Fiona’s Reviews > The God Delusion > Status Update
Fiona
is on page 368 of 468
"The same tendency to glory in the quaintness of ethnic religious habits, and to justify cruelties in their name, crops up again and again. It is the source of squirming internal conflict in the minds of nice liberal people who, on the one hand, cannot bear suffering and cruelty, but on the other hand have been trained by postmodernists and relativists to respect other cultures no less than their own."
— 6 hours, 44 min ago
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Fiona’s Previous Updates
Fiona
is on page 360 of 468
"If hell were plausible, it would only have to be moderately unpleasant in order to deter. Given that it is so unlikely to be true, it has to be advertised as very very scary indeed, to balance its implausibility and retain some deterrence value."
— 6 hours, 51 min ago
Fiona
is on page 345 of 468
"The take-home message is that we should blame religion itself, not religious extremism—as though that were some kind of terrible perversion of real, decent religion. Voltaire got it right long ago: ‘Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.’ So did Bertrand Russell: ‘Many people would sooner die than think. In fact they do.’"
— 7 hours, 31 min ago
Fiona
is on page 335 of 468
"Religious moralists can be heard debating questions like, ‘When does the developing embryo become a person—a human being?’ Secular moralists are more likely to ask, ‘Never mind whether it is human (what does that even mean for a little cluster of cells?); at what age does any developing embryo, of any species, become capable of suffering?’"
— 7 hours, 41 min ago
Fiona
is on page 261 of 468
"I’m inclined to suspect (with some evidence, although it may be simplistic to draw conclusions from it) that there are very few atheists in prisons. I am not necessarily claiming that atheism increases morality, although humanism—the ethical system that often goes with atheism—probably does." Disproportionately few or actually few, though, if so many people are religious?
— 9 hours, 28 min ago
Fiona
is on page 185 of 468
For a guy who keeps comparing things to "cranes" and "skyhooks" he never actually clearly defines the important qualities of either. Obviously a reader can get the gist but you think he'd make doubly sure that the reader is on the same page.
— Feb 26, 2026 10:05PM
Fiona
is on page 154 of 468
I think one of the issues of this book is that it requires some prior knowledge/assumption on the reader's part. It's fine if the reader isn't stupid/can Google, but does make reading a little awkward and disjointed when Dawkins plows along like the reader must follow even though he admits this book isn't just about preaching to the choir. (example: Popperian)
— Feb 26, 2026 12:44PM
Fiona
is on page 151 of 468
"More generally, as I shall repeat in Chapter 8, one of the truly bad effects of religion is that it teaches us that it is a virtue to be satisfied with not understanding."
— Feb 26, 2026 11:55AM
Fiona
is on page 74 of 468
"Some natural phenomenon is too statistically improbable, too complex, too beautiful, too awe-inspiring to have come into existence by chance. Design is the only alternative to chance that the [creationists] can imagine. Therefore a designer must have done it. And science’s answer to this faulty logic is also always the same. Design is not the only alternative to chance. Natural selection is a better alternative."
— Feb 26, 2026 10:10AM
Fiona
is on page 74 of 468
"Nevertheless, it is a common error, which we shall meet again, to leap from the premise that the question of God’s existence is in principle unanswerable to the conclusion that his existence and his non-existence are equiprobable."
— Feb 25, 2026 06:59PM
