Nope, it's been seen in branches of Waterstone's eg, Both Folkestone Branches and Both Canterbury and I should imagine it is or has been in the past, policy.
Nobody here is claiming it is pop science, Richard Dawkins wouldn't claim it is pop science.
The gospels are certainly not history and are probably best classified as mythology (to return to the subject).
I'm not talking about people here Jeremy I'm talking about Waterstone's and the people who don't mind that they miscategorise The God Delusion.....and if the cap fits...........
And this thread is not meant to be about The God Delusion so why do you keep banging on about it? It's a very strange argument with which to try to counter the "gospels are fiction" point.
Me: The gospels are fiction
Vlad: This other book was wrongly classified in Waterstones, so there.
I mean WTF?
The main Gospel points and personae are attested to in the Epistles which were written within a couple decades of the events.
Wonders will never cease. Vlad makes a relevant argument.
Interestingly, the epistles do not attest to the main gospel points at all, excepting that Jesus was executed and the obviously mythical resurrection. If you look for anything else, like the Lord's Prayer, the Sermon on the Mount, the virgin birth, any of Jesus' miracles, you search in vain. How could this be? How is it that, when arguing that Jesus was resurrected, Paul fails to mention the empty tomb, preferring a ridiculous use of the fallacy of adverse consequences?
The answer is because those stories hadn't been made up yet.