Bruce S. Thornton's
review of Warraq's book at
City Journal is especially insightful in regards to overturning Said's prejudicial attitude towards the West. As he puts it:
Warraq then turns to Said's misrepresentation of the West as a xenophobic culture, fearful of the "Other" and cultural difference. Warraq explodes this canard by identifying what he calls the "three golden threads" woven through Western culture since the time of the Greeks: rationalism, universalism, and self-criticism. As Warraq argues, Western intellectual curiosity has driven an interest in other cultures and peoples and created a magnificent edifice of scholarship formalizing that interest. The Western notion of a universal human nature reinforced this intellectual openness to other cultures. And self-criticism has been the engine of the West's improvement, leading to the rejection of traditional practices that were unjust or inefficient, as Warraq shows with his discussion of the British Empire's war on slavery. In fact, the West's most trenchant critics, Said included, have always been Westerners.