Can we ever achieve belief by a direct act of will? If it will help us to be happier, should we make ourselves believe propositions which the evidence alone does not warrant? These are the sort of questions which Professor Pojman examines in Religious Belief and the Will (originally published in 1986).
Can we ever achieve belief by a direct act of will? If it will help us to be happier, should we make ourselves believe propositions which the evidence alone does not warrant? These are the sort of questions which Professor Pojman examines in Religious Belief and the Will (originally published in 1986).
Louis P. Pojman was Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus from the United States Military Academy at West Point, where he was a professor for nine years. In 2004-5, he was a Visiting Fellow at Clare Hall, Cambridge University, UK, where he became a Life-Fellow. Pojman was best known perhaps for presenting extremely balanced perspectives in his writings on a variety of some of the most controversial and challenging contemporary issues, including abortion, affirmative action, and the death penalty. He endeavored to explain why people disagree on such issues and presented the roots of the ideas, teachings and writings that help build an understanding of these differing viewpoints so that the reader can reflect on his or her own point of view on various issues.
Inhaltsangabe
Part One: Belief and Will in the History of Western Thought 1. Belief and Faith in the Bible and the Early Christian Movement 2. Plato on Knowledge and Belief 3. Augustine on Faith 4. Aquinas on Faith 5. The Rationalists on Belief and Will: Descartes and Spinoza 6. Pascal's Wager: A Case of Indirect Volitionalism 7. The Empiricists' Notion of Belief: Locke and Hume 8. Kant and Kierkegaard on the Nature and Place of Faith 9. Clifford and James on the Ethics of Belief 10. Modern Catholic Volitionalists: Newman, Pieper and Lonergan 11. The Contemporary Debate on Belief and Will 12. The Contemporary Debate on Faith and Reason: Fideism and Rationalism Part Two: Belief, Will and Justification of Religious Belief 13. Direct Descriptive Volitionalism 14. Indirect Volitionalism, Prescriptive Volitionalism and the Ethics of Belief 15 Rationality and Religious Belief 16 Faith, Doubt and Hope
Part One: Belief and Will in the History of Western Thought 1. Belief and Faith in the Bible and the Early Christian Movement 2. Plato on Knowledge and Belief 3. Augustine on Faith 4. Aquinas on Faith 5. The Rationalists on Belief and Will: Descartes and Spinoza 6. Pascal's Wager: A Case of Indirect Volitionalism 7. The Empiricists' Notion of Belief: Locke and Hume 8. Kant and Kierkegaard on the Nature and Place of Faith 9. Clifford and James on the Ethics of Belief 10. Modern Catholic Volitionalists: Newman, Pieper and Lonergan 11. The Contemporary Debate on Belief and Will 12. The Contemporary Debate on Faith and Reason: Fideism and Rationalism Part Two: Belief, Will and Justification of Religious Belief 13. Direct Descriptive Volitionalism 14. Indirect Volitionalism, Prescriptive Volitionalism and the Ethics of Belief 15 Rationality and Religious Belief 16 Faith, Doubt and Hope
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