The last superstition A refutation of the new atheism

Edward Feser

Book - 2008

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Subjects
Published
South Bend, Ind. : St. Augustine's Press 2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Edward Feser (-)
Physical Description
xi, 299 p. ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 269-291) and index.
ISBN
9781587314513
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • 1. Bad Religion
  • "The New Atheism"
  • The old philosophy
  • The abuse of science
  • Religion and counter-religion
  • Things to come
  • 2. Greeks Bearing Gifts
  • From Thales to Socrates
  • Plato's Theory of Forms
  • Realism, nominalism, and conceptualism
  • Aristotle's metaphysics
  • A. Actuality and potentiality
  • B. Form and matter
  • C. The four causes
  • 3. Getting Medieval
  • What Aquinas didn't say
  • The existence of God
  • A. The Unmoved Mover
  • B. The First Cause
  • C. The Supreme Intelligence
  • 4. Scholastic Aptitude
  • The soul
  • Natural law
  • Faith, reason, and evil
  • 5. Descent of the Modernists
  • Pre-birth of the modern
  • Thoroughly modern metaphysics
  • Inventing the mind-body problem
  • Universal acid
  • A. The problem of skepticism
  • B. The problem of induction
  • C. Personal identity
  • D. Free will
  • E. Natural rights
  • F. Morality in general
  • Back to Plato's cave
  • 6. Aristotle's Revenge
  • How to lose your mind
  • The lump under the rug
  • Irreducible teleology
  • A. Biological phenomena
  • B. Complex inorganic systems
  • C. Basic laws of nature
  • It's the moon, stupid
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* New Atheists Richards Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Daniel Dennett, and Sam Harris get their comeuppance from philosopher Feser in the spirit with which they abuse believers. Their books stand out for their manifest ignorance of the Western religious tradition, he says, and for the breathtaking shallowness of their philosophical analysis of religious matters. Far better than such no-quarters rhetoric, however, are the review of pre-Aristotelian philosophy and the summary of Aristotelian metaphysics and Thomas Aquinas' refinements of Aristotle that make up the heart, soul, and bulk of the book. Feser chooses to argue from Aristotle because he was not arguing from any religious perspective and because Aristotle's logic, his rationality, hasn't been improved upon or refuted by modern philosophy. Aristotle's proof that there is a prime mover or pure being God remains solid. Ignoramuses like the four horsemen of the apostasy, whose factual errors, half-truths, and mischaracterization Feser highlights with contemptuous glee, refute Aristotle only by changing the playing field from metaphysics to science, from philosophical realism to materialism. With energy and humor as well as transparent exposition, Feser reestablishes the unassailable superiority of classical philosophy.--Olson, Ray Copyright 2008 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.