Sometimes the harsh approach has surprisingly good results. Example.
But Christopher Hitchens always struck me as too black-and-white and just plain irritating
Tangential, I know, but this surprises me. Hitchens, with his literary background, strikes me as a very nuanced thinker, attuned to the various shades of gray. (For example, he’s by no means unmoved by religion’s contributions to art and culture.) Maybe you’re thinking of his talent for devastating rhetorical flourish, as in his infamous comments on Jerry Falwell?
I accept your correction. I’ve only seen Hitchens on TV a few times and never read his book. My introduction to him was in fact his Jerry Falwell comments. If you say he’s more nuanced in his writings, I believe you.
I’ve read God is not Great and seen footage of him in debate, and while I admire him in many ways, in other ways think he’s a total arse and an embarrassment, and I don’t think Yvain’s picture of him is all that unfair. There isn’t anyone prominent who thinks that the Sistine Chapel is bad because it’s religious.
(I should add that there’s almost nothing he has to say about religion that I actually disagree with, I just wouldn’t use his turns of phrase to my religious friends)
I should add that there’s almost nothing he has to say about religion that I actually disagree with, I just wouldn’t use his turns of phrase to my religious friends
You use different rhetoric to energize the base than to sway the undecideds. Hitchens often acts as a cheerleader. All of the big four do from time to time—well, maybe not Dennett.
Hitch has the strongest line in work-the-base rhetoric and so provides a good example of the sort of rhetoric you shouldn’t use when trying to sway the undecideds, which was Yvain’s point.
Sometimes the harsh approach has surprisingly good results. Example.
Tangential, I know, but this surprises me. Hitchens, with his literary background, strikes me as a very nuanced thinker, attuned to the various shades of gray. (For example, he’s by no means unmoved by religion’s contributions to art and culture.) Maybe you’re thinking of his talent for devastating rhetorical flourish, as in his infamous comments on Jerry Falwell?
I accept your correction. I’ve only seen Hitchens on TV a few times and never read his book. My introduction to him was in fact his Jerry Falwell comments. If you say he’s more nuanced in his writings, I believe you.
I’ve read God is not Great and seen footage of him in debate, and while I admire him in many ways, in other ways think he’s a total arse and an embarrassment, and I don’t think Yvain’s picture of him is all that unfair. There isn’t anyone prominent who thinks that the Sistine Chapel is bad because it’s religious.
(I should add that there’s almost nothing he has to say about religion that I actually disagree with, I just wouldn’t use his turns of phrase to my religious friends)
You use different rhetoric to energize the base than to sway the undecideds. Hitchens often acts as a cheerleader. All of the big four do from time to time—well, maybe not Dennett.
Hitch has the strongest line in work-the-base rhetoric and so provides a good example of the sort of rhetoric you shouldn’t use when trying to sway the undecideds, which was Yvain’s point.