by Ted Christopher ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 25, 2020
A thorough, right-wing perspective on the philosophical vices of modern science.
A theoretical critique of scientism, the hyperbolically confident view that scientific materialism is capable of explaining the universe in its totality.
Christopher announces an ambitious agenda: to challenge the “scientific vision of life,” the reductive attempt to capture all existing phenomena—human and otherwise—in the categories of scientific materialism. The author principally devotes his attention to the relentless attempt to explain human behavior from the perspective of DNA, the alleged “language of life.” However, Christopher contends, with impressive clarity and rigor, that such an attempt has long been exposed as a failure—explanatory recourse to DNA simply doesn’t account for the whole spectrum of behavioral differences or variations in innate intelligence. Despite the mounting difficulties with the explanatory power of DNA, however, the scientific community has doubled down on its commitment to it—a type of “faith-based” rather than evidentiary allegiance. The author interprets this commitment as an expression of irrational scientism, which combines a “total confidence in the materialistic model of human life” with a self-congratulatory “hype and arrogance.” Christopher devotes so much attention to the field of genetics precisely because he sees it as the crucible of this scientism: “I suggest that biologists/geneticists are effectively in the front lines of the defense of materialism. That foundational scientific belief that life is completely describable in terms of physics dictates that DNA fulfill the heredity role. Never mind some of the extraordinary behavioral challenges, DNA has to cover all of materialism’s bets.”
Christopher also assesses the ways scientific dogma clouds discussions of environmental sustainability, race, intelligence, and even meditation—in the latter case he furnishes a fascinating discussion of the limitations of the analysis of Sam Harris, a philosopher and neuroscientist who is a well-known critic of religion. Further, he does a credible job of not only exposing the vulnerabilities and limitations of DNA as a theoretical panacea, but also the ways the scientific community routinely dismisses them, betraying their avowed commitment to intellectual openness. “Contradicting the certitude of science there are bunch [sic] of behavioral phenomena which are very difficult to explain from a materialist perspective. The inability of science to acknowledge this situation contradicts the regularly proclaimed openness and curiosity of scientists. In fact science has its own rigid materialist purview and strongly defends it.” The author, whose perspective is unmistakably locatable on the right of the political aisle, claims he does not supply a “nuanced effort,” and this is sometimes true. In his discussion of black communities, he offers common racist tropes: “A relatively weak commitment towards education and a tendency towards violence are still substantial problems in parts of the African American community.” Overall, the author’s argument is clear and free of technical convolution, a remarkable feat given the forbidding nature of much of the subject matter. His chief goal is to demonstrate the “sacred” nature of the scientific community’s fidelity to DNA as a settled theory and, as a consequence, encourage it to “start looking elsewhere for explanations.” At the very least, he accomplishes this goal.
A thorough, right-wing perspective on the philosophical vices of modern science.Pub Date: March 25, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-62967-170-3
Page Count: 178
Publisher: Wise Media Group
Review Posted Online: July 27, 2020
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Ben Newell with Marvin J. Newell ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 21, 2015
A detailed, allegorical discussion of Hell and the many ways to get there.
A man suddenly finds himself on a path to the afterlife in Newell’s inspirational-fiction debut.
In this book, the author deals with the age-old question, “What happens to me after I die?” His narrator, an engaging Everyman, is enjoying his morning at a coffee shop when his perceptions abruptly alter and he suddenly finds himself on a wide road. Streams of people travel the road’s easy path and a much smaller group travels in the opposite direction. The main character can clearly see signs marking the road as the path to Hell, but, to his bafflement, he finds that the people on it have no idea of where it’s heading. Over and over, he asks variations of the same question to people he encounters: “Do you know what road you are on, and where it leads?” Newell intersperses the man’s adventures with third-person narration to effectively drive the point home, asking traditional Christian questions about Hell: does it exist? Would a loving God send people there to suffer torment forever? “Could there be someone screaming your name, hoping that somehow you will hear them and change your life’s course?” He also effectively shapes his story with old-fashioned, Pilgrim’s Progress–style religious allegory, having his traveler meet such characters as the “Us Family,” headed by A.A. Pretending; Miss Taken; and Bourne Wright. The book makes sure not to spare religious people, either—the main character also talks with the Rev. Do U. Feelgood of the First Church of Misconception. Overall, the novel repeatedly drives the point home that Hell is real and that Christians should do everything in their power to help others avoid it. As a result, this book appears to target not only Christians, but also readers who can possibly be frightened into faith.
A detailed, allegorical discussion of Hell and the many ways to get there.Pub Date: Sept. 21, 2015
ISBN: 978-1-5127-1138-7
Page Count: 126
Publisher: Westbow Press
Review Posted Online: Feb. 2, 2016
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Eric Smith ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 13, 2016
A redemption story, with some satisfying suspense and triumph, that delivers too much unbelievable tragedy for such a...
A talented young runner escapes a turbulent childhood only to face even bigger challenges in this debut novel.
With an abusive father, Wes Strong grows up living in a state of undeserved criticism and fear. A hardworking student who just wants to make his father proud, Wes asks earnestly in prayer “What have I done, God? What am I doing wrong?” Even though he never does anything wrong, his father’s abuse is merely the first, and least awful, of the horrors awaiting him. He briefly finds an outlet for frustration on the running team, even achieving a scholarship to a nearby university. But as he relishes escaping his father, his indulgence in his first and only beer quickly snowballs into a sudden pain pill addiction and a drug deal that ends with the murder of a policeman, landing Wes in prison for six years. To top it all off, his mother dies in a car wreck around the same time. Despite all this adversity, Wes carries on and tries to avoid the two leading rival gangs at his new home in prison: the “boys” and the “freaks.” But, poster boy for Murphy’s Law that he is, Wes soon becomes a target for rape by the “boys” and seeks refuge with their enemies, discovering that they truly are freaks: “Jesus Freaks.” Wes builds a relationship with God that seems to reverse his bad luck. In telling Wes’ tale, Smith makes it difficult for a reader to take the protagonist’s “redemption” seriously. Most of the characters are two-dimensional, either completely monstrous or saintly, and Wes’ wrong place, wrong time “crime” is much less intriguing than a true dark side. The author excels in small, contained scenes, especially Wes’ races, which are taut, suspenseful, and compulsively readable. But Smith never decides how best to approach Wes, sometimes narrating from his first-person perspective and sometimes describing him at a distance like a documentarian. The result is a disjointed character who never earns the sympathy he truly deserves.
A redemption story, with some satisfying suspense and triumph, that delivers too much unbelievable tragedy for such a fragmented central character.Pub Date: June 13, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-5127-4282-4
Page Count: 228
Publisher: Westbow Press
Review Posted Online: Sept. 30, 2016
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Eric Smith
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edited by Lauren Gibaldi & Eric Smith
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by Eric Smith with Alanis Morissette , Diablo Cody & Glen Ballard
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