Andrew Brown (writer)


Andrew Brown is an English journalist, writer, and editor. He was one of the founding staff members of The Independent, where he worked as religious correspondent, parliamentary sketch writer, and a feature writer. He has written extensively on technology for Prospect and the New Statesman and been a feature writer on the Guardian. He has worked as the editor for the Belief section of The Guardian's Comment is Free which won a Webby under his leadership and is currently a leader writer and member of the paper's editorial board. He is also the press columnist of the Church Times. In The Beginning was the Worm was shortlisted for the Aventis Prize. Fishing in Utopia won the Orwell Prize and was nominated for the Dolman Best Travel Book Award in 2009.

Views

English Wikipedia

Andrew Brown fears English Wikipedia has outcompeted rival encyclopedias and problems that lead to criticism of Wikipedia will continue. Brown fears "charlatans and liars" have most to gain from editing Wikipedia and potential idealistic contributors are discouraged due to difficulties editing the site especially through smartphones.

Torture

Brown has been a fierce critic of the Sam Harris' position on torture. He has attacked Harris for what he has described as Harris' advocacy of torture in situations where we are willing to accept collateral damage, as it relates to fighting the war on terror.

Popularity of non-believers and scientific concepts

Brown has criticised Richard Dawkins for what he calls the cult of personality that has grown around him and his positions. He is also sceptical of the scientific concept of memes, as developed by Dawkins.

''The Guardian'' editorial on David Cameron

In September 2019, Private Eye magazine named Brown as the author of an editorial in The Guardian newspaper about David Cameron. This touched the death of the PM's six-year-old son. Brown claimed the PM only ever felt "privileged pain". The article provoked outrage across the political spectrum and the paper later said the piece "fell far short of our standards. It has now been amended, and we apologise completely."

Christianity

Brown has described himself as someone for whom "Christianity is only true backwards." He has written that he is "constantly astonished by the way in which the Church of England contains such a large number of clever, learned and dedicated people giving their lives to an institution that is none of those things." He has also concluded, "But I still can't do it myself. So why worry? Why not see it all as nonsense? Because really it isn't all nonsense. As a friend of mine, a former missionary, said once: "It's about the thing that is true even if Christianity isn't true. Christian language does things that no other use of language can. I can conclude only that God has called me to be an atheist."

Awards and nominations