Evidence and Religious Belief features eleven new essays on the question of whether religious belief must be based on evidence in order to be rational. Leading philosophers in the field discuss the demand for evidence, the ways in which available evidence differs from person to person, and the current arguments for and against religious belief.
Evidence and Religious Belief features eleven new essays on the question of whether religious belief must be based on evidence in order to be rational. Leading philosophers in the field discuss the demand for evidence, the ways in which available evidence differs from person to person, and the current arguments for and against religious belief.
Kelly James Clark is Professor of Philosophy at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He is the author and editor of over fifty articles and fifteen books including The Story of Ethics (Prentice-Hall), Return to Reason (Eerdmans), and Children of Abraham (forthcoming). Raymond J. VanArragon is Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Bethel University in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is author of Key Terms in Philosophy of Religion (Continuum), co-editor of Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Religion (Blackwell), and has published articles in philosophy of religion and epistemology.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction * I: Exploring the Demand for Evidence * 1: James Ross: Willing Belief and Rational Faith * 2: Linda Zagzebski: Epistemic Self-Trust and the Consensus Gentium Argument * 3: C. Stephen Evans: Religious Experience and the Question of Whether Belief in God Requires Evidence * 4: Chris Tucker: Phenomenal Conservatism and Evidentialism in Religious Epistemology * II: The Relation of Beliefs to Evidence * 5: William Wainwright: Theistic Proofs, Person Relativity, and the Rationality of Religious Belief * 6: E. J. Coffman and Jeff Cervantez: Hiddenness, Evidence, and Idolatry * 7: Thomas M. Crisp: An Evolutionary Objection to the Argument from Evil * III: Evidence and Religious Belief * 8: Thomas Kelly: Consensus Gentium: Reflections on the 'Common Consent' Argument for the Existence of God * 9: Kelly James Clark and Andrew Samuel: Motivating Morality * 10: William Rowe: Divine Perfection and Freedom * 11: William Hasker: The Many Gods of Hick and Mavrodes * Response to Hasker * Bibliography * Index
* Introduction * I: Exploring the Demand for Evidence * 1: James Ross: Willing Belief and Rational Faith * 2: Linda Zagzebski: Epistemic Self-Trust and the Consensus Gentium Argument * 3: C. Stephen Evans: Religious Experience and the Question of Whether Belief in God Requires Evidence * 4: Chris Tucker: Phenomenal Conservatism and Evidentialism in Religious Epistemology * II: The Relation of Beliefs to Evidence * 5: William Wainwright: Theistic Proofs, Person Relativity, and the Rationality of Religious Belief * 6: E. J. Coffman and Jeff Cervantez: Hiddenness, Evidence, and Idolatry * 7: Thomas M. Crisp: An Evolutionary Objection to the Argument from Evil * III: Evidence and Religious Belief * 8: Thomas Kelly: Consensus Gentium: Reflections on the 'Common Consent' Argument for the Existence of God * 9: Kelly James Clark and Andrew Samuel: Motivating Morality * 10: William Rowe: Divine Perfection and Freedom * 11: William Hasker: The Many Gods of Hick and Mavrodes * Response to Hasker * Bibliography * Index
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