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Who has been the most influential Atheist/Agnostic famous person for you? How and why?

I would like some recommendations of things to see or read.

DavidLaDeau 8 Feb 22
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60 comments (51 - 60)

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1

As far as to start questioning it was Carl Sagan. When it comes to finally accepting that I was atheist it was reading "The God Delusion" by Dawkins.

gearl Level 8 Feb 24, 2020

A very good book!

1

Stephen West podcast really reassures my beliefs and then un does them 😆😆😆 He has a book and also does transcripts of all his shows if your into philosophy or just generally want to challenge your ideas and how you process certain views on life.

I will listen to the podcast. Thank you!

1

Richard Feynmann: " I prefer having questions that can't be answered to answers that can't be questioned. See a video of him on TouTube by searching Feynmann on Uncertainty.

1

His books are also quite good.

"Rob Boston is senior adviser and editor of Church & State, Americans United for Separation of Church and State's monthly membership magazine.

Rob, who has worked at Americans United since 1987, is the author of four books: Close Encounters with the Religious Right: Journeys into the Twilight Zone of Religion and Politics (Prometheus Books, 2000); The Most Dangerous Man in America? Pat Robertson and the Rise of the Christian Coalition (Prometheus Books, 1996); Why the Religious Right Is Wrong About Separation of Church and State (Prometheus Books, 1993; second edition, 2003) and, most recently, Taking Liberties: Why Religious Freedom Doesn’t Give You The Right To Tell Other People What To Do (Prometheus Books, 2014)."

[au.org]

I don't know him, time to study up!

1

Jordan Peterson for me. He's not sure there is a god but he acts like there is one in the world.

He seems to have too many bad arguments that are focused on pandering to the largest demographic to me. I see atheist criticize his arguments him constantly. This is in no way to suggest you are wrong.

Actions speak louder than words - Old chestnut!

1

Barry W. Lynn is one of my favorite religionists and has written several books on church/state separation.

[en.m.wikipedia.org]

Thank you. I am not not familiar with Barry.

@DavidLaDeau

Lynn's first book, Piety & Politics: The Right-Wing Assault on Religious Freedom (ISBN 0-307-34654-4), was published in October 2006. His second book, God and Government: Twenty-Five Years of Fighting for Equality, Secularism, and Freedom Of Conscience (ISBN 1633880257) was published in 2015.

@WilliamCharles I have never read any books that address the political aspects of unbelief and how it affects society and government. Sunds like a good place to start.

1

Depends what you want. If you are looking for confirmation bias the pop authors in the field would be ideal. Pick anyone, they all say the same.

If you want real life consideration go for an Idiots Guide to Stoicism type book.

Even just stoic quotes will suffice to get a handle on the world.

1

Robert Heinlein, hands down. It’s difficult to pick a single book, but Stranger in a Strange Land is up there. The most influential for me was Starship Troopers. And Friday. And most of the things he wrote.

What did he write about?

0

I would also contact CFI for selections/recommendations from their extensive library.

[cfiwest.org]

Thank you!

0

famous or less famous people influence me to varying degrees not based on their atheism, or on their discussing/portraying atheism, but for a wider variety of reasons. some of them happen to be atheists. some do not. so to answer this question, i have to think, okay, who is/was an atheist? it's not as if my mental library has a special shelf for them. they're all mixed in with everyone else. i don't even necessarily know who is or isn't. not everyone reveals that, and i don't mean because it's being hidden but, rather, because it just doesn't happen to be the topic du jour. i happen to adore carl sagan. as it happens, he was an atheist. i don't remember whether he talked about his atheism in "cosmos." it doesn't matter. his world view, well beyond belief or nonbelief in deities, is what moved me.

but now i have to ask, when you say influential, do you mean influential in general or influential in terms of my being an atheist? because i was not knowingly influenced by any atheists (or nonatheists) at all in those terms. i don't think i had ever read anything about atheism, or heard anyone discuss it, or seen it portrayed except perhaps in passing, when i realized at age 15 that there were no gods. that realization did not come from anyone else's tutelage.

g

I did notnknow there were atheist that wrote books or made videos or spoke publicly until after I coma out as one myself. Them it was only to defend my son who was sent to the principles office for stating he was an atheist. It was them that I disocered many authors and found that they had put into concise, organized words what I already knew. They helped me to expressmyself better to others.

@DavidLaDeau that is a good thing i am sure. i have been writing since i was four years old (poetry at first, not about atheism lol) so i was, shall we say, already a good communicator! but on the other hand, it wasn't a traumatic discovery for me and it never occurred to me to mention it to anyone except my best friend, in passing, and it turns out she too was an atheist.

g

@genessa Good people, good company!

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