Why I’m Not a Christian by Bertrand Russell revolves his informative text with full of arguments and opposed opinions of a certain argument about being a Christian or how being a Christian by giving his perception and view about he sees about being a Christian and as a Christian and about their lives, the principles and even the laws revolving around the arguments. The first one he discussed what is a Christian? At the first point of view there are two different items essential to anyone by calling themselves a Christian they must believe in God and Immortality but of course there is opposing belief that he said as a Christian you must have some kind of belief about Christ. He also said one commented view about like the Mohammedans they also believe in God and in Immortality but they don’t called theirselves a Christian.
Another one is the existence of God which is the Christian really believes about their conviction of their firm belief that God really exist before.
The next one is the representation of the First Argument, “The First-Cause Argument”, it emphasized that in everything we see in this world has a cause meaning in everything we do, even existed, we saw, we feels, or even happenings and event it all have its cause but Russell gave remarkable question to it that if everything must have a cause so there must be a reason why he created the Universe because if it doesn’t have any cause then there’s a fallacy and it is not valid in this argument. The other one is the Natural Law Argument it focused on the cosmogony of everything and how does the Law of Nature and Human Laws behave that can also be associate and possible with the Law of Chances and he also said that when God had a reason for giving those laws then God himself was subject to law in this argument he also says contradictions and fallacies about the review of the argument. The fourth one is the argument from design this is the belief that