The Atheist Book Club discussion
Atheism + Skepticism
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Im a new atheist and want to read some atheist book. I was a Christian for a year but just this last week I realized how bullshit it was. I need to read The God Delusion soon
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S. Leann
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Feb 10, 2017 07:17PM

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These are the latest 2 research papers of Roman Piso. They have been posted within Academia(dot)Edu. A Session to explain any part of these two (a Session for each) and a chance to ask questions about them within Academia(dot)Edu has begun. These Sessions are active for a limited time.
The True Context Of Ancient History & The Gordian Emperors
http://www.academia.edu/s/cc567b0350/...
Ancient Alias Names List (2017)
http://www.academia.edu/s/a339f0df02/...
-OR- The same (and other) papers posted to Wordpress within The Piso Project there:
The True Context Of Ancient History & The Gordian Emperors
http://pisoproject.wordpress.com/the-...

God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens - who is very opinionated all the time
and The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason by Sam Harris

I will provide a different "spin" from the others here. I am a secular humanist or non-believer, and not particularly anti-theistic. More non-theistic, I guess, with a strong dose of skepticism mixed in. I tend to follow the themes of science and mind (or the myth of soul, if you prefer), and what those two fields of study add to the understanding of religion.
So if you have any interest in the nature of what is called the soul, or mind, and want to understand it as a materialist function, I suggest either "The Mystery of Consciousness" or "Mind: A Brief Introduction," both by John Searle. Another one I have not read, but am intrigued by, is Owen Flanagan's "The Problem of the Soul."
These books all deal with the Cartesian problem, occurring when Descartes got monstrously close attention from the Church, to the point he had to concede under force that there was an immaterial soul beyond his research. It is getting much harder these days to support that concept, as brain functions are getting mapped so well.
If you think you might want to read something closer to pure science, I would suggest an interesting book called "Nonsense on Stilts" by Massimo Pigliucci. Then for human nature itself, there is Stephen Pinker's "How the Mind Works." It deals a lot with how we form language, and why that matters.
Last, it seems most fundamentalists spend more time bashing evolution without trying to comprehend it. So "Evolution: What the Fossils Say and Why It Matters" by Donald R. Prothero is good. His discussion of debates with them is very instructive.
Books mentioned in this topic
God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (other topics)The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason (other topics)
The Happy Atheist (other topics)
Population Wars: A New Perspective on Competition and Coexistence (other topics)