內容介紹
- Named One of The New Yorker’s Best Books of 2026
- One of The New York Times’s anticipated books of February!
我能知道什麼? (What can I know?)
我該做什麼? (What must I do?)
我可以希望什麼? (What may I hope?)
此書由前《哈潑雜誌》(Harper's Magazine)主編、曾入圍美國國家圖書獎的作家克里斯多福.貝哈(Christopher Beha)所著,這是一部結合了個人回憶錄與哲學思辨的作品,作者在這本書中回顧了自己對這些基本問題的掙紮,並真誠地呼籲讀者也尋求屬於自己的答案。
25年前,作為一名從小受天主教信仰薰陶長大的作者,貝哈選擇放棄對上帝的信仰。受到羅素(Bertrand Russell)經典作品《我為什麼不是基督徒》(WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN)的影響,他成為了堅定的無神論者,確信信仰的日子已經一去不返。然而,在經歷了病痛(他曾患霍奇金淋巴瘤)與親友的意外後,開啟了他在無神世界中追尋意義的長久旅程。
《我為什麼不是無神論者》講述了這段旅程,探索伊曼努爾・康得(Immanuel Kant)所提出的三個迫切的人類問題:我能知道什麼?我該做什麼?我可以希望什麼?在過程中,貝哈分析了他所認為當代無神論的兩大核心世界觀:「科學唯物主義」與「浪漫理想主義」。他穿越這兩種相互競爭的無神論思想體系,最終抵達一個令人意外的結論:信仰——特別是對「在受造的秩序中,每個生命皆有意義」的信仰——既保留了兩者的精華,又提供了一套完整且連貫關於現實的圖像。
貝哈認為,現代無神論(科學唯物主義)試圖用物理定律解釋一切,但這種解釋在面對人類的苦難與對意義的渴望時,往往顯得單薄且「令人無法滿足」。書中詳細記錄了他與死亡擦身而過的經歷。他坦誠地討論了「懷疑」在信仰中的必要性,認為真正的信仰並非盲目,而是與懷疑共存的。
這部關於人類智力成就巔峰的權威著作,既深刻個人,也普遍共鳴。它不要求讀者立刻相信上帝,而是邀請讀者一起思考這些懸而未決的生命難題。它奠基於作者數十年來對受苦、死亡與終極意義的閱讀與思索。這不是一本為信仰和宗教辯護的爭論,而是一位知識分子在「上帝已死」的後現代社會中,如何重新審視痛苦、死亡與生命意義,並最終回歸信仰的心路歷程。
作者介紹
書評
“Beha [is] a rigorous thinker and remarkably lucid writer...a voice in the wilderness for all those who desire actual transcendence rather than a bespoke identity... The author's mind is open to being changed by a good idea, and after reading this book, patient readers should not be surprised if theirs have grown more open too.” —Mike St. Thomas, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Christopher Beha, the novelist and former editor of Harper's, was once a proud skeptic. He had read his way out of faith. But then he read his way back in. He describes that process in “Why I Am Not an Atheist,” his brilliant new book. Part memoir, part intellectual history, it is not only a record of his own doubts, but a survey of the modern struggle with belief.” —Matthew Schmitz, The Washington Post
“Beha's gifts as a novelist are deployed to provide clear, lively encapsulations of philosophers from Plato to Wittgenstein, including perspicacious engagements with figures like Spinoza and Schopenhauer. If you weren't paying attention in college, this book is a liberal arts education pressed between two covers. His philosophical expositions are illuminated by a liquid prose. (If you’ve ever tried to read Immanuel Kant, you’ll appreciate the magic Beha pulls off in making him comprehensible.)” –America Magazine
“What makes Beha's book so worthwhile [is] showing how religion at its best offers more than a theory of cultural renewal. As his there-and-back-again story conveys, faith can foster humility, of the mind and of the heart, and a desire to see others with the love that they believe God sees in people.” —Luis Parrales, The Atlantic
“You might think that you have heard this story before. But Beha's book is unique . . . There is breadth and depth here . . . Why I Am Not an Atheist is an enlightening travelogue of the mind and the soul.” —Nick Ripatrazone, The Catholic Herald
“Beha is sincere, honest and likable on the page. Unlike a traditional pilgrimage, this book is an odyssey of the mind . . . [a] deep-dive meditation on faith and philosophy [that] shows his ambidextrous literary talents.” —Timothy Egan, The New York Times Book Review
“The greatest strength of Why I Am Not an Atheist is this humility. Beha never tries to win. He doesn't preach or posture. Instead, he offers the rarest thing in modern writing on belief: openness without hostility, emotion without excess, and a measured voice without a hint of self-importance. The highs are the moments of insight that feel earned. The lows are the dark corridors he walks without self-pity. Beha leans on the idea that meaning grows when we face the world in its fullness, with all its doubt, difficulty, and wonder.” —John Mac Ghlionn, World
“Beha earns his articulation of his current Christian life with a long, thoughtful, serious, historical unpacking of the thinkers who constructed the 'artificial obvious' of modern unbelief. The whole narrative is handled very well indeed. . . This is an admirable and important endeavor.” —Alan Jacobs, The Dispatch
“Christopher Beha was the best editor of Harper's Magazine since Lewis Lapham. An accomplished critic and novelist, Beha turns inward in his latest book, Why I Am Not an Atheist: The Confessions of a Skeptical Believer, to tell the story of his journey from Catholicism to atheism and back. It’s a smart, provocative, and surprisingly timely addition to a very old genre.” —Ash Carter, Air Mail
“Former Harper’s editor Beha recounts his decades-long struggle to find answers in atheism before embracing faith, and along the way tackles questions about suffering, pain, mortality and purpose.” —Publishers Weekly, Top 10 Religion and Spirituality titles for Spring 2026
“A nuanced philosophical investigation of belief and nonbelief . . . [Beha] is a smart and fluent interpreter. A lucid, thought-provoking treatise.” —Kirkus
“This powerful and poignant book lays bare Christoper Beha's heartfelt and erudite journey from Bertrand Russell’s Why I Am Not a Christian to John Henry Newman's legendary conversion to Catholicism, American-style! Like Dante's Beatrice, his transformative experience of earthly love opens the windows to genuine divine presence! His literary artistry sparkles as his heart yearns for and burns with transcendence!” —Cornel West, author of Black Prophetic Fire
“What a thrilling and fascinating mind Beha has, and what a brilliant and beautiful (and sometimes very funny) book he has written with Why I Am Not an Atheist! It's a joy to read him probing the philosophical traditions underlying our contemporary worldviews, and when the book moves into his own attempts to live out various faiths, from atheism to Roman Catholicism, the book doesn’t just offer us a brilliant portrait of sophisticated faith in the modern age but also gives us a genuinely moving narrative of spiritual longing and love.” —Phil Klay, author of Uncertain Ground
“Sometimes a matter of personal, existential urgency will impel a man to start questioning the certainties of his time. Christopher Beha found himself at such a juncture, and the fruit of it is Why I Am Not an Atheist. Beha recovers and reconstructs the steps by which Western man got himself into a jam—that is, how we ended up with a world-picture that renders important swaths of experience unintelligible. We bracket off moments of wonder and grace as unexplainable, and therefore as unreal. The result is a flattened world. But it is not the only world available. In tracing the intellectual genealogy of our superficial metaphysics, Beha clears the way for us to hear the quiet, clear call of . . . well, of something very large that addresses us.” —Matthew B. Crawford, New York Times bestselling author of Shop Class as Soulcraft
“Christopher Beha's brilliant memoir takes to heart Saint Augustine's injunction to ‘read your life.’ In doing so, Beha offers his own, deeply personal confrontations with religious faith, even as he examines the philosophical traditions that both underpin and undermine his attempt—anyone’s attempt, really—to respond to that simple and persistent question: How should we live? A profound and honest book that proves intelligent belief is not an oxymoron, that both faith and doubt can nurture the soul.” —Alice McDermott, author of Absolution
海外授權
UK & BC (Ebury Vine)
Germany (Matthes & Seitz)
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