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A Skeptic's Faith: Why Scientific Materialism Cannot Be the Whole Truth
This book skewers prominent materialist thinkers such as Steven Pinker and Richard Dawkins, showing the obvious errors in their reasoning. More important, it looks critically at materialism, and it shows that what philosophers call “dualism,” the idea that matter and spirit can exist independently, is more plausible than the idea that only matter exists. It begins by looking at philosophers’ arguments showing that computers cannot have consciousness. Then it shows that materialism cannot provide a basis for scientific knowledge or morality—and shows that it is self-contradictory to claim that science has proven that only matter exists. It looks critically at the evidence from near-death experiences, and it concludes by asking how we can reconcile religion with science.
Reviews
“Materialism is pure dogma” writes Siegel (More Work or More Free Time) in this assiduous treatise on the merits of dualism over materialism. Contending that “reasoning and evidence” are necessary to determine the credibility of dualism, Siegel encourages readers to approach the text as true skeptics—those who have “an open mind and [decide] what to believe based on the evidence.” He explains the main principles behind both materialism and dualism—applying them to concepts such as morality and subjective experience—while arguing that materialism is routinely self-contradictory and, though he notes that it cannot be disproved, he insists its followers should openly explore other ideas.

Siegel’s text is weighty material, packed with philosophical rationales and fresh, revealing examples, but he offers readers thought-provoking reflections on his path to validating dualism, a belief that “mind and matter both exist independently, and our bodies are somehow connected with our minds.” He shares the uniqueness of humans and our evolutionary ability to reason reliably about the world around us, as opposed to being simple products of “evolved matter,” using this development as evidence for dualism. Siegel also delves into near-death experiences as confirmation that consciousness and body are able to function separately—a direct conflict with materialism’s belief that “science can, in principle, explain everything.”

Siegel takes a strong stance against creationism (a “demonstrably false idea” he writes) and cautions readers against “drawing a halo around the word ‘religion’ and thinking that it is always good.” Spiritual experience, he contends, can be considered a “fluke,” though he argues that his perspective on dualism finds support in religions like Jainism. The second half of the book is dedicated to refuting proponents of materialism, including Christopher Hitchens, an “intellectual lightweight” who, Siegel asserts, dismisses eastern religions without merit. Siegel’s passion for dualism—and willingness to tackle its complex nature—will illuminate.

Takeaway: A thorough, clarifying analysis of dualism versus materialism.

Great for fans of: David J. Chalmers’s The Conscious Mind, Steven Richheimer’s The Fallacy of Materialism.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: B

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