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The man who Created God
 
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The man who Created God [Hardcover]

John F. Brain (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

Price: $32.99 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

August 3, 2005
Under his pseudonym John F Brinster, noted author of science, philosophy, and religion, has produced an important satirical novel directed to imaginative beliefs in an anthropomorphic god with explanations of the emotional mind and filled with lively characters. It pits the most respected logical mind of Oxford Professor Jeremiah B Cackelry III against the emotional minds of traditional believers. A mysterious Cackelry abduction results in attempts to identify perpetrators through a mathematical code. The religious world challenges Cackelry to a Paris Summit to present his religion, patterned after concepts of the author's former neighbor, Albert Einstein.His loyal assistant, Dr Anne Duchin, a neuroscientist and attractive tennis star, goes to his rescue. Dr Elaine Price, a disturbed lesbian assistant of equal beauty and of pathological belief, attempts to defend her god. Fiendish Dr Anton Schicter enters into an arrangement on the side of religions and plans an untraceable prefrontal leucotomy todestroy the professor's creativity . Meanwhile, a militant Transylvanian cult takes advantage of the fear of Dracula vampires and Frankenstein monsters to protect membership. Cackelry is not atheistic but determined to replace imaginative notions with reality, notions that he believes deter neural development of reason essential for peaceful coexistence. He succeeds in creating his god and the ultimate religion for Man. The setting is Switzerland decades beyond the present. Requested by the new Third Millennium U N with expanded power, Cackelry builds the World University to lead the world out of stagnation. He marries Anne but, upon his mysterious death, she abandons her narrow life to marry his eldest son, Jeremiah Cackelry IV, a banker in Basel. In a society, torn with religious conflict, replete with prejudices, and with beliefs and practices that challenge human reason, this book presents a breath of fresh air.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Xlibris Corporation (August 3, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1413487629
  • ISBN-13: 978-1413487626
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #9,695,268 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Cosmotheism and CosmoDeus?, February 12, 2006
By 
Alex Farkas (Sunnyvale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book is supposed to be a satirical novel, but I read it as a straight one. I guess one could do that, as one could read Gulliver's Travels straight. Its subject is a commendable one: create a science-based, natural religion in the spirit of Einstein, to replace the existing ones centered around an anthropomorphic god created by human imagination and wishful thinking (mostly the three Abrahamist/Adamist faiths) and create a matching natural god while preserving the spititual nature of Man. The main character is Prof. Jeremiah Cackelry, an expert in brain sciences, as smart as Einstein and then some. There is little dialogue, the book unfolds through the narration of an ever-present, omniscient observer (my creative writing teacher would say: "Don't tell me, show me!") The full name of the prof appears thousand of times, one wishes that he would be referred simply as Jerry, to save a bunch of pages! The book is preachy most of the time (which is all right with me, being a member of the choir, but I'm not sure how far a non-member would stay with it). Sometimes it veers into sheer jeremiads.
The plot is reasonably neat, although some people will find one suspicious character being lesbian objectionable, and the references to Transylvania and Frankenstein are weird and out of place. I guess creating these references is safer than battling the real, more likely opposers of the natural religion, people whose faiths are interwined with national and racial identities. Oh well, a few rewrites, or the screen-writers might take care of these!
The author has a way with acronyms and names: I especially liked BARF, and one character's psychiatrist named Sigma Freud! The time-frame is mid-21st century, like the books "The Singularity is Near" and "The Radical Evolution," although there are no high-tech gadgets here--with the exception of an MRI machine, suitable for non-evasive lobotomy. I miss any references to space, what seems near impossible here on Earth will come natural on a space colony.
Returning to satire: I think the time-frame to establish his natural religion in 40-some months is satirical all right; a product of imagination and wishful thinking--and one has to be careful with those. They put us into this mass we are in now! Also the choice of the place: Europe/Switzerland (in the Tower of Babel?) where xenophobia is hopelessly rampant? Excuse me! It will take more than a common religion for Man to become Homo Universalis; it will take a common language as well. HU will more likely emerge in the US, in the New World of immigrants and tolerance, Monkey Trials and Intelligent Design notwithstanding! Maybe it will emerge in the author's and Einsten's own Princeton, or here at Stanford in California, where one can find a Sikh Temple next to a Mosque, among dozens of Christian denomination houses of worship. We also have to find a catchier name than Natural Religion and Natural God! "Sci/religion has been suggested by Corey Powell in his "God in the Equation," but I'd rather go with Cosmotheism and CosmoDeus.
I recommend this book to those emerging from their shamanistic cocoons into the One World of Man.
Alex Farkas Sunnyvale, CA. www.cosmotheist.com
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