• Será que Deus existe?
    Gradiva. 1998.
  •  69
    Morality and God
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 57 (225). 2003.
    All particular moral truths depend on necessary moral truths. Among these necessary moral truths are the duty (within limits) to conform to the commands of benefactors; hence, our duty to obey God, our supreme benefactor. In virtue of his perfect goodness, God will not issue commands beyond the limits of his right to issue them. Necessary moral truths hold in virtue of the concepts designated by expressions such as ’morally obligatory’, and so it is not logically possible for God to change the n…Read more
  •  156
    What kind of necessary being could God be?
    In Miroslaw Szatkowski (ed.), Ontological Proofs Today, Ontos Verlag. pp. 345. 2012.
  •  15
    Problem zła
    Roczniki Filozoficzne 57 (2): 135-152. 2009.
  •  264
    The Argument to God from Fine-Tuning
    In Melville Y. Stewart (ed.), Science and Religion in Dialogue, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 223--233. 2010.
    This chapter contains sections titled: * Fine-Tuning * Notes
  •  38
    In defence of logical nominalism: Reply to leftow1: Richard Swinburne
    Religious Studies 46 (3): 311-330. 2010.
    This paper defends logical nominalism, the thesis that logically necessary truth belongs primarily to sentences and depends solely on the conventions of human language. A sentence is logically necessary iff its negation entails a contradiction. A sentence is a posteriori metaphysically necessary iff it reduces to a logical necessity when we substitute for rigid designators of objects or properties canonical descriptions of the essential properties of those objects or properties. The truth-condit…Read more
  •  48
    Authority of scripture, tradition, and the church
    In Thomas P. Flint & Michael C. Rea (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophical theology, Oxford University Press. 2008.
    Christianity, Islam, and Judaism all claim that God has given humans a revelation. Divine revelation may be either of God, or by God of propositional truth. Traditionally Christianity has claimed that the Christian revelation has involved both of these. God revealed himself in his acts in history; for example in the miracles by which he preserved the people of ancient Israel, and above all by becoming incarnate as Jesus Christ, who was crucified and rose from the dead. And God also revealed to u…Read more
  •  138
    Providence and the Problem of Evil
    Oxford University Press UK. 1998.
    Richard Swinburne offers an answer to one of the most difficult problems of religious belief: why does a loving God allow humans to suffer so much? It is the final instalment of Swinburne's acclaimed four-volume philosophical examination of Christian doctrine
  •  152
    Dualism Intact
    Faith and Philosophy 13 (1): 68-77. 1996.
    I have argued in many places that a carefully articulated version of Descartes’ argument to show that he is essentially an immaterial soul is sound. It is conceivable that I who am currently conscious continue to exist without my body, and that can only be if there is currently a non-bodily part of me which alone is essential for me. Recent counter-arguments of Alston and Smythe, Moser and van der Nat, Zimmerman, and Shoemaker are rejected.
  • Review of WESLEY C. SALMON: Hans Reichenbach: Logical Empiricist (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 31 (4): 401-404. 1980.
  •  203
    Response to Reviewers
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 (2): 51--63. 2014.
  •  12
    How God makes all the difference to morality
    Disputatio Philosophica 6 (1): 135-145. 2004.
  • The hypothesis that Jesus rose bodily from the dead is rendered probable in so far as: (1) evidence makes it probable that there is a God, (2) God has reason to become incarnate - to provide atonement for our sins, to identify with our suffering, and to reveal teaching (and so to lead a particular kind of human life, including teaching that he was divine and making atonement, a life culminated by a super-miracle such as his resurrection from the dead), (3) there is evidence of a modest degree of…Read more
  •  10
    No title available: Religious studies
    Religious Studies 16 (2): 239-242. 1980.
  • 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.
  •  13
    Review: Response to Warrant (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (2). 1995.
  •  47
    God as the Simplest Explanation of the Universe
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 68 3-24. 2011.
    I have argued over many years that theism provides a probably true explanation of the existence and most general features of the universe. A major reason for this, I have claimed, is that it is simpler than other explanations. The present paper seeks to amplify and defend this latter claim in the light of some recent challenges.
  •  103
    The irreducibility of causation
    Dialectica 51 (1). 1997.
    Empiricists have sought to follow Hume in claiming that causality is a relation between events reducible to something more basic, e.g., regularities or counterfactuals. But all such attempts fail through their inability to distinguish cause from effect. The alternative is that causation is irreducible. Regularities are evidence of causation but do not constitute it. We understand what causation is through performing intentional actions which necessarily involve trying, which in turn just is exer…Read more
  •  30
    An Introduction to Confirmation Theory
    with Mark Pastin
    Philosophical Review 84 (1): 122. 1975.
  • Book notices-the evolution of the soul
    History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 20 (1): 127. 1998.
  •  133
    Reason and the Christian religion: essays in honour of Richard Swinburne (edited book)
    with Alan G. Padgett
    Oxford University Press. 1994.
    Richard Swinburne is one of the most distinguished philosophers of religion of our day. In this volume, many notable British and American philosophers unite to honor him and to discuss various topics to which he has contributed significantly. These include general topics in the philosophy of religion such as revelation, and faith and reason, and the specifically Christian doctrines of the Trinity, the Incarnation, and atonement. In the spirit of the movement which Swinburne spearheaded, the essa…Read more
  •  5
    Free To Do Evil
    The Philosophers' Magazine 5 49-51. 1999.
  •  2
  •  69
    Necessary a Posteriori Truth
    American Philosophical Quarterly 28 (2). 1991.
    Two sentences express the same proposition if they are synonymous; they express the same statement if they attribute the same properties to the same objects at the same time (however objects and times are picked out). Neither propositions nor statements are necessary a posteriori. Suggested examples of the necessary a posteriori, such as "Hesperus is Phosphorus", or "water is H2O", only appear to be such because of a confusion between proposition and statement.
  • What Philosophers Think
    Continuum Press. 2003.
  • "Alvin Plantinga," edited by James E. Tomberlin and Peter van Inwagen (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 47 (3): 511. 1987.