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cleanhippie

(19,705 posts)
Sat Dec 17, 2011, 01:28 PM Dec 2011

Richard Dawkins: Illness made Hitchens a symbol of the honesty and dignity of atheism

Christopher Hitchens was a writer and an orator with a matchless style, commanding a vocabulary and a range of literary and historical allusion far wider than anybody I know. He was a reader whose breadth of reading was simultaneously so deep and comprehensive as to deserve the slightly stuffy word "learned" – except that Christopher was the least stuffy learned person you could ever meet.

He was a debater who would kick the stuffing out of a hapless victim, yet did it with a grace that disarmed his opponent while simultaneously eviscerating him. He was emphatically not of the school that thinks the winner of a debate is he who shouts loudest. His opponents might have shouted and shrieked. Indeed they did. But Hitch didn't need to shout, for he could rely instead on his words, his polymathic store of facts and allusions, his commanding generalship of the field of discourse, and the forked lightning of his wit.

Christopher Hitchens was known as a man of the left. But he was too complex a thinker to be placed on a single left-right dimension. He was a one-off: unclassifiable. He might be described as a contrarian except that he specifically and correctly disavowed the title. He was uniquely placed in his own multidimensional space. You never knew what he would say about anything until you heard him say it, and when he did, he would say it so well, and back it up so fully, that if you wanted to argue against him you had better be on your guard.

He was recognised throughout the world as a leading public intellectual of our time. He wrote many books and countless articles. He was an intrepid traveller and a war reporter of signal valour. But he had a special place in the affections of atheists and secularists as the leading intellect and scholar of our movement. A formidable adversary to the pretentious, he woolly-minded or the intellectually dishonest, he was a gently encouraging friend to the young, the diffident, and those tentatively feeling their way into the life of the freethinker and not certain where it would take them.

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/richard-dawkins-illness-made-hitchens-a-symbol-of-the-honesty-and-dignity-of-atheism-6278298.html

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Richard Dawkins: Illness made Hitchens a symbol of the honesty and dignity of atheism (Original Post) cleanhippie Dec 2011 OP
Nice to see Dawkins' tribute to Hitch MarkCharles Dec 2011 #1
A fitting Eulogy. darkstar3 Dec 2011 #2
 

MarkCharles

(2,261 posts)
1. Nice to see Dawkins' tribute to Hitch
Sat Dec 17, 2011, 02:18 PM
Dec 2011

I often enjoy reading Dawkins more than I did Hitchens, actually. This one tribute to Hitch is jut one more of the reasons why.

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