A Journey Through the Great Divide: Twenty Honest Dialogues on Faith, Reason, and the Human Condition
David O. Harrison spent the first thirty-five years of his life as a skeptic, viewing the world through the lens of atheism before a profound spiritual shift led him to theism. In this book, he draws upon that dual history to bridge the gap between two of the most significant worldviews in human history. Rather than a one-sided monologue, this work is a structured debate that presents both theistic and atheistic perspectives with intellectual honesty.
Through twenty foundational questions, the reader is invited to explore the mathematical intelligibility of the universe, the origin of biological information, the persistence of religious impulse, and the reality of moral outrage. Each chapter provides a set of scientific and philosophical facts intended to ground the conversation in reason rather than rhetoric. By contrasting the biological legacy of a self-organizing cosmos with the purposeful design of a necessary mind, Harrison challenges readers to examine the evidence and reach their own conclusions.
The inquiry culminates in a final audit of our shared existence, posing the most urgent question of the human experience: “Does the story of Good and Evil end in Justice or Silence?” Whether you are a firm believer, a staunch atheist, or a curious skeptic, this book provides the framework to facilitate the honest conversations that our civilization requires.
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