Is belief in God epistemically justified? That's the question at the heart of this volume in the Great Debates in Philosophy series, with Alvin Plantinga and Michael Tooley each addressing this fundamental question with distinctive arguments from opposing perspectives. * The first half of the book contains each philosopher's explanation of his particular view; the second half allows them to directly respond to each other's arguments, in a lively and engaging conversation * Offers the reader a one of a kind, interactive discussion * Forms part of the acclaimed Great Debates in Philosophy series
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
"I would recommend the book to professional philosophers ofreligion and philosophy graduate students for these significantcontributions." (Journal of Religion, 1 October 2010)
"The book's style is very different from other philosophy ofreligion texts, because it presents the issues within the contextof a lively debate, capturing the excitement of philosophicalargumentation and epitomizing how philosophy should be practiced."(American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly, Summer2010)"Alvin Plantinga and Michael Tooley here debate the questionwhether God's existence is known--or, at least, justifiablybelieved. As expected from two such distinguished philosophers,their discussion has the originality and intellectual weight torepay careful consideration, as much by philosophers of mind andepistemologists as by philosophers of religion." (Mind,October 2009)
"The book illuminates some important issues in philosophicaltheology. Recommended." (CHOICE, October 2008)
"I found this book strangely compelling ... .Plantinga usesan ingenious new version of the Design Argument to demonstrate 'theepistemic probability' that God exists; Tooley argues that 'thefact of evil' on our world makes the existence of a benevolent God'very unlikely.'" (Church Times, January 2009)
"The present volume, by two heavyweight analytical philosophers,is rather different from the usual pattern." (TheTablet)
"A very fine book, presenting arguments for and against theismand naturalism by two very distinguished philosophers. I stronglyrecommend it for graduate level courses." (Notre DamePhilosophical Reviews)"Knowledge of God is a work of major significance. There isno other debate-style book in the philosophy of religion that packsthe intellectual punches thrown by heavy-weights Plantinga andTooley. Excellent."
-Thomas Senor, University of Arkansasz
"A rigorous yet accessible debate on central issues in thephilosophy of religion by two leading contributors to the field.When Plantinga and Tooley turn to discuss each other's views, theyshed light not only on these topics but on a whole range of furtherissues, including minds and materialism, propositional content,evolutionary explanation, and probabilistic reasoning. A first-rateexchange, full of philosophical insight."
-Edward Wierenga, University of Rochester
"The book's style is very different from other philosophy ofreligion texts, because it presents the issues within the contextof a lively debate, capturing the excitement of philosophicalargumentation and epitomizing how philosophy should be practiced."(American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly, Summer2010)"Alvin Plantinga and Michael Tooley here debate the questionwhether God's existence is known--or, at least, justifiablybelieved. As expected from two such distinguished philosophers,their discussion has the originality and intellectual weight torepay careful consideration, as much by philosophers of mind andepistemologists as by philosophers of religion." (Mind,October 2009)
"The book illuminates some important issues in philosophicaltheology. Recommended." (CHOICE, October 2008)
"I found this book strangely compelling ... .Plantinga usesan ingenious new version of the Design Argument to demonstrate 'theepistemic probability' that God exists; Tooley argues that 'thefact of evil' on our world makes the existence of a benevolent God'very unlikely.'" (Church Times, January 2009)
"The present volume, by two heavyweight analytical philosophers,is rather different from the usual pattern." (TheTablet)
"A very fine book, presenting arguments for and against theismand naturalism by two very distinguished philosophers. I stronglyrecommend it for graduate level courses." (Notre DamePhilosophical Reviews)"Knowledge of God is a work of major significance. There isno other debate-style book in the philosophy of religion that packsthe intellectual punches thrown by heavy-weights Plantinga andTooley. Excellent."
-Thomas Senor, University of Arkansasz
"A rigorous yet accessible debate on central issues in thephilosophy of religion by two leading contributors to the field.When Plantinga and Tooley turn to discuss each other's views, theyshed light not only on these topics but on a whole range of furtherissues, including minds and materialism, propositional content,evolutionary explanation, and probabilistic reasoning. A first-rateexchange, full of philosophical insight."
-Edward Wierenga, University of Rochester