There were many questions about Flew towards the end of his life, and how much of those books he actually wrote.
The Case of Antony Flew
He said this with a laugh. When we began the interview, he warned me, with merry self-deprecation, that he suffers from “nominal aphasia,” or the inability to reproduce names. But he forgot more than names. He didn’t remember talking with Paul Kurtz about his introduction to “God and Philosophy” just two years ago. There were words in his book, like “abiogenesis,” that now he could not define.
Is Anthony Flew the "evolutoinist" of people? Someone who is only mentioned as an attack? (In the case of "evolutionist" or "Darwinist" to imply that accepting the findings of evolution and science was some how a dogma or belief system of "evolutionism" or "Darwinism".)
I have no idea who this person was, but I've seen many a Christian bring him out as if some how his (alleged) conversion to Christianity in his dotage should be evidence against "the atheist position". (again, whatever that is)
From this short excerpt it would seem he may have been a philosopher. That would of course explain why I have no idea who he is or what his contribution to thought and knowledge was.
The only people who ever seem to bring him up are Christians as an attack on atheists. A sort of "here's one of your greats. He converted, why don't you." This is never a good argument.
When I left The Church, I had no idea Richard Dawkins was an atheist. To me he was an English biologist who wrote very good books about evolution and who fought the good fight against the anti-science that is creationism. I had never read any atheist literature and would have been hard pressed to identify any famous non-believers. It wasn't arguments against God or Christianity that sent me away, but the slow realization that I didn't find the supernatural claims that were central to the religion plausible and that normal human activities could sufficiently explain the origins and development of Judaism and it offshoot, Christianity. My problems were not with the practice of the Church, so there was not lure in Protestant versions, and the Church had done an excellent job at preparing my mind to view non-Jesus religions as inherently wrong.
The alleged death-bed conversion of Hitchens would have no bearing on my position (and it is almost certainly false), nor would I care if Dawkins became a tent revival preacher teaching from the works of AiG.
One final note, as I said above, when I left the Church I'd never read any "atheist literature" or consumed any similar arguments. Ironically it was *this very website* where I was first introduced to the atheist movement, bloggers, and YouTube. And I only came here because I went deep down a pseudoscience (non-creationist) rabbit hole one Saturday afternoon. The site was interesting so I stuck around to browse a bit, and much later, joined the conversation. So congratulations CF, you didn't make me an atheist, but you did make me an aggressive one.