'A salutary corrective to those who might imagine they have emancipated themselves from belief, and a reassurance to those who have not that to believe is the very essence of being human. A timely, often bracing and always highly stimulating book.' Tom Holland, author of Dominion 'Timely and important... Scholarly, compulsively readable and with gems of information on every page, it is a must read for anyone who has ever wondered why and how humans come to believe.' Revd Fergus Butler-Gallie, author of A Field Guide to the English Clergy 'Taking on the "great over-simplifiers", McGrath shows that belief is not some weird fault in human nature, but a vital part of it, a tool for navigating an uncertain word in our endless search for meaning, goodness and significance. A thoughtful, penetrating and engaging read.' Nicholas Spencer, author of Magisteria Alister McGrath shows us in this book with (paradoxically) great lucidity, just why we can only ever be "darkly wise", as Alexander Pope put it, about our ordinary assumptions, about scientific conclusions and about ultimate realities supremely the question of God. Belief is all pervasive, while conversely religious faith may not be a desertion of reason but its intensification and the necessary guarantee of its link to reality. McGraths cogent conclusions will surely be of immense help to many perplexed people in our perplexed times. Professor John Milbank 'While we cannot prove God exists, that is not a reason to think he doesnt... An enjoyable book.' Prospect I have read many books by Alister McGrath, renowned scientist and theologian This, though, is the best I have read. It is quite simply brilliant, a must-read for those who want to reflect deeply on the whole question of belief the work of an exceptional and very mature scholar. I recommend it very highly. Church Times 'McGrath maps out a convincing case for why belief must not only be defended in society but recognised as something we cannot live without. Believing, he argues, is intrinsic to what it means to be human... Why We Believe is an important and timely book, reintroducing respectful dialogue to an area too often caricatured or dismissed. For that reason, it deserves to be both widely read and carefully considered.' Premier Christianity,