•  60
    The Evidential Force of Religious Experience
    Review of Metaphysics 44 (2): 419-419. 1990.
    Caroline Franks Davis here undertakes an assessment of the value of religious experiences as evidence for religious beliefs. She distinguishes this question from that of the veridical character of particular experiences or their value for the person undergoing them or his community. She attends both to the phenomenological variety of religious experiences and the variety of cultural settings in which they take place. She concludes that religious experience can form an important part of the case …Read more
  •  155
    Letters to the Editor
    with Sandra Lee Bartky, Marilyn Friedman, William Harper, Alison M. Jaggar, Richard H. Miller, Abigail L. Rosenthal, Naomi Scheman, Nancy Tuana, Steven Yates, Christina Sommers, Harry Deutsch, Michael Kelly, and Charles L. Reid
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 65 (7): 55-90. 1992.
  •  185
    Relativism
    The Monist 67 (3): 405-418. 1984.
    I take the essence of relativism to be that reasoning is possible only given shared assumptions, and that there is a plurality of possible sets of assumptions between whose adherents no argument is possible. Crucial to relativism, thus conceived, is the existence of basic standards, which underlie the assertions human beings make. Philosophers who have taken relativism seriously have given the sources of such standards various names: I here settle on the word “frameworks.”
  •  85
    Ideologues Or Scholars?
    International Journal of Applied Philosophy 6 (2): 69-78. 1991.
  •  172
    What’s Wrong with Torture?
    International Philosophical Quarterly 49 (3): 317-332. 2009.
    Many of us want to say that there is an absolute—or at least a virtually absolute—prohibition on torturing people. But we live in a world in which firm moral restraints of all sorts are hard to defend. Neither contemporary conventional morality, nor any of the available moral theories, provides adequate support for the deliverances of the “wisdom of repugnance” in this area. Nor do they support casuistry capable of distinguishing torture from (sometimes legitimate) forms of rough treatment. I he…Read more
  •  179
    Capital punishment and the sanctity of life
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 24 (1): 229-8211. 2000.
  •  125
    The Religious Significance of the Ontological Argument
    Religious Studies 11 (1): 97-116. 1975.
    I discuss the religious implications of accepting the ontological argument as sound. in particular, i attempt to show in detail how the argument fails to validate religious belief.
  •  23
    Academic freedom in the postmodern world
    Public Affairs Quarterly 10 (3): 185-201. 1996.
  • Theism: An Epistemological Defense
    The Thomist 50 (2): 210-222. 1986.
  •  130
    "Exists" and St. Anselm's Argument
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 3 (1): 59-70. 1977.
    This paper examines interpretations of the doctrine that "exists" is not a predicate (existence is not a property). None, it is concluded, is both true and a refutation of St. Anselm's "ontological" argument for the existence of God.
  •  34
    What Is Naturalism?
    Philosophia Christi 8 (1): 125-139. 2006.
  •  68
    Birth, Copulation, and Death
    New Scholasticism 59 (3): 276-295. 1985.
  •  92
    The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas
    Philosophical Books 34 (3): 174-175. 1993.
  •  97
    Acting and Refraining/Intention and Foresight
    Dialogue 26 (1): 87. 1987.
    It is commonplace that negative duties are more stringent than positive duties. it is also commonplace that this distinction requires defense, in particular against those who regard it as a mere apology for the privileges of the wealthy and secure. i conclude, though real, the distinction between negative and positive duties is not as deep as some philosophers have supposed--that it makes best sense in terms of a deeper distinction between the intended and the foreseen consequences of our action…Read more
  •  129
    Relativism, abortion, and tolerance
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 48 (1): 131-138. 1987.
  •  81
    Intrinsic Value: Concept and Warrant
    Philosophical Books 37 (3): 202-204. 1996.
  • Justifying Terrorism: Dvd
    with Ken Knisely and Scott Hibbard
    Milk Bottle Productions. 2002.
    Can the use of terror as a political weapon ever be justified? What are the political implications of the struggle to define the concept of "terrorism"? Was the attack on the USS Cole a terrorist act? What role do the intentions of the terrorist and the state of mind of the victims play? Does the modern concept of the nation-state necessarily require the radical devaluation of the use of terror for political ends? With Robert Rafalko, Philip Devine, and Scott Hibbard
  •  45
    Current periodical articles 161
    American Philosophical Quarterly 12 (3). 1975.
  •  58
    A Gross Abuse of Judicial Power?
    Hastings Center Report 14 (1): 47-47. 1984.
  • FRENCH, P.-The Virtues of Vengeance
    Philosophical Books 44 (3): 282-282. 2003.
  •  58
    What's the Meaning of "This"?
    Review of Metaphysics 44 (1): 131-131. 1990.
    Austin's book raises, but does not resolve, a problem for the analysis of belief as a two-termed relation between a believer and a proposition. The argument turns to account a puzzle about beliefs expressed in terms of the demonstratives this and that--and hence also I, here, and now--to expose a threatened inconsistency in the doctrine of propositions most commonly held among analytic philosophers.
  •  63
    The logic of fiction
    Philosophical Studies 26 (5-6): 389-399. 1974.
  •  37
    Aids and the L-Word
    Public Affairs Quarterly 5 (2): 137-147. 1991.
  •  32
    This book presents a defense of the reality of God in the sense in which Nietzsche proclaimed His death. It explores various contemporary versions of Nietzsche's maxim God is dead and proposes an alternative to them. Philip E.Devine critically examines three views that, in one way or another, accept the death of God and take it as central to the intellectual life: pragmatism, which asserts that the only end of the intellectual life is the pursuit of worldly goods other than truth; relativism', w…Read more