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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher
Prometheus Books
Publication date
May 25, 2010
Pages
183
Binding
Paperback
Book category
Adult Non-Fiction
ISBN-13
9781616141783
ISBN-10
1616141786
Dimensions
0.50 by 6 by 8.75 in.
Weight
0.60 lbs.
Original list price
$18.00
Amazon.com says people who bought this book also bought:
God Gave Us Reason, Not Religion | Candide | The Portable Voltaire | Philosophical Dictionary | A Treatise on Toleration and Other Essays | The Age of Reason | Critique of Pure Reason | Rights of Man | The Jefferson Bible
God Gave Us Reason, Not Religion | Candide | The Portable Voltaire | Philosophical Dictionary | A Treatise on Toleration and Other Essays | The Age of Reason | Critique of Pure Reason | Rights of Man | The Jefferson Bible
Summaries and Reviews
Amazon.com description: Product Description: In this little-known work by Voltaire (1694-1778)ânow available in English for the first timeâ the famous French philosophe and satirist presents a wide-ranging and acerbic survey of religion throughout the world. Written toward the end of his life in 1769, the work was penned in the same decade as some of his more famous worksâthe Philosophical Dictionary, Questions on Miracles, and Lord Bolingbrokeâs Important Examinationâall of which questioned the basic tenets of Christianity.
Voltaire called himself a deist and thus he professed belief in a supreme deity. But he was always sharply critical of institutional Christianity, especially its superstitions, the hypocrisy of its clergy, and its abuse of political power. Both his deism and his critical attitude toward Christianity are manifest in God and Human Beings, which is, in effect, one of the first works of comparative religion. Comparing Christianity to the more ancient belief systems of the Jews, Hindus, Chinese, Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Babylonians, Phoenicians, and Arabs, he notes a common tendency to worship one supreme god, despite the host of subordinate deities in many of these religions. He also critiques the many superstitions and slavish rituals in religion generally, but he emphasizes that in this respect Christianity is no better than other faiths. Thus, the clergyâs claim that Christianity is Godâs supreme revelation to humanity has no basis from an objective perspective.
This first English translation of a classic critique of religion includes an introduction by writer, scholar, and editor S. T. Joshi, who wrote the article on Voltaire in The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief (edited by Tom Flynn). Anticipating many of the themes of the later Higher Criticism and rationalist critiques of religion, this incisive, witty treatise by the great French skeptic will be a welcome addition to the libraries of anyone with an interest in the philosophy of religion, intellectual history, or the Enlightenment.
Voltaire called himself a deist and thus he professed belief in a supreme deity. But he was always sharply critical of institutional Christianity, especially its superstitions, the hypocrisy of its clergy, and its abuse of political power. Both his deism and his critical attitude toward Christianity are manifest in God and Human Beings, which is, in effect, one of the first works of comparative religion. Comparing Christianity to the more ancient belief systems of the Jews, Hindus, Chinese, Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Babylonians, Phoenicians, and Arabs, he notes a common tendency to worship one supreme god, despite the host of subordinate deities in many of these religions. He also critiques the many superstitions and slavish rituals in religion generally, but he emphasizes that in this respect Christianity is no better than other faiths. Thus, the clergyâs claim that Christianity is Godâs supreme revelation to humanity has no basis from an objective perspective.
This first English translation of a classic critique of religion includes an introduction by writer, scholar, and editor S. T. Joshi, who wrote the article on Voltaire in The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief (edited by Tom Flynn). Anticipating many of the themes of the later Higher Criticism and rationalist critiques of religion, this incisive, witty treatise by the great French skeptic will be a welcome addition to the libraries of anyone with an interest in the philosophy of religion, intellectual history, or the Enlightenment.
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