In The Devil's Delusion, Berlinski's passion for simile begins to take on the qualities of an obsessive compulsion. Here's one rather well-defined symptom:
"It is as if the liver, in addition to producing bile, were to demonstrate an unexpected ability to play the violin." (Page 17)
"It is rather as if an accomplished horseman were to decide that his chief task were to learn to ride without a horse." (Page 35)
"To ask of the physical science that they assess the Incarnation, or any other principle of religious belief, is rather like asking of a powerful Grand Prix racing car that it prove itself satisfactory in doing service as a New York taxicab." (Page 60)
"Physicists thus find themselves very much in the position of a master couturier obliged to allow one of his finest creations to appear on the runway with its basting lines and tacking pins still affixed." (Page 115)