A study of Darwin that argues that he was driven by theological concerns and the prevailing ideas about God at the time in his formation of his theory of evolution.
This volume is a critique on contemporary Darwinists such as Kenneth Miller, Mark Ridley, Niles Eldredge, and Stephen Jay Gould rely on Darwin's God to justify evolution as much as Darwin did. Ironically, we discover that the theory that supposedly made God unnecessary is predicated upon dearly held beliefs about the very nature of God.