Name | Dates | Known as / for | Who | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Christopher Eccleston | 1964– | English stage, film, and television actor, known for his roles in Shallow Grave , 28 Days Later , and as the ninth incarnation of the Doctor in Doctor Who . | "I'm an atheist. My mother is very religious, a churchgoer. She would often encourage me to go to church as well, but never forced it upon me, which I thought was quite decent of her. [...] There was no defining moment in which I decided there was no god for me, it was more of a growing process. I do feel that whatever religious beliefs I had as a child were foisted upon me. It's like when you ask where Grandma went when she died, and you'd be told that she went to heaven. I wouldn't necessarily view that as a bad thing, but it was stuff like that which I think hindered my intellectual development. Now that I've grown, I prefer a different interpretation." [1] | ||
David Edgar | 1948– | British playwright, noted for his adaptation of Charles Dickens' novel Nicholas Nickleby. | "Earlier this year David Edgar wrote an unforgettable account of the death of his wife, Eve Cook, for a BBC radio talk during Easter week. An avowed atheist, Edgar said that he was trying to express 'that most human need to tell the dead what we would want to say - but know we couldn't say - if they were still alive'." [2] | ||
Paul Edwards | 1923–2004 | Austrian-American moral philosopher and editor of The Encyclopedia of Philosophy | "'There is no God, there is no life after death, Jesus was a man, and, perhaps most important, the influence of religion is by and large bad,' he wrote in the current issue of Free Inquiry, a magazine about secular humanism, a school of thought that emphasizes values based on experience rather than religion.". [3] | ||
Fan Zhen | 450–515 | Chinese philosopher | "...Fan Zhen, the great atheist..." [4] | ||
Jodie Foster | 1962– | Actress | American film actress, director, and producer. | [5] [6] [7] [8] | |
Joseph Fouché | 1759–1820 | French statesman and Minister of Police under Napoleon I. | Helped established the Cult of Reason. Established the policy of inscribing "Death is an eternal sleep" over the gates to cemeteries. [9] | ||
Sigmund Freud | 1856–1939 | Austrian neurologist, "father of psychoanalysis" | "The man who would become an atheist..." [10] | ||
Stephen Fry | 1957– | British author, comedian, television presenter, actor, journalist, film director, broadcaster and political activist | "The most important philosophy I think is that even if it isn't true you must absolutely assume there is no afterlife. You cannot for one second I think, abrogate the responsibility of believing that this is it because if you think you’re going to have an eternity in which you can talk to Mozart and Chopin and Schopenhauer on a cloud and learn stuff and you know really get to grips with knowledge and understanding and so you won’t bother now. I think it’s a terrible, a terrible mistake." | ||
Anu Garg | 1967– | Author | American author, speaker, engineer, and founder of Wordsmith.org. | [11] | |
Gao Xingjian | 1940– | Author | Chinese émigré novelist, dramatist, critic, translator, stage director and painter. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2000. | "Putting aside discussion of the existence or non-existence of God, I would like to say that despite my being an atheist I have always shown reverence for the unknowable." [12] | |
Theo van Gogh | 1957–2004 | Film director | Dutch film director, television producer, publicist and actor, murdered following the broadcasting of his film Submission . | "This book is called "Allah knows best" because it is my dark suspicion we are on the verge of the new Middle Ages of Mecca; and because I feel, as a professional atheist, very unsafe in a climate that is dominated by ambitious mayors who are happily busy "keeping things together". Since 11 September, the knives are sharpened and the fifth column of goatfuckers marches ahead unhindered." [13] | |
Ricky Gervais | 1961– | Actor | English comedian, actor, director, producer, musician, writer, and former radio presenter. | "I'm basically a 'do unto others' type person. I don't have any religious feelings because I'm an atheist, but I live my life like there's a God. And if there was he'd probably love me." [14] | |
Shenae Grimes | 1989– | Canadian actress | Annie Wilson on 90210 , Darcy Edwards on Degrassi: The Next Generation . | [15] | |
Herb Grosch | 1918–2010 | Computer scientist | Grosch's law | [16] | |
Brion Gysin | 1916–1986 | Painter, writer, sound poet, and performance artist | He is best known for his discovery of the cut-up technique. | [17] | |
EW: Are you religious? JF: No, I'm an atheist. But I absolutely love religions and the rituals. Even though I don't believe in God.
I made them quit essentially. When I was nine years old I decided that I was an atheist. So I told them, "Well you shouldn't go to church anymore, it's silly." Well, apparently they'd been going to church primarily for my benefit. So after I refused to go, they quit going too.
Brion's view of Creating soon changed. By age fifteen he was an avowed atheist attending St. Joseph's Catholic High School.
Antony Garrard Newton Flew was an English philosopher. Belonging to the analytic and evidentialist schools of thought, Flew worked on the philosophy of religion. During the course of his career he taught philosophy at the universities of Oxford, Aberdeen, Keele, and Reading in the United Kingdom, and at York University in Toronto, Canada.
Herbert Reuben John Grosch was an early computer scientist, perhaps best known for Grosch's law, which he formulated in 1950. Grosch's Law is an aphorism that states "economy is as the square root of the speed."
Christian atheism is an ideology that embraces the teachings, narratives, symbols, practices, or communities associated with Christianity without accepting the literal existence of God.