Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us about Contentment

As the tide of secular self-awareness and public discussion of nonbelief rises, Phil Zuckerman's latest book, Society without God, is not only a major contribution to the study of irreligion and religion today, it is... Read More
The Letter from Death

FOREWORD by Howard Zinn Lillian Moats gives us, in The Letter from Death, a brilliant and strikingly original work of the imagination, drawing both on biblical scholarship and contemporary military doctrine, infused with wit and... Read More
An Edible History of Humanity

From 1879 to 1883 Chile, Bolivia, and Peru fought the War of the Pacific. By the end of the hostilities (Chile won) 55,000 people had been killed or wounded. The aim of the combatants was... Read More
Karma, Dharma, Pudding & Pie

“Karma, dharma, pudding, and pie...” isn’t exactly how we remember the line read to us in our tender years. But then, nursery rhymes are no longer thought of in the same way either—as innocent little... Read More
Living Without God: New Directions for Atheists, Agnostics, Secularists, and the Undecided

In the introduction to Living Without God, Ronald Aronson assumes a problem that many religious skeptics would quickly dismiss as not their problem. And yet it’s one to which I suspect many would welcome a... Read More
I Don’t Believe in Atheists

Chris Hedges is an experienced journalist who knows his way around the Middle East and the former Yugoslavia, as well as other troubled areas. He has written one of the more powerful arguments against war... Read More
The Mind of the Market: Compassionate Apes, Competitive Humans, and Other Tales from Evolutionary Economics

Competition, cooperation, and compassion all play a part in free market systems--and the use of these traits can be explained with an economic analogy to the biological science of evolution, according to Michael Shermer's latest... Read More