Warranted Christian Belief

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2000-01-27
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

This is the third volume in Alvin Plantinga's trilogy on the notion of warrant, which he defines as that which distinguishes knowledge from true belief. In this volume, Plantinga examines warrant's role in theistic belief, tackling the questions of whether it is rational, reasonable,justifiable, and warranted to accept Christian belief and whether there is something epistemically unacceptable in doing so. He contends that Christian beliefs are warranted to the extent that they are formed by properly functioning cognitive faculties, thus, insofar as they are warranted, Christianbeliefs are knowledge if they are true.

Author Biography

Alvin Plantinga is John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame.

Table of Contents

Is There A Question?
Kantp. 3
The Problem
Kant
Two Worlds or One?
Arguments or Reasons?
Kaufman and Hickp. 31
Kaufman
The Real Referent and the Available Referent
The Function of Religious Language
Hick
The Real
Coherent?
Religiously Relevant?
Is There Such a Thing?
What is the Question?
Justification and the Classical Picturep. 67
John Locke
Living by Reason
Revelation
Classical Evidentialism, Deontologism, and Foundationalism
Classical Foundationalism
Classical Deontologism
Back to the Present
Problems with the Classical Picture
Self-Referential Problems
Most of Our Beliefs Unjustified?
Christian Belief Justified
Analogical Variations
Variations on Classical Foundationalism
Variations on the Deontology
Is This the de Jure Question?
Rationalityp. 108
Some Assorted Versions of Rationality
Aristotelian Rationality
Rationality as Proper Function
The Deliverances of Reason
Means-End Rationality
Alstonian Practical Rationality
The Initial Question
Doxastic Practices
Epistemic Circularity
The Argument for Practical Rationality
Practical Rationality Initially Characterized
The Original Position
The Wide Original Position
A Narrow Original Position?
Warrant and the Freud-and-Marx Complaintp. 135
The FandM Complaint
Freud
Marx
Others
How Shall We Understand the FandM Complaint?
Warrant: The Sober Truth
The FandM Complaint Again
Warranted Christian Belief
Warranted Belief in Godp. 167
The Aquinas/Calvin Model
Models
Presentation of the Model
Is Belief in God Warrant-Basic?
If False, Probably Not
If True, Probably So
The de Jure Question Is Not Independent of the de Facto Question
The FandM Complaint Revisited
Sin and Its Cognitive Consequencesp. 199
Preliminaries
Initial Statement of the Extended Model
The Nature of Sin
The Noetic Effects of Sin
The Basic Consequence
Sin and Knowledge
The Extended Aquinas/Calvin Model: Revealed to Our Mindsp. 241
Faith
How Does Faith Work?
Faith and Positive Epistemic Status
Proper Basicality and the Role of Scripture
Comparison with Locke
Why Necessary?
Cognitive Renewal
The Testimonial Model: Sealed upon Our Heartsp. 290
Belief and Affection
Jonathan Edwards
Intellect and Will: Which is Prior?
The Affirmations of Faith
Analogue of Warrant
Eros
Objectionsp. 324
Warrant and the Argument from Religious Experience
What Can Experience Show?
A Killer Argument?
Son of Great Pumpkin?
Circularity?
Defeaters?
Defeaters and Defeatp. 357
Nature of Defeaters
Defeaters for Christian or Theistic Belief
Projective Theories a Defeater for Christian Belief?
Two (or More) Kinds of Scripture Scholarshipp. 374
Scripture Divinely Inspired
Traditional Christian Biblical Commentary
Historical Biblical Criticism
Varieties of Historical Biblical Criticism
Tensions with Traditional Christianity
Why Aren't Most Christians More Concerned?
Force Majeure
A Moral Imperative?
Historical Biblical Criticism More Inclusive?
Nothing to Be Concerned About
Troeltschian Historical Biblical Criticism Again
Non-Troeltschian Historical Biblical Criticism
Conditionalization
Concluding Coda
Postmodernism and Pluralismp. 422
Postmodernism
Is Postmodernism Inconsistent with Christian Belief?
Do These Claims Defeat Christian Belief?
Postmodernism a Failure of Nerve
Pluralism
A Probabilistic Defeater?
The Charge of Moral Arbitrariness
Suffering and Evilp. 458
Evidential Atheological Arguments
Rowe's Arguments
Draper's Argument
Nonargumentative Defeaters?
Indexp. 500
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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