The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Religion
to say and what is wrong to say, thereby learning the “grammar” of that language thus used. In learning to use it thus, one lear ...
accounts in the Gospels might, historically speaking, be demonstrably false and yet belief would lose nothing by this; not, howe ...
had discovered some chemical process whereby he could change ordinary bread into muscle and ordinary wine into blood, that would ...
beliefs to be rational (entitled) they have to be rationally grounded in the deliverances of reason and experience. Confronted w ...
the doxastic merit in view. Not only are some of the mediate ones not entitled; some of the immediate ones also are not. Some ba ...
hold the criterion. And that may just possibly be true. But then notice this oddity: he would be entitled to hold it only becaus ...
negative. In the face of an influential critique of the everyday, the Reformed epistemologist has affirmed, for example, the wor ...
Begin with the question that Heidegger raises in “The Onto-Theo-Logical Constitution of Metaphysics”: “How does the deity enter ...
adequate concept of Dasein, with respect to which it can now be asked how the relationship of Dasein to God is ontologically ord ...
Christian theology, then, is “the science of faith,” thus understood. It is “the science of faith insofar as it not only makes f ...
Phillips, D. Z. 1986. Belief, Change, and Forms of Life. Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press International. Plantinga, Al ...
Paul R. Draper The history of Science is not a mere record of isolated discoveries; it is a narrative of the conflict of two con ...
warfare is, as the title of his book suggests, between science and (traditional dogmatic) theology, not between science and reli ...
overwhelming, his most serious opponents were part of the scientific establishment of his day, and many of his defenders were cl ...
An increasingly popular position in recent years is the view that mutually beneficial interaction between science and religion i ...
and the foundations of methodological naturalism. To avoid getting lost on the way, some preliminary remarks about terminology a ...
Philosophers like Nancey Murphy (1998, 128–31), however, will regard this as overly restrictive on the grounds that some entitie ...
universe. If there is more than one, then, although one could define the natural world as the entire collection of such universe ...
epistemic status than scientific knowledge; and the view that knowledge is attainable only by methods that at least approximate ...
challenge for a being who creates the world never to act in it at all. For if even a single effect of that being's initial creat ...
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