of their faith.
Hitchens may be gone, but no single individual will take his place. Instead of a replacement Horseman, there are millions of Horsemen ushering in a new Enlightenment and an Age of Reason. You, the reader, will be one of these Horsemen. You will become a Street Epistemologist. You will transform a broken world long ruled by unquestioned faith into a society built on reason, evidence, and thought-out positions. This is work that needs to be done and work that will pay off by potentially helping millions — even billions — of people to live in a better world.
For the reader eager to get started talking others out of their faith, the tendency will be to skip to chapter 4. This is a mistake. The early chapters are designed to give you an understanding of the mechanism of belief. Effective interventions depend upon understanding core ideas and definitions covered in chapters 2 and 3.
CHAPTER 2FAITH
* * *
This chapter has two parts. The first part clears up the terms "faith," "atheist," and "agnostic." It does so by offering two definitions of faith: "belief without evidence" and "pretending to know things you don't know." It then disambiguates "faith" from "hope." Once the meanings of these terms have been clarified, the second part of the chapter articulates faith as an epistemology, underscores the fact that faith claims are knowledge claims, and then briefly articulates the problems and dangers of faith.
THE MEANING OF WORDS: FAITH, ATHEIST, AND AGNOSTIC
As a Street Epistemologist, you'll find subjects will attempt to evade your help by asserting that every definition of faith offered is incorrect and that you "just don't understand" what faith really is.
When pressed, the faithful will offer vague definitions that are merely transparent attempts to evade criticism, or simplistic definitions that intentionally muddy the meaning of "faith." More common still are what Horseman Daniel Dennett terms "deepities."
A deepity is a statement that looks profound but is not. Deepities appear true at one level, but on all other levels are meaningless. Here are some examples of deepities:
"Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." (Hebrews 11:1)
"Faith is not to have a perfect knowledge of things; therefore if ye have faith ye hope for things which are not seen, which are true." (Alma 32:21)
"Faith is the act in which reason reaches ecstatically beyond itself." (Tillich, 1957, p. 87)
"Faith is faith in the living God, and God is and remains a mystery beyond human comprehension. Although the 'object' of our faith, God never ceases to be 'subject.'" (Migliore, 1991, p. 3)
"Making faith-sense tries to wed meaning and facts. You can start with either one, but it is important to include the claims of both." (Kinast, 1999, p. 7)
"Having faith is really about seeking something beyond faith itself." (McLaren, 1999, p. 3)
... and additionally, virtually every statement made by Indian-American physician Deepak Chopra. For example, Chopra's tweets on February 7, 2013, read:
"The universe exists in awareness alone."
"God is the ground of awareness in which the universe arises & subsides"
"All material objects are forms of awareness within awareness, sensations, images, feelings, thoughts"
One could easily fill an entire book with faith deepities — many, many authors have. Christians in particular have created a tradition to employ deepities, used slippery definitions of faith, and hidden behind unclear language since at least the time of Augustine (354–430).
The word "faith" is a very slippery pig. We need to get our hands on it, pin it to the ground, and wrap a blanket around it so we can have something to latch onto before we finally and permanently subdue it. Malleable definitions allow faith to slip away from critique.
Two Definitions of Faith
The words we use are important. They can help us see clearly, or they can confuse, cloud, or obscure issues. I'll now offer my two preferred definitions of faith, and then disambiguate faith from hope.
faith /faTH/
1. Belief without evidence.
"My definition of faith is that it's a leap over the probabilities. It fills in the gap between what is improbable to make something more probable than not without faith. As such, faith is an irrational leap over the probabilities."
— John W. Loftus, "Victor Reppert Now Says He Doesn't Have Faith!" (Loftus, 2012)
If one had sufficient evidence to warrant belief in a particular claim, then one wouldn't believe the claim on the basis of faith. "Faith" is the word one uses when one does not have enough evidence to justify holding a belief, but when one just goes ahead and believes anyway.
Another way to think about "belief without evidence" is to think of an irrational leap over probabilities. For example, assume that an historical Jesus existed and was crucified, and that his corpse was placed in a tomb. Assume also that eyewitness accounts were accurate, and days later the tomb was empty.
One can believe the corpse was missing for any number of reasons. For example, one can believe the body arose from the dead and ascended to heaven, one can believe aliens brought the body back to life, or one can believe an ancient spirit trapped in the tomb merged with the corpse and animated it. Belief in any of these claims would require faith because there's insufficient evidence to justify any one of these particular options. Belief in any of these claims would also disregard other, far more likely possibilities — for example, that the corpse was stolen, hidden, or moved.
If one claims knowledge either in the absence of evidence, or when a claim is contradicted by evidence, then this is when the word "faith" is used. "Believing something anyway" is an accurate definition of the term "faith."
faith /faTH/
2. Pretending to know things you don't know.
Not everything that's a case of pretending to know things you don't know is a case of faith, but cases of faith are instances of pretending to know something you don't know. For example, someone who knows nothing about baking a cake can pretend to know how to bake a cake, and this is not an instance of faith. But if someone claims to know something on the basis of faith, they are pretending to know something they don't know. For example, using faith would be like someone giving advice about baking cookies who has never been in a kitchen.
As a Street Epistemologist, whenever you hear the word "faith," just translate this in your head as, "pretending to know things you don't know." While swapping these words may make the sentence clunky, "pretending to know things you don't know" will make the meaning of the sentence clearer.
To start thinking in these terms, the following table contains commonly heard expressions using the word "faith" in column one, and the same expressions substituted with the words "pretending to know things you don't know" in column two.
Disambiguation: Faith Is Not Hope
Faith and hope are not synonyms. Sentences with these words also do not share the same linguistic structure and are semantically different — for example, one can say, "I hope it's so," and not, "I faith it's so."
The term "faith," as the faithful use it in religious contexts, needs to be disambiguated from words such as "promise," "confidence," "trust," and, especially, "hope." "Promise," "confidence," "trust," and "hope" are not knowledge claims. One can hope for anything or place one's trust in anyone or anything. This is not the same as claiming to know something. To hope for something admits there's a possibility that what you want may not be realized. For example, if you hope your stock will rise tomorrow, you are not claiming to know your stock will rise; you want your stock to rise, but you recognize there's a possibility it may not. Desire is not certainty but the wish for an outcome.
Hope is not the same as faith. Hoping is not the same as knowing. If you hope something happened you're not claiming it did happen. When the faithful say, "Jesus walked on water," they are not saying they hope Jesus walked on water, but rather are claiming Jesus actually did walk on water.
Atheist
"I contend we are both atheists, I just believe in one fewer God than you do."
— Stephen F. Roberts
Of all the terms used in this book, none is more problematic, more contentious, more divisive, or more confusing than the term "atheist."
This confusion is understandable given that the word "theist" is contained in the word "atheist." It is thus natural to assume a type of parallelism between the two words. Many of the faithful imagine that just as a theist firmly believes in God, an a-theist firmly disbelieves in God. This definitional and conceptual confusion needs to be clarified.
"Atheist," as I use the term, means, "There's insufficient evidence to warrant belief in a divine, supernatural creator of the universe. However, if I were shown sufficient evidence to warrant belief in such an entity, then I would believe." I recommend we start to conceptualize "atheist" in this way so we can move the conversation forward.
The atheist does not claim, "No matter how solid the evidence for a supernatural creator, I refuse to believe." In The God Delusion, for example, Horseman Dawkins provides a 1–7 scale, with 1 being absolute belief and 7 being absolute disbelief in a divine entity (Dawkins, 2006a, pp. 50–51). Dawkins, whom many consider to be among the most hawkish of atheists, only places himself at a 6. In other words, even Dawkins does not definitively claim there is no God. He simply thinks the existence of God is highly unlikely. A difference between an atheist and a person of faith is that an atheist is willing to revise their belief (if provided sufficient evidence); the faithful permit no such revision.
Agnostic
Agnostics profess to not know whether or not there's an undetectable, metaphysical entity that created the universe. Agnostics think there's not enough evidence to warrant belief in God, but because it's logically possible they remain unsure of God's existence. Again, an agnostic is willing to revise her belief if provided sufficient evidence.
(Continues...)Excerpted from A Manual for Creating Atheists by Peter Boghossian. Copyright © 2013 Peter Boghossian. Excerpted by permission of Pitchstone Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Pitchstone Publishing; Illustrated edition (November 1, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 280 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1939578094
- ISBN-13 : 978-1939578099
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #480,967 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #193 in Atheism (Books)
- #306 in Epistemology Philosophy
- #697 in Religion & Philosophy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Dr. Peter Boghossian is a full time faculty member in the philosophy department at Portland State University and an affiliated faculty member at Oregon Health Science University in the Division of General Internal Medicine.
He's a national speaker for the Center of Inquiry and the Secular Student Alliance, and an international speaker for the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science.
Peter has an extensive publication record across multiple domains of thought. He is currently serving as a Fellow for the Global Secular Institute’s think tank.
http://peterboghossian.com/
http://www.pdx.edu/philosophy/peter-boghossian
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Customers find the book moderately informative, particularly as an introduction to street epistemology, and appreciate its readability, with one noting it's worth more than a single read. The writing style receives positive feedback for its clarity, with examples making the content easier to understand, and customers value its excellent definition of faith. They find it amusing and consider it worth the money, though the tone receives mixed reactions, with some finding it straightforward while others find it challenging. The title receives criticism for being needlessly inflammatory.
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Customers find the book contains useful ideas, particularly appreciating its focus on science and reason, and serves as a great introduction to street epistemology.
"...The most informative chapter by far appears to be 'Enter Socrates' where Boghossian draws on a wealth of knowledge on how to use the Socratic Method..." Read more
"...What is very helpful in this book, is that it not only has theory but it also has frequent examples from Boghossians’ own experience as an educator..." Read more
"...Positives: 1. A well-written, well-research book. Philosophical jargon is kept to a minimum. This book is accessible to the masses. 2...." Read more
"...the conversation in this way raises the bar and lifts discussions between believers and skeptics out of the ubiquitous quagmire that is squabbling..." Read more
Customers find the book enjoyable and brilliant, noting that it is worth more than a single read.
"...Perhaps the best thing I can say about it is that it is cleverly designed to function both as a 'manual' and as an argument...." Read more
"...The interventions are a lot of fun to read (I wished there were more). A great addition to my collection, I highly recommend it!..." Read more
"This is a thoughtful, well-reasoned book that I personally learned a lot from...." Read more
"...to convince, Boghossian's method is Socratic, and he does a fantastic job presenting it, both in theory and in practice...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it easy to understand with clear examples and good communication tips. One customer notes that it offers a great step in clarifying fuzzy language, while another mentions it provides a great introduction to anti-apologetics.
"...book also is laid out in such a way that you can intensely study each individual chapter separately, since the notes are at the end of the chapter..." Read more
"...Overall, I think “A manual for creating atheists” is a well-written and very helpful book for anyone who is dedicated to reason and logic and is not..." Read more
"...that captures the sentiment of the book, "We fear clear, honest, blunt dialogue, but what we ought to fear are stupid and dangerous ideas, because..." Read more
"...Discussions based upon Boghossian's methods, instead, are ideally open-ended dialogues in which seeds of reasonable doubt are sown in soil that is..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's approach to faith, particularly its excellent definition and rational thesis for eliminating it, along with its disambiguation of faith and hope.
"...: tough-minded, plain-speaking, known for self-defence, committed to truth, unyielding in the face of danger and fearless in calling out falsehoods,..." Read more
"...Street Epistemology, 2. Faith, 3. Doxastic Closure, Belief, and Epistemology, 4. Interventions and Strategies, 5. Enter Socrates, 6...." Read more
"...Overall it was solid and took a different approach compared to other books on the subject...." Read more
"...a way to interact with religious people that is respectful and not antagonistic – yet confronts believers with something they often wish to avoid:..." Read more
Customers find the book humorous, noting it provides comic relief at times.
"...Perhaps PB had been having a bad day. The book proved punchy, passionate, original, and respectful of the ancients..." Read more
"...excerpts of actual conversations which are both enlightening and humorous...." Read more
"...This is but a sampling of the truly distorted, bizarre and logically flawed items on display in this house of horrors...." Read more
"...not a "tour de force" or a "missive for the ages", it is a simple, entertaining, enjoyable reference with the power to change forever how you think..." Read more
Customers find the book worth its price.
"...Dr. Boghossian’s book is very worthwhile – a breath of fresh air in the body of skeptical and atheist literature, tackling topics seldom discussed...." Read more
"...maybe something else entirely." It was powerful and worth the price of admission in itself...." Read more
"...The parts of this book that makes it worth your money are the examples of conversations between Boghossion and those with, or those who support faith..." Read more
"...This is a good book at a good price. If you are a non-believer and you foresee getting into arguments about faith then then you should check it out." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the tone of the book, with some finding it goes straight to the point, while others find it complicated and hard to get into.
"A wonderful book to read, this is a short and to-the-point set of incredibly valuable tools...." Read more
"...Though I definitely think all the content applies, it seems far too easy a subject, even if religion is definitely a problem in contemporary..." Read more
"Excellent read. Easy and to the point...." Read more
"...Nevertheless, the text is not always an easy read, being somewhat onerous, even opaque (hard to see through to the point being made) at times...." Read more
Customers criticize the book's title, finding it needlessly inflammatory and potentially off-putting to readers.
"...I subtracted a star because I felt the title was needlessly inflammatory. The book is about epistemology, and belief is God is a tangential issue...." Read more
"...I thought the title was somewhat provocative and it was initially a turnoff...." Read more
"...The title is decpetive." Read more
"Labels are not amusing. Finding labels like 'street epistimology" over and over nearly made me put it down...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2013Peter Boghossian's new book marks a turning point in the "New Atheism" movement from (if I may quote Hamlet) "Words, words, words!" to action. However, this comes with a criticism: it's far too narrow of a sell.
First off, the book really is quite something. Perhaps the best thing I can say about it is that it is cleverly designed to function both as a 'manual' and as an argument. That is, the book does exactly what it says it does: it teaches people how to talk others out of their faith. But additionally, the book is designed so that someone of faith who reads it, could potentially recognize why there are people who desire to talk others out of their faith. Essentially, a person of faith could easily 'play Boghossian's hand' and realize through the various examples and analyses that their faith should not be held so resolutely.
The 'manual' aspect of the book is also well designed. The book uses clear and concise language, though Boghossian uses a 'big word' every now and again, it is clearly interpretable using a basic dictionary. After all, expanding your vocabulary sheerly can't be seen as a bad thing, right? The book also is laid out in such a way that you can intensely study each individual chapter separately, since the notes are at the end of the chapter instead of at the end of the book. Though this particular format bothered me at first, I soon saw its practicality given its designation as a 'manual.' Each chapter also has a 'dig deeper' section which comes fully supplied with extra sources to expand your education. In addition, there is also three well designed appendices, a glossary, a full set of references (which I believe a young philosophy undergraduate spent many careful hours compiling into perfect APA formatting), and an index. This is truly a book to study, rather than to passively read.
The most informative chapter by far appears to be 'Enter Socrates' where Boghossian draws on a wealth of knowledge on how to use the Socratic Method to bear on contemporary issues. His exposition of the method is clear, and throughout the entire book gives examples of how he has used it in the past, which makes applying it in the future that much easier to accomplish. However, that is not a recommendation to skip to chapter five, for Boghossian seems to have taken care to give exactly what is necessary in terms of background information to accomplish his goal. No more, no less.
Secondly, though, I have an issue with how it is framed. I myself am an atheist. I also have no vehemence towards those who try to convince others of their position. Growing up as a fundamentalist, I understand that it is indeed a natural propensity to try and convince others of your position, and quite honestly the act of doing so is how one learns. It is through dialogue with those who hold different positions, that you can truly learn. Boghossian does recognize this by underlining his methodology with inquisitiveness, and an openness to learn yourself. Despite all of this, I believe the focus on making this a book about 'atheism' instead of 'critical thinking' is flawed. Though I definitely think all the content applies, it seems far too easy a subject, even if religion is definitely a problem in contemporary society.
What this book truly teaches is how to engage in reflective critical thinking, and dialectical critical thinking. Essentially, how to be a socratic teacher. Though, I honestly can see the marketing advantages of putting this within the "New Atheism" movement, instead of the skeptic movement, or critical thinking literature. My concern, however, is that it will not be picked up by enough people because of it. Though hopefully Boghossian's future "street epistemologists" will not stop at the faithful, but continue on to critically question the purveyors of pseudoscience and other silliness.
My one other point of detraction lies in the lack of care in handling certain subjects, such as the chapter on faith in academia. Though under a careful reading of his book, I can tell that he does not mean to make sweeping generalizations. Despite this, I cannot help but think others could misinterpret some of his statements as such. Boghossian definitely has skills as an educator and writer, this does not change that (at least upon my observation) some of his fans lack the ability to recognize nuance in arguments and statements, which leads to an over confidence in certain beliefs and positions. Though I do recognize the errors of others cannot be a burden placed upon the shoulders of Boghossian, and it might be wrong of me to mention it here, I do believe it is a necessary caution to future readers.
Overall, I find the book to be a great success in the trajectory of Boghossian's literature. It builds upon years worth of work and experience and culminates all of his passions, except perhaps his passion for science fiction, unfortunately. I strongly recommend it to skeptics and atheists, as much as I recommend it to christians and muslims, and of course every person in-between. The words should be mulled over and considered, if not adopted and put into action.
(I believe it is necessary to give a brief post-review note of the fact that I did considerable work on this book with Boghossian. This is partly due to the fact that it would take much less than a genius to come to this knowledge via a quick google search, but also due to a desire for complete transparency with my reader. Boghossian is a mentor and a friend, though I can assure you we disagree on many things. I've tried to give an objective analysis of this book, which I hope I accomplished. Furthermore, despite my working with him, I'm not privy to any special knowledge about any 'secret' intentions of this book or his work; everything he says to me, he says to the public at large.)
- Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2015Boghossian explains that his book intends to create a generation of what he calls “Street Epistemologists”, people ho are equipped with an array of dialectical and clinical tools to help the religious abandon faith and embrace reason. He writes that Street Epistemology embraces the same values as the ancient philosophers: tough-minded, plain-speaking, known for self-defence, committed to truth, unyielding in the face of danger and fearless in calling out falsehoods, contradictions, inconsistencies and nonsense.
The job of the Street Epistemologist will be to pick up where the “Four Horsemen of the Non-Apocalypse” left of. Dawkins, Dennett, Harris and Hitchens made clear how religion is harmful. Now, the Street Epistemologist will go further using the tools Boghossian gives in this book. He or she will actively go out and inoculate people who have been infected with the “faith virus”, faith being defined as “pretending to know things you don’t know”. These are lofty ideals but Boghossian then begins to do just that: to equip the reader with a set of tools that helps in dissecting faith and its truth claims.
What is very helpful in this book, is that it not only has theory but it also has frequent examples from Boghossians’ own experience as an educator and philosopher. He includes both failed and successful interventions with notes, so it is possible to learn from his successes and failures. He also demonstrates how to successfully refute often heard arguments from believers, such as “you can’t prove God doesn’t exist” or “you have faith in science”. While these refutations probably aren’t new to people familiar with atheist arguments, these refutations could certainly help people who still have faith or are on the fence about their belief.
Boghossian includes plenty of sources to bolster his argument and includes a lot of references for further study to help deepen your understanding as a Street Epistemologist. The more familiar you are with apologetics and the better versed you are in philosophy, the more effective you become at exposing the falsehood of faith-based truth claims.
Much of the book is rooted in the Socratic method (elenchus), a way of examining what someone believes and to help people become aware of their own ignorance. Boghossian argues that this method is effective at exposing that faith is a failed epistemology, seeing as it not based on reason and logic. Through the Socratic method, believers are supposed to realise that they actually don’t know what they thought they knew, for instance “The Bible is the word of God”.
I particularly enjoyed chapter 8, where Boghossian argues against the validity of cultural relativism, especially in academic circles. I tend to agree with him that in the current climate, it is frowned upon to judge cultural practices and ideas as if somehow, all practices and ideas are equally valid. It should be obvious that this is not the case and that some ideas are worse than other ideas. It shouldn’t be frowned upon to say that but unfortunately many people these days seem unable to differentiate between criticism on an idea and an attack on a group of people.
So is there nothing I don’t like about this book? There is one thing. It’s not much but I do have some issue with the fact that Boghossian not only refers to faith as an actual virus but poses that we should treat it as such, containment protocols and all. Let me be clear here: I have no problems with suggesting ways to combat the influence of religion on the world and I agree that this is necessary.
However, a virus is an actual, physical agent, a pathogen which makes people (usually) physically ill. Calling faith a virus is, in my opinion, a statement that weakens his argument because it misrepresents what faith is: a set of ideas that is not based on reality, thus making it more akin to a delusion than to a disease of the body. If we are going to argue against faith and use reason and logic as our weapons, we should not use comparisons that misrepresent faith.
That being said, this is perhaps more a matter of taste than a real objection because faith does share some characteristics with viruses.
Overall, I think “A manual for creating atheists” is a well-written and very helpful book for anyone who is dedicated to reason and logic and is not afraid to follow them, wherever they lead. I haven’t tried any Street Epistemology yet per the instructions outlined by Boghossian but I am not unfamiliar with the Socratic method so I think they will prove helpful.
I also appreciate the way Peter Boghossian bolsters the morale of his Street Epistemologists to be, warning them that they will face adversity by exposing faith as a failed epistemology but encouraging them to speak plainly and boldly, just like the philosophers of old.
Top reviews from other countries
- douglas scownReviewed in Australia on April 13, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars A manual for creating thoughtful minds
Not only for those interested in ideas about Gods. This is a brief and accurate guide for anyone interested in cutting through poorly constructed arguments generally and gaining the confidence to navigate our own way through a complex, modern and often confusing world.
- Boaz A. M. RochaReviewed in Brazil on February 10, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Truust me.
If you are reading this, you definitely should read it. I should have read it when I was in my twenties.
-
KimPossibleReviewed in Germany on June 22, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Die gute Nachricht: Religion ist heilbar!
Eine der besten Bücher zum Thema. Viele (Richard Dawkins) nehmen Religionen analytisch und argumentativ auseinander. Peter Boghossian bietet einen weniger konfrontativen und allgemeineren Ansatz: Woher wissen wir, was wir zu wissen glauben? Das ist nicht nur in der Auseinandersetzung mit Religionen sondern mit allem ohne weiteren Nachdenkens übernommenen "Wissen" sehr hilfreich.
- Bryn T.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 28, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Contribution
The God Delusion is one of my all-time favourite books and I agree with other reviewers that this book makes an excellent companion.
When I was practising as a full-time hypnotherapist I saw first-hand how entrenched false / irrational beliefs can cause long-term misery. This book takes a similar view by approaching people 'infected with the faith virus' as needing an intervention - not debate or criticism or facts - none of which have historically been shown to have the required impact, but a calm, structured 'interventional deconstruction' of how the beliefs were arrived at in the first place.
This approach is spot-on in my opinion. Most religious people operate from 'confirmation bias' - start with a conclusion and then work backwards to justify it - something one hears over and over again from the street preachers, pulpit and teachers of the 'faith virus'.
Time to kick the legs out from under the beliefs table-top!
The strategy is that used to de-program so-called 'cult members' (Scientologists, Moonies, etc) - a category the author feels mainstream religions are comparable with.
Not a quick read as there is much to learn, ponder and practice, however you will gain a 'de-programming' skill that can be applied to many everyday situations, so well worth the time.
Highly recommended.
- VenetianReviewed in Canada on September 27, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Such a great book.
Peter Boghossian's "A Manual for Creating Atheists," is a well written, thought-provoking and intellectually stimulating exploration of critical thinking, skepticism, and the art of reasoning. This book is a valuable addition to the discourse on atheism, philosophy, and the role of faith in our society.
Boghossian's approach in this manual is meticulous and enlightening. He advocates for the cultivation of the Socratic method as a means to engage in constructive dialogues with individuals of differing beliefs, particularly those grounded in religious faith. He emphasizes the importance of asking probing questions, challenging presuppositions, and fostering a spirit of intellectual curiosity. In essence, Boghossian encourages readers to become "street epistemologists" – individuals skilled in the art of helping others scrutinize their beliefs.
One of the strengths of this work is its ability to bridge the gap between academia and the broader public. Boghossian's writing style is accessible and engaging, making complex philosophical concepts comprehensible to a wide range of readers. This accessibility is particularly crucial in a world where discussions about belief systems and atheism can often be polarized and emotionally charged.
Furthermore, Boghossian's manual underscores the importance of promoting reason and evidence-based thinking, which are essential components of any open and pluralistic society. By encouraging individuals to examine the foundations of their beliefs, he promotes a culture of critical thinking and self-reflection, ultimately contributing to a more rational and informed public discourse.
In closing this is a thoroughly commendable work that encourages critical thinking and intellectual engagement. It provides valuable insights into the realm of atheism and faith, offering a compelling guide for those interested in exploring these topics further. An important contribution to the ongoing conversation about belief, reason, and the pursuit of truth.