Sethbag wrote:Again, this is like saying that one cannot dismiss crop circles until one has a PhD in cerealogy, or tell the emperor that he has no clothes unless one has a PhD in fashion.
It really doesn't matter what nuance some given theologist believes he casts on the issue of God if there's no good reason to believe that a God exists at all.
I'm afraid I have to disagree with the reviewer. Richard Dawkins doesn't need to have studied deeply the subject of theology to be able to judge that the whole subject of theology is really empty. Theologists debate and spin and create nuanced arguments on behalf of a being for which there is no evidence that it even exists, and plenty of evidence and logic which undermine the need for it. If Dawkins is able to see and understand that the entire subject of God, or whatever gods may be, is one for which there is really no good evidence whatsoever, then how is he required to have studied all of the various philosophical theories of people regarding their particular chosen God?
Do I need to have a PhD in the subject of the tooth fairy to be allowed to comment on its likely non-existence?
Must I have a PhD in Christmas to be allowed to comment on the likely non-existence of Santa Claus?
Pray tell, in what subject would one have to have a PhD in order to discuss the subject of alien abductions? Astronomy, or psychology?
You compare apples to oranges. Yes when one goes out to write a book called the God Delusion he should have some working knowledge of what he seeks to debunk. Dawkins had not done this. His book seems more a popular appeal to debunking God without really exploring what the nuances are about a belief in God. I have never read him nor seen him where he does not seem rather arrogant and condescending. And it is clear he has not done his leg work.