MrFrankZito
Thinker
- Joined
- May 14, 2005
- Messages
- 226
I think that the main idea can be effectively conveyed without writing an essay filled with quotes by David Hume, J. B. S. Haldane, Jerry A. Coyne, Michael Shermer, Richard Dawkins, and so on.
An absurdly simplified argument such as my suggestion may be completely inadequate for an essay... but wouldn't the essay carry more impact if it were more concise?
Conciseness is a tricky thing, though.
For instance, both Bertrand Russell and Richard Carrier have composed pieces entitled, "Why I Am Not A Christian." Both of theirs is considerably longer than my own statement. And, of course, some (Dawkins, Hitchens, etc.) have gone the book-length route. In comparison to those, 3000 or so words is very concise. (Of course, I recognize that The God Delusion and God is Not Great are far more ambitious in scope and detailed in scholarship than my own work, so I do not fool myself into drawing a direct comparison.)
In any event, I do believe that, to refute Christianity adequately, some length is necessitated.