cover image The Great Agnostic: 
Robert Ingersoll and 
American Freethought

The Great Agnostic: Robert Ingersoll and American Freethought

Susan Jacoby. Yale Univ., $25 (256p) ISBN 978-0-300-13725-5

A rare all-American atheist is celebrated in this provocative if hagiographic sketch. Journalist and atheist intellectual Jacoby (Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism) recaps the Gilded Age career of Robert Green Ingersoll, an influential lawyer and liberal Republican orator dubbed “The Great Agnostic” for his wildly popular lectures on religion, evolution, and other hot-button issues. Her brisk, lucid study makes him an apostle of irreligion in the tradition of Thomas Paine: a minister’s son steeped in Christian doctrine, Ingersoll used folksy humor, clear expositions, and conversational language to extol science and condemn religious cant. (He lampooned the notion of intelligent design by touting cancer as the capstone of God’s plan.) She also styles him a paragon of progressive politics and culture—she appends his luminous eulogy for Walt Whitman—and a near-saintly exemplar of secular humanism, complete with deathbed scene bathed in the joyful denial of a world to come. The author sets her frankly laudatory portrait—her afterword enjoins latter-day “‘New’ Atheists” to honor Ingersoll’s memory—in an insightful analysis of the late Victorian clash between a scientific, Darwinian worldview and a fundamentalist backlash. Jacoby is hardly neutral in that culture war, but her stimulating study shows that rationalist skepticism is as authentic and deep-seated as America’s fabled religiosity. Photos. Agent: Georges Borchardt. (Jan. 8)