The Non-existence of GodPsychology Press, 2004 - Всего страниц: 326 Is it possible to prove or disprove God's existence? Arguments for the existence of God have taken many different forms over the centuries: in The Non-Existence of God, Nicholas Everitt considers all of the arguments and examines the role that reason and knowledge play in the debate over God's existence. He draws on recent scientific disputes over neo-Darwinism, the implication of 'big bang' cosmology, and the temporal and spatial size of the universe; and discusses some of the most recent work on the subject, leading to a controversial conclusion. |
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Стр. i
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Стр. vii
... argument 37 Plantinga and the ontological argument 41 The Malcolm / Anselm version 45 Hartshorne's version 47 Where ontological arguments go wrong 50 Can the ontological argument vii.
... argument 37 Plantinga and the ontological argument 41 The Malcolm / Anselm version 45 Hartshorne's version 47 Where ontological arguments go wrong 50 Can the ontological argument vii.
Стр. viii
Nicholas Everitt. Where ontological arguments go wrong 50 Can the ontological argument survive ? 55 Further reading 57 4 COSMOLOGICAL ARGUMENTS 59 Introduction 59 The First Cause argument 60 Clarifying the concept of infinity 60 Can ...
Nicholas Everitt. Where ontological arguments go wrong 50 Can the ontological argument survive ? 55 Further reading 57 4 COSMOLOGICAL ARGUMENTS 59 Introduction 59 The First Cause argument 60 Clarifying the concept of infinity 60 Can ...
Стр. ix
... argument 135 Ward's account 139 Trethowan and apprehending morality as apprehending God ' 142 The supervenience of the moral 143 What does morality rest on ? 147 Further reading 149 8 RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE 150 Introduction 150 Experience ...
... argument 135 Ward's account 139 Trethowan and apprehending morality as apprehending God ' 142 The supervenience of the moral 143 What does morality rest on ? 147 Further reading 149 8 RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE 150 Introduction 150 Experience ...
Стр. 7
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accept Anselm Anthropic Principle argue Argument from Contingency assumption best possible causal cause Chapter claim cognitive faculties concept conclusion cosmological argument create creator defence defining definition depend Descartes divine epistemic eternity evidence example existence of God existential statements explain fact false follows foundationalism free actions further given God's existence grounds hence human Hume hypothesis idea incompatibilist indexicals infer infinite justified kind laws of nature Leibniz logically impossible logically possible ment mind-independent morally perfect natural selection naturalist non-existence object occurred omnipotent omniscient ontological argument open propositions perhaps person Plantinga possible world predicate premise probability problem of evil properly basic belief properties question rational reasons for thinking Reformed Epistemology religious experience requires sceptic seeming design self-contradictory sense simply someone Suppose Swinburne Teleological arguments tells temporal theist theistic theory things thought timeless tion true truth universe veridical violation miracles