Description:Explores the rise of radical secular humanism as a religious phenomenon, in a report that challenges beliefs about secular humanism's validity and seeks to demonstrate how its self-centered life philosophies fail to safeguard the western world from Islamic threats.
In
this timely and wide-ranging book, one of America's leading public
intellectuals explores the rise of radical secular humanism as a
religious experience. London shows that while secular humanism has it's
saints, sinners, and even its quasi-religious rituals, it is too anemic
and self-centered a philosophy of life to serve America and the West in
its battle against the threat of radical Islam.