The preeminent scientist Richard Dawkins is Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University. Discover magazine recently dubbed him "Darwin’s Rottweiler" for his fierce defense of evolution and Prospect magazine placed him among the top three public intellectuals (with Noam Chomsky and Umberto Eco) worldwide. His award-winning books include The Selfish Gene, in which he first introduced the concept of the "meme," and The Blind Watchmaker, a convincing account of neo-Darwinian theory. In The God Delusion, Dawkins asserts the irrationality of belief in God and the grievous harm religion has done society, from the Crusades to 9/11.
Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
Also huffduffed as…
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins | The God Delusion
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Richard Dawkins
Stephen Moss introduces a debate between Richard Dawkins and Madeline Bunting.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/audio/2008/feb/14/richard.dawkins
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Richard Dawkins on The Bat Segundo Show
Subjects Discussed: The audience for The God Delusion, comparing an atheistic text to Satan, evolutionary biology and religion, charitable religious-based organizations, Mother Teresa, whether imaginary constructs are a bad thing, living in the real world, the assassination of Harvey Milk, Twinkies, “In God We Trust” and the American zeitgeist, on Dawkins being “a university person” speaking to university crowds, politics and atheism, Stephen Jay Gould and non-overlapping magisteria, language and religion, Marilynne Robinson’s review, logical positivism, love and perception, sexual lust, on deists being fools, the susceptibility of children, the advertising industry vs. religion, Jesus Camp, and extremists vs. everyday religious people.
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Darwin 200: Dawkins and Harries
Richard Dawkins, Richard Harries and Jeremy Paxman celebrating 200 years since Charles Darwin was born.
