Several of my friends are posting about books that they have read recently. I’ve decided to be a sheep and add a side-bar widget to my blog to show what I am currently reading. Unfortunately, that means changing my theme a little, but that’s ok. Expect the look to change a bit as I settle on something reasonable. Click on the book to find out what I think of it… assuming I post a "review."
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Favorite Web Comics- AppleGeeks: Issue 576 | Haunting September 10, 2010
- Dreamland Chronicles: Page 1162… (12 Comments) September 10, 2010
- Girl Genius: Girl Genius for Friday, September 10, 2010 September 10, 2010
- Megatokyo: Comic [1282] "viral" September 10, 2010
- Order of the Stick: 745: It Does Beat Scissors
- Penny Arcade: Comic: The Eighth Attraction September 10, 2010
- Penny Arcade: News: More Penny Arcade Stuffs September 10, 2010
- Penny Arcade: News: The Eighth Attraction September 10, 2010
- Real Life Comics: strip for September / 10 / 2010 September 10, 2010
- XKCD: Leaving September 10, 2010
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Whom Do I Read
Now Reading
Planned books:
None
Current books:
Recent books:
- What Matters Most: Living a More Considered Life by James Hollis
- Modern Man in Search of a Soul (Harvest Book) by C.G. Jung
- Buddhism without Beliefs by Stephen Batchelor
- The Histories by Herodotus
- A Perfect Red: Empire, Espionage, and the Quest for the Color of Desire by Amy Butler Greenfield

Hi!
I just finished The End of Faith by Sam Harris.
Harris is a Buddhist and an avowed atheist, but while that’s apparent in this book, to dwell on it would be to only skim the surface. He spends a great deal of effort going over what we know about the history of social damage caused by fundamentalism, first in medieval Christianity and then in reactionary Islam. This is a book written for a popular audience, and the comparison of the two religions is illustrative without introducing any theoretical concepts about what they have in common. This is a weakness, however, because Harris then simply blames the problems of fundamentalism on religion in general, which I think is facile… I believe that the real issue is the way that religious types (and societal stages), which are not much more evolved than fundamentalism, continue to enable it. However, I doubt Harris could have successfully made so fine a point in a popular book.
Harris’ progressive bona fides are good, so it’s interesting he comes dangerously close to the kind of Straussian argument that’s been appropriated by the neocons to meddle with Islam. Why do I say this? Read the chapter on torture and you’ll see what I mean. I think he has set up this argument to needle the reader, however.
All in all, it is a good book, but for anyone who is already familiar with the problems and mass psychology of fundamentalism, no new ground is covered.
I would recommend the version of Graves’ developmental psychology now being promoted by Chris Cowan for an interesting take on the nature of fundamentalism is a stage in society, rather than as an aberration. Hopefully I’ll be reading up more on that next, as a new book as come out. Let me know if you want my reaction to it. Thanks!
Interesting, I’ll keep them in mind. If I don’t have at least one book in the queue, I’m not sure what to do with myself. Unfortunately (or not, depending) Herodotus was prolific for someone writing in a time where you had to make your own pens.
An interesting point on religion and fundamentalism, by the way. I read the Ancestor’s Tale by Richard Dawkins last year, and he’s particularly rabid about religion. I think, though, that he tars all religions when he should be looking at something more focused… basically fundamentalism. Still, the bulk of that book was about evolution… so in the few bits where he started attacking “religion” I just mentally sighed and slogged my way back to the science.