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20Jesus and the Total Available EvidencePhilosophia Christi 16 (2): 419-422. 2014.Cavin and Colombetti correctly affirm that in judging the probability of a hypothesis we should take into account “the total available evidence.” However, they neglect their own affirmation when they claim that I make an unwarranted assumption that God would not massively deceive the human race, when they claim that I do not take into account any evidence favoring hypotheses incompatible with the traditional account of what happened to the body of Jesus, and when they claim that I do not take in…Read more
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39Response to Keith Ward, Christ and the CosmosPhilosophia Christi 18 (2): 297-305. 2016.Keith Ward understands the Trinity as “one conscious being” and the divine “persons” as three necessary modes of divine action. But he does not give a good reason for supposing that there must be just three modes of divine action. I argue that by contrast all the theories of the Trinity developed from the Nicene Creed by patristic and medieval writers, are “social” theories, or “three persons” theories. I defend my a priori argument for the justification of a social theory—that three persons are…Read more
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88The Argument to the Soul from Partial Brain TransplantsPhilosophia Christi 20 (1): 13-19. 2018.Suppose we transplant the left hemisphere of one person, Alexandra, into the skull of another person, Alex, from whom both cerebral hemispheres have been removed; and transplant Alexandra’s right hemisphere into the skull of another person, Sandra, both of whose cerebral hemispheres have been removed. Both of the resulting persons will then have some of Alexandra’s brain and probably almost all of her memories and character. But since at most only one of them can be Alexandra, being Alexandra mu…Read more
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29Response to WarrantWarrant: The Current Debate.Warrant and Proper FunctionPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (2): 415. 1995.
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5The justification of inductionRevue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 165 (2): 183-184. 1974.
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97The Argument from Design—a Defence: R. G. SWINBURNEReligious Studies 8 (3): 193-205. 1972.Mr Olding's recent attack on my exposition of the argument from design gives me an opportunity to defend the central theses of my original article. My article pointed out that there were arguments from design of two types—those which take as their premisses regularities of copresence and those which take as their premisses regularities of succession. I sought to defend an argument of the second type. One merit of such an argument is that there is no doubt about the truth of its premisses. Almost…Read more
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An Introduction to Confirmation TheoryBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (3): 289-292. 1976.
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31XIII*—Personal IdentityProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 74 (1): 231-247. 1974.R. G. Swinburne; XIII*—Personal Identity, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 74, Issue 1, 1 June 1974, Pages 231–247, https://doi.org/10.1093/arist.