Atheism

Imagine There’s No Heaven by Frederick Von Heisenberg

Imagine There's No Heaven by Frederick Von Heisenberg Laying out a compelling argument for atheism, or at least a more intentional relationship to whatever faith you choose, Imagine There’s No Heaven: The Born Again Atheist by Frederick Von Heisenberg is a personal reflection on God’s potential existence, or lack thereof.

Beginning with a thorough review of the major global religions and traditions, Von Heisenberg moves into his personal journey towards non-belief with counterpoints to many religion’s premises and assumptions. Using scientific data and widely accepted truths, he dextrously deconstructs the beliefs and facts upon which faith is built. The final section is the most original and affecting, as […]

2024-01-26T15:20:42+02:00January 26th, 2024|Categories: New Releases|Tags: , |

Review: The Freak God by Peter Kornis

The Freak God

In The Freak God by Peter Kornis, an intriguing and eye-opening parable about the value of knowledge over belief, readers witness what gods and humans could achieve if they worked together for honest, honorable goals.

This sci-fi novel is set in a far-flung human colony in the far reaches of space, where the unique atheistic beliefs of one nation there have given rise to a new god – one who does not seek adulation or submission from the humans around him. Readers are given an intimate look at this “non-god god” as he grows up alongside humans, similar to what […]

2018-04-04T09:56:49+02:00March 12th, 2018|Categories: Book Reviews|Tags: , |

Review: Doomed Soul: Reflections of a Man Without Faith by Robert Boomsliter ★★★★★

Doomed Soul: Reflections of a Man Without Faith by Robert BoomsliterThe delightful, whimsical cover of this book and tongue-in-cheek cover quote (“I am almost certainly going to end up in Hell”) alerts you right away to the fact that you are getting more—far more—than another of the currently popular anti-religion screeds. Boomsliter has tremendous respect, bordering on hero worship, for Richard Dawkins, Dan Dennett, and Sam Harris. But he wisely takes a slightly different tack in this book. Boomsliter, you see, has a sense of humor (in this he owes more to Christopher Hitchens than the triumvirate mentioned above, although Boomsliter’s wit is just a tad less acerbic than Hitchens’). […]

2015-10-05T03:58:50+02:00September 10th, 2015|Categories: Book Reviews|Tags: , , |
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