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The Richard Dawkins Collection (The Genius of Charles Darwin, The Enemies of Reason and The Root of All Evil?) | 
enlarge | Artist: Richard Dawkins Studio: Channel 4 DVD Category: DVD
List Price: £29.99 Buy New: £17.98 You Save: £12.01 (40%)
New (9) from £15.07
Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 859
Format: Box Set, Pal Rating: To Be Announced Region: 2 Number Of Discs: 2 Running Time: 350 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.5 x 1.3
EAN: 6867441023999 ASIN: B0016OMFLQ
Release Date: September 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
A voice of reason. August 25, 2008 Mr. S. P. Hargraves (Liverpool UK) 122 out of 132 found this review helpful
Often reviled by religionists foaming at the mouth by his calmly reasoned heresy, Dawkins gamely tries to promote science - which provides irrefutable evidence for evolution despite the oft repeated strawman arguments of the creationists who'd sooner we revert to idiocy than acknowledge reality - over the irrational and often offensive beliefs of those indoctrinated into bronze age thinking, where all the wonders and marvels of the universe, instead of being explored and understood, are blindly attributed to a magic sky-fairy, who is probably the most unpleasant character in popular fiction. These programs are fascinating, thought provoking, and long overdue. The inexplicable rise of christian neo-fascism in america, with threats of ID being taught in schools, and creationist museums springing up depicting some kind of lunatic live-action flintsones with cavemen and dinosaurs living together as a factual rendition of the past (despite the 65 million year gap in time)- its time to address these delusional belief systems, which far from being just a useful tool for social control and personal comfort, seems increasingly intent on bringing violence, terrorism, racism, homophobia and mysogonism to us all. While science doesn't yet provide the answers to *all* the big questions - it has emphatically answered how mankind came into existence, where the planet earth came from and approximately how old it is. Also - unlike the best selling religious texts - scientific work is updated and revised to stay at the forefront of human knowledge, rather than being rooted thousands of years in the past. Dawkins beliefs aren't "beliefs" - they require no "faith" - its not a system - its not a form of "religion"; its simply how things are in reality. A lot of people would sooner bury their heads in the sand rather than go to a museum or read a science book. Dawkins may not be the most diplomatic or unbiased of commentators (!) but established religion has only relatively recently stopped murdering non-believers. Thankfully - its about time we heard an educated perspective, rather then mumbo jumbo.
The uncomfortable truth August 25, 2008 Dr. Keith A. Moseley (UK) 66 out of 77 found this review helpful
Cuddly he aint! Richard Dawkins reminds me of a former work colleague (a palaeontologist as it happens) who never let sensitivities get in the way of winning an argument. But, uncomfortable though his words may be for many devout people, Richard exposes the difference between ideas based on blind trust (faith), self-delusion (alternative medicine) and those based on mountains of peer-reviewed researched evidence(such as evolution). This DVD set is bound to have religious fundamentalists and mystics foaming at the mouth so watch out for their reviews trying to bring it down. Richard takes on his opponents with unnerving calm and some get quite upset. Prepare to be enlightened by a surgically precise dismantling of religious dogma and pseudo-scientific 'alternative' nonsense, followed by the presentation of reasoned fact in its place. As Dawkins has said, the reality is wonderful enough without having to invent any more of it.
Rational thought in irrational times August 28, 2008 Ian Armer (Lancashire, United Kingdom) 30 out of 35 found this review helpful
When it comes to God, Richard Dawkins is very clear that we can't disprove a God, but neither can we disprove an orbiting tea-pot around Mars (See what he did there? Although apparently it's fine and rational to muse upon an unprovable and convenient possibility like a 'multiverse', but that's because a 'multiverse' is sensible where as the tea pot analogy is purposefully stupid. See again what he did there? He does that a lot, especially in 'The God Delusion') nor can we sit back and allow religious loons to kill us because we don't believe what they do and vice versa. The fact that Richard Dawkins isn't telling us anything new is testament to the power of these 3 documentaries provided in this boxed set. And even though I don't agree with everything he says, or where his arguements sometimes lead, I feel that Prof. Dawkins is the nearest thing we godless heathens have to a national treasure. In this set you get the excellent 'Root of all Evil?', the so-so 'Enemies of Reason' and the dividing 'Genius of Charles Darwin'. Personally I really liked 'Genius' where as others thought it less about Darwin and more about Richard Dawkins attacking religion again. Well, judging by some of the idiots in this documentary - and the alarming interview with the Archbishop of Canterbury who blatantly doesn't take anything he teaches literally but is on too much money to say otherwise - frankly they deserve it. In fact, it is painful to watch some of the interviews because many seem to be brainwashed and lacking any genuine passion (or evidence), just as Dawkins springs to life about evolution and backs it all up with more evidence than you can shake a fossil at. Of course he injects Darwinian evolution with his own 'selfish gene' reading of the process, no other view is covered, although a critic of this view engages in a chat with dawkins over a gorilla or two. On the downside, some of the camerawork on 'Genius' is appalling. It's as if nobody could be bothered to think ahead and plan out shots, or even edit around gaffes in post. Dawkins at the piano and the interview with Daniel Dennett (especially where the cameraman - seemingly drunk - staggers in between the 'over the shoulder' shots) is pretty shoddy. 'Enemies of Reason' is perhaps an easier shot at irrational thought than religion or a belief in God. It's pretty unremarkable to be honest. The only noteworthy aspect of the programme is the disclosure of just how much taxpayers money goes into loony practices on the NHS and how a 'guru' like Deepak Chopra makes gazillions on the back of the seemingly endless gumph he writes and lectures about. Okay, so it's a mixed bag. Hardened fans of Dawkins (usually people that go around quoting dawkins and saying how silly tea pots are, along with faeries and unicornzzz-z-z-z) will lap it up. Most other reasonable free thinking humanists will see it all for its strengths and flaws.
Reason September 11, 2008 V. Pule (Malta) 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
Dawkins has often been accused of being arrogant. In these DVDs he shows that he's just the opposite. He is calm and courteous when confronting people who are promoters of unproven claims yet he is firm and unflinching in the face of nonsense. His commentary is not only rational but also poetic. More of these programmes instead of the commercial rubbish being dished out would make the world a better place. Highly recommended.
Truth August 25, 2008 R. Otovator (Luton) 32 out of 41 found this review helpful
Dawkins comments on belief systems are consise, refreshing and hit their mark with perfect accuracy. The reaction he gets from "religious" folk is wonderful and speaks volumes about the doubt he instills in them. Brilliant stuff
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