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From the Wandering Jew to William F. Buckley, Jr. : On Science, Literature, and Religion [Hardcover]

Martin Gardner (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 2000
For over fifty years, Martin Gardner has been writing witty, entertaining, and highly intelligent articles on an amazing range of topics. Best known for his works on popular science and mathematics, and as an incisive skeptical commentator on the paranormal, Gardner is also an accomplished writer of children's literature, a novelist, and essayist on religion and philosophy. This collection of essays and book reviews takes its name from the bookend articles, 'The Wandering Jew and the Second Coming' and 'The Faith of William Buckley', which in themselves demonstrate the extent of Gardner's interests. Besides the legend of the Wandering Jew, its relation to the Second Coming, and Bill Buckley's religious convictions, Gardner also takes on the subjects of astrology, psychic surgery, word play in the stories of L Frank Baum (author of "The Wizard of Oz"), and the history of a forgotten children's magazine. In addition, there are reviews of books by astronomer Carl Sagan, philosopher Paul Edwards, and science fiction writer H G Wells, along with commentary on mathematics, Lewis Carroll, chess, Christian Science, science fads, and more. Long-time Gardner fans and intellectually curious newcomers will welcome this entertaining and literate collection by one of America's most brilliant essayists.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Over his several decades of writing, Gardner has accomplished so much it's hard to believe there's just one of him. His 60-odd books have explained complex science and math, dissected UFOs and pseudoscience, analyzed and admired Alice in Wonderland, answered everyday questions about technology and collected 25 years of contributions to Scientific American's column "Mathematical Games." This compilation of previously published work adds postscripts and restores editorial cuts to 29 short essays and book reviews, reprinted from Skeptical Inquirer, Free Inquiry, Discover, the Los Angeles Times Book Review and elsewhere. Many pieces attack religious fundamentalists and claims of the supernatural, like the purported "psychic surgeons" from the Philippines. A three-part series examines the Seventh-Day Adventists and their breakaway sects, who set dates, since expired, for the apocalypse (the first Christians apparently did the same). Also in Gardner's sights are TV evangelists, Buckley's brand of Christianity and social constructionist theories of science and math. Readers who share Gardner's sentiments on all these matters may find his debunking essays repetitive, but they will turn with gratitude to his appreciations. The best of the essays and book reviews here are praiseAfor unjustly forgotten children's author and editor John Martin, for L. Frank Baum of Oz fame, for science-fiction editor and popular-science writer Hugo Gernsback, for H.G. Wells and for sharp-tongued Catholic novelist G.K. Chesterton, whose work Gardner knows inside and out. It is in these pieces that Gardner's readers will learnAas they may expect from him something new each time. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Scientific American

Once again the reader gets to see what a broad range of things Gardner thinks about and how crisply he writes. Already renowned as a mathematical gamesman and a steely critic of pseudoscience, Gardner extends his reach in this collection of nine essays and 20 book reviews. In "The Wandering Jew and the Second Coming," he touches on a biblical message that is, he says, "for Bible fundamentalists one of the most troublesome of all New Testament passages." Reviewing Demon-Haunted World, in which astronomer Carl Sagan attacked the "dumbing down" of science, Gardner calls the book "a powerful indictment of today's miserable science teaching, the upsurge of Protestant fundamentalism and the roles of greedy book publishers, abetted by the print and electronic media, in accelerating America's dumbing down." He also considers a "question that troubles all the parents of chess prodigies," namely, what direction the prodigy will take. "Will he become an honored grandmaster, happy and well adjusted as the Russian Boris Spassky, or will the game turn him into a miserable misfit like Bobby Fischer?"

EDITORS OF SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 350 pages
  • Publisher: Prometheus Books (October 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573928526
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573928526
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,060,081 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

For 25 of his 95 years, Martin Gardner wrote 'Mathematical Games and Recreations', a monthly column for Scientific American magazine. These columns have inspired hundreds of thousands of readers to delve more deeply into the large world of mathematics. He has also made significant contributions to magic, philosophy, debunking pseudoscience, and children's literature. He has produced more than 60 books, including many best sellers, most of which are still in print. His Annotated Alice has sold more than a million copies. He continues to write a regular column for the Skeptical Inquirer magazine.

 

Customer Reviews

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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In which Gardner debunks the debunkable, January 25, 2001
This review is from: From the Wandering Jew to William F. Buckley, Jr. : On Science, Literature, and Religion (Hardcover)
Martin Gardner, creator of the "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American, and the author of more books than he or I can remember, takes on some of his pet peeves here in his usual readable and understated style.

There are ten short essays on such subjects as psychic surgery in the Philippines, "Oral Roberts on Jim Bakker," "Life Magazine and Astrology," etc., and a number of book reviews, including Searching for Bobby Fischer (1988) by Fred Waitzkin, a life of Lewis Carroll and Lewis Carroll as a photographer, both by Morton Cohen, Carl Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World (1995), and What is Mathematics, Really? (1997) by Reuben Hersh. In the latter, Gardner strongly disagrees with Hersh's thesis, insisting that mathematics does indeed exist outside the human mind, and that, for example, two plus two equals four anywhere in the galaxy. (Notice my reluctance to write "anywhere in the universe.") Perhaps the most incisive essay is Gardner's debunking of the phony psychic surgeons, which he does in a style that would please both Carl Sagan and James Randi, and does indeed please this reviewer. Notable in the review of Reflections in a Looking Glass (1998) by Morton Cohen about Lewis Carroll are two photos taken by the author of Alice in Wonderland, one of them of the real-life Alice herself. Also included are introductions to new releases of three books by H.G. Wells.

I was particularly entertained by Gardner's deflation of William F. Buckley Jr. in his review of Buckley's Nearer, My God (1997). It seems that Buckley believes whole heartedly in such fundamental Catholic doctrines as incarnation, virgin birth, atonement, the resurrection of Jesus, papal infallibility, hell, and hell fire. Literally. Gardner wonders if Buckley thinks that Eve was fabricated "from one of Adam's ribs, or does he accept the evolution of human bodies?" (p. 343). Buckley replies to Gardner's review but does not respond to the question about evolution. Gardner concludes that, in spite of his admirable faith, "Buckley is guilty of what has been called the sin of willful ignorance."

I also liked Gardner's devaluation of the so-called science of memetics in his review of psychologist Susan Jane Blackmore's recent book, The Meme Machine. Gardner sees the "memes-eye view" as "little more than a peculiar terminology for saying the obvious" (p. 214), and he agrees with Stephen Jay Gould, who called memes "meaningless metaphors" (p. 215).

I have only one question of Mr. Gardner: how can you justify the time spent on reading works from the likes of Jim Bakker and Tammy Faye or about such charlatans as the Seventh Day Adventist fraud, Margaret Rowen? I suspect Gardner would reply that he is doing a public service by flailing against the ever-present tide of pseudoscience and fake religiosity. He undoubtedly feels as Carl Sagan did, that "the rising flood of superstition and pseudoscience is too damaging to society to be ignored" (p. 125). I agree, and in fact, his is a noble cause. May he long persist.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another blow to the credulous, January 11, 2001
This review is from: From the Wandering Jew to William F. Buckley, Jr. : On Science, Literature, and Religion (Hardcover)
Martin Gardner, in this,his latest essay collection,once again does yeoman service in the interest of science,rationality, and truth. Taking on such diverse views as those of Jim and Tammy Bakker,Mary Baker Eddy, and Wm. F. Buckley Jr.,he analyzes and all but demolishes the absurdities that these people so abundantly display. Buckley, who normally applies the most searching intelligence to his scrutiny of society and politics, is here shown to be lacking in the most rudimentary skepticism when it comes to his Catholic faith, and one comes away from the essay on him disappointed and disillusioned. As an antidote to the credulity seen so widely in our supposedly advanced society, whether it be fundamentalism, creationism, astrology,or "psychic surgery", Gardner should be assigned reading. He has a sure nose for humbug.
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19 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars For Gardner Fans (and a Caveat), January 16, 2001
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This review is from: From the Wandering Jew to William F. Buckley, Jr. : On Science, Literature, and Religion (Hardcover)
If you haven't read anything by Martin Gardner, I'm not sure this is the best book to start with. Gardner's been doing this for a long time now, and his earlier works are more fresh. There's a sense of retreading familliar ground here. I would propose either one of his Mathematical Recreations collections (if you are interested in that side of Gardner's work) or the essay collection _The Night is Large_ as a starting point. That said, this covers varied ground, occasionally overdoing the skewering of an idea that is, to anyone likely to read Gardner, going to be fairly easily dismissed, and occasionally showing naivete (a la Carl Sagan) in its manner of demolishing pseudoscience. Gardner is no born again Scientific Materialist, like Sagan, but he can sometimes display the same flaws.

Which brings me to the last essay in the book, the review of William F. Buckley, Jr.'s _Nearer, My God_. Gardner respects Buckley, despite strong disagreements with him on varied topics, and the review, as such, is certainly positive: "I put down 'Nearer, My God' with unbounded admiration for Buckley's courage and honesty and the depth of his piety." However, the bulk of the article is a rambling account of time-worn criticisms of Christianity that Gardner suggests Buckley has answered with willful ignorance. The problem isn't that the criticisms are uninteresting (one of them is the problem of evil, another the difference between the Old Testament God and the New Testament God that so moved the Gnostics). It's hard to imagine that Buckley could have written a book that answered all of them, and presumably Buckley is as aware of them as the next highly educated and supremely literate Catholic--I suspect (he hints as much in his reply to Gardner, included here) that Buckley would refer Martin Gardner to some of the thinkers Gardner and Buckley mention--Augustine, Aquinas, etc.

The chief problem with the essay is that when it comes to religious matters, Gardner, despite a great admiration for Chesterton and a good deal of knowledge, has a strangely Protestant approach to matters, and tends to judge Catholic thought as if sola scriptura had been the cry not of Luther but of the Church. In particular, although it is hard for me to imagine that the widely read Martin Gardner isn't aware of Newman's ideas on the development of doctrine and the Church's position that tradition, rather than simply the texts of the canon and the Church Fathers, serves a role in this development. Gardner seems to think that the writings of Aquinas are all formally proclaimed doctrine and that doctrines historically present but not written by the earliest fathers are inventions. This overly text-based approach might be a legitimate weapon to use against a Protestant Church proclaiming itself to be based purely on early texts, but it is not very useful in discussing a Church that claims to develop (not invent) doctrine under the continued guidance of an acting Spirit.

This point aside, the book is certainly worth reading if you've enjoyed Martin Gardner's writings in the past.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
For the son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man according to his works. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
review first appeared, introduction first appeared, psychic surgery, essay first appeared
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Christian Science, New York, Notting Hill, Los Angeles, United States, Second Coming, John Martin, Mary Baker Eddy, Looking Backward, Cap'n Bill, Ellen White, Sky Island, Christian Scientists, Hugo Gernsback, Jim Bakker, Martin Gardner, Tin Woodman, Lewis Carroll, Pump Street, Emerald City, Frank Baum, Tammy Faye, Carl Sagan, Long Island, Margaret Rowen
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