Comments

  • Primary Sources
    Thank you all for the kind words and feedback. I was never really sure where I was going with this website, or why. It just kind of developed over time into what it is now. If other people can find some value in it, then that's really great to hear. If anybody has feedback, recommendations, suggestions, constructive criticism, etc. I would be more than happy to listen.

    I recently got the Harvard Classics page up: https://antilogicalism.com/primary-sources/harvard-classics/
  • Primary Sources
    Just a bit of an update: I spent some time putting together a new page for the bookshelf. The page contains the 50-volume set of The Sacred Books of the East: https://antilogicalism.com/primary-sources/sacred-books-of-the-east/.

    I want to make a page for the Harvard Classics next.
  • Currently Reading
    After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory by Alasdair MacIntyre
  • Primary Sources
    Forgotten Books looks interesting. Thanks for the recommendation.

    I guess I'm the type of person who likes to collect books, but never gets around to reading them all. Most of what I have read on my lists would be the "canonical" texts of Western philosophical and religious tradition. If I had to list a few of the most influential on my own worldview it would have to include certain books of the Bible, Norman Geisler, William Lane Craig, Immanuel Kant, Soren Kierkegaard, Albert Camus, Friedrich Nietzsche, G.K. Chesterton, Keiji Nishitani, and probably some of the other "existentialist" thinkers.

    I have an old page here that kind of goes through my first 7-8 years of self-study: https://antilogicalism.com/my-journey/
  • Primary Sources
    My choice of the title Antilogicalism was kind of a personal thing. I actually have an old page about it here: https://antilogicalism.com/2017/06/29/antilogicalism/
  • Atheist Epistemology
    You could respond, "I have consistently found my faith to be reliable."
  • Do Atheists hope there is no God?
    I think this is an interesting question. I was raised Pentecostal and have studied the history of theology and philosophy. I tend to see a strong element of autobiography in both. Now, after many years I have come to an atheistic/agnostic standpoint, yet (sorry for the melodrama) I mourn the death of God. Maybe I miss the certainty and simplicity of my old worldview. Whatever it is, I can tell you that I am an atheist who actively wants God to exist.