rio wrote:
Having attempted to read the God Delusion and being overwhelmed by the sheer pointlessness of it after 10 minutes, I can't say this with any authority at all- but isn't at least a large part of it an attack on theology? Clearly it's not theology itself, but it's surely about it... hence the analogy works?
It's kind of unlikely that someone like Eagleton would make such a basic mistake as the one you're accusing him of... however having not read the book thoroughly myself, I don't really know either way.
He definitely spends some time in pointing out the pointlessness of theology, but that's not the main point of the book. TGD is more of a "call to arms" for atheists to be vociferous about their position. Dawkins, being a scientist, is obviously more concerned with the implications that religion has for knowledge seeking and rationalism, rather than solving philosophical quandaries. Leave that to Dennett.
I didn't read the entire Eagleton article, it's too long for now. I did skim through it and saw a few criticisms that are bollocks, though. Like the idea that Dawkins honestly believes that all faith is fundamentalist and blinding. Again, the preface to TGD addresses this point. Dawkins says that while of course most believers simply wish to live and let live, there is a) a quite loud and influential portion of believers who do not wish to do so, and who must be countered, and b) there is a more pervasive and general negative aspect to religious faith, which he summed up (quite eloquently, IMHO

) during an interview once: "I am against faith because it teaches us to be content with what we do not know".