• Sushchestvovanie Boga
    I︠A︡zyki slavi︠a︡nskoĭ kulʹtury. 2014.
  • Space and Time
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (4): 366-371. 1969.
  • Book reviews (review)
    Mind 85 (337): 131-134. 1976.
  • Substances
    In The Christian God, Oxford University Press. 1994.
    A substance is a concrete individual thing that exists all at once. Although the world can be cut up into substances in different ways, any full description of the world will include both material objects and immaterial souls as substances. Souls have essentially mental properties, ones to which the subject has privileged access such as thoughts and sensations. The essential part of a human being is a human soul, one with a structure and a capacity for logical thought, moral belief, and free wil…Read more
  • Space, Time and Causality
    Philosophy 59 (230): 539-541. 1984.
  • VESEY, G. "Personal Identity" (review)
    Mind 85 (n/a): 143. 1976.
  • Gott und Zeit
    In Ch JäGer (ed.), Analytische Religionsphilosophie, Ferdinand Schã¶ningh. 1998.
  • The Concept of Miracle
    Religious Studies 8 (3): 270-272. 1972.
  • The Evidence of Incarnation
    In The Christian God, Oxford University Press. 1994.
    God does not need to become incarnate, i.e. human, to forgive us, but it is good that he should do so to make his forgiveness available to us by means of an atonement for our sins; and also for many other reasons – to identify with our sufferings, show us how much he loves us, and reveal truths to us. Evidence that Jesus was God Incarnate is provided by the kind of life he led, and its culmination in the Resurrection. Other accounts of the ‘incarnation’ – monophysitism, Nestorianism, the Kenotic…Read more
  • Book reviews (review)
    Mind 90 (359): 468-470. 1981.
  • Introduction
    In The Christian God, Oxford University Press. 1994.
  • PLANTINGA, A. "The Nature of Necessity" (review)
    Mind 85 (n/a): 131. 1976.
  • O artigo discute a forma de um argumento em favor da ressurreição de Jesus do modo como o Cristianismo acredita que esta ocorreu, o qual, se bem-sucedido, seria um forte indício histórico da existência de Deus. O artigo sustenta que Deus teve boas razões para se encarnar por certos propósitos e que, se assim ele o fez, ele viveria um certo tipo de vida como um ser humano, que seria culminada por um supermilagre como sua ressurreição. Se encontrarmos um e apenas um ser humano em toda a história s…Read more
  • HARRISON, ROSS "On What There Must Be" (review)
    Philosophy 50 (n/a): 118. 1975.
  • O artigo sustenta que, a fim de dar uma descrição completa do mundo, precisamos listar não apenas os eventos cerebrais que ocorrem, mas também os eventos mentais e analisálos como estados de uma substância imaterial, a alma. Com base nesse dualismo de substância, defende-se que a ciência física não tem como explicar a existência de vida consciente. O artigo conclui que, levando-se em conta a estrutura de argumentação formalizada no Teorema de Bayes, podemos dizer que o fenômeno da vida conscient…Read more
  • An Introduction to Confirmation Theory
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (3): 289-292. 1976.
  • Revelation: From Metaphor to Analogy
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 34 (3): 189-191. 1993.
  • The Trinity
    In The Christian God, Oxford University Press. 1994.
    There can be more than one divine individual if any others are dependent for their existence on a first one and if it is supremely good, act to cooperate with a second individual to share all that they have with a third individual. In that case, God will be a Trinity, three divine persons, the others deriving ultimately from one of these, ‘The Father’. The Nicene creed and other Christian doctrinal statements of the doctrine of the Trinity can be seen to fit this account, if we bear in mind that…Read more
  • Será que Deus existe?
    with Desidério Murcho, Ana Cristina Domingues, Miguel Fonseca, and Maria Leonor Xavier
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 61 (3): 1110-1110. 2005.
  • Será que Deus existe?
    Gradiva. 1998.
  • Personal identity
    with Sydney Shoemaker, David Armstrong, Norman Malcolm, and Richard Bernstein
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 175 (4): 567-569. 1985.
  • David Lewis
    In Daniel Kolak & R. Martin (eds.), Self and Identity: Contemporary Philosophical Issues, Macmillan. pp. 273. 1991.
  • An Introduction to Confirmation Theory
    Mind 84 (333): 146-148. 1975.
  • Could God Become Man? IN The Philosophy in Christianity
    In , Cambridge University Press. 1989.
    Christian orthodoxy has maintained that in Jesus Christ God became man, i.e., acquired a human nature, while remaining God. Given two not unreasonable restrictions on the understanding of "man", that claim is perfectly coherent. But if the New Testament is correct in claiming that in some sense Christ was ignorant, weak, and temptable, we have to suppose that Christ has a divided mind; or, in traditional terminology, that the two natures did not totally interpenetrate.
  • The Divine Nature
    In The Christian God, Oxford University Press. 1994.
    All the divine properties follow from one essential property of having pure limitless intentional power. An individual with this property will be metaphysically necessary. Aquinas was right to hold that what binds the divine properties together was causal power, and not – as Anselm held – being the greatest conceivable being. A divine individual is simple and does not have thisness.
  • Book reviews (review)
    Mind 87 (3): 450-452. 1978.
  • Book notices-the evolution of the soul
    History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 20 (1): 127. 1998.