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263Alvin Plantinga's warranted Christian beliefNoûs 37 (2). 2003.This critical study of the third book of Plantinga's trilogy on proper-function epistemology begins by denying that classical foundationalism proposes a deontic conception of justification. Nor is it subject to Gettier counterexamples, as, I show, Plantinga's fallibilism is and must be. Plantinga's central thesis is that there's no way of attacking the rationality of central Christian beliefs without attacking their truth. That, I argue, is not so on several grounds, e.g., because one can demand…Read more
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9Does religious experience justify religious beliefIn Michael L. Peterson (ed.), Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Religion, Wiley-blackwell. 2003.
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176David Ray Griffin, parapsychology, philosophy, and spirituality: A postmodern exploration. (Albany, NY: State university of new York press, 1997.) Pp. XIV+339, US $59.50 hb., $19.95 pk (review)Religious Studies 34 (1): 103-114. 1998.
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190Theoretical simplicity and defeasibilityPhilosophy of Science 45 (2): 273-288. 1978.Theoretical simplicity is difficult to characterize, and evidently can depend upon a number of distinct factors. One such desirable characteristic is that the laws of a theory have relatively few "counterinstances" whose accommodation requires the invocation of a ceteris paribus condition and ancillary explanation. It is argued that, when one theory is reduced to another, such that the laws of the second govern the behavior of the parts of the entities in the domain of the first, there is a char…Read more
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186Can science explain mysticism?Religious Studies 35 (2): 213-227. 1999.Jerome Gellman has recently disputed my claim that a naturalistic explanation for mystical experiences is available, a better explanation than any current attempt to show that God is sometimes perceived in those experiences. Gellman argues (i) that some mystics do not 'fit' the sociological explanation of I. M. Lewis; (ii) that the sociological analysis of tribal mysticism cannot properly be extended to theistic experiences; and (iii) that mystical experiences merit prima facie credence, so the …Read more
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Are Causal Laws Contingent?In John Bacon, Keith Campbell & Lloyd Reinhardt (eds.), Ontology, Causality and Mind: Essays in Honour of D M Armstrong, Cambridge University Press. 1993.It has been nearly a decade and a half since Fred Dretske, David Armstrong and Michael Tooley, having each rejected the Regularity theory, independently proposed that natural laws are grounded in a second-order relation that somehow binds together universals.' (l shall call this the ‘DTA theory’). In this way they sought to overcome the major - and notorious — shortcomings of every version of the Regularity theory: how to provide truth conditions for laws that lack instances; how to distinguish …Read more
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90Opacity in the AttitudesCanadian Journal of Philosophy 8 (4). 1978.Philosophical logic has its problem-children; and among these the Principle of Substitutivity of codesignating expressions — the linguistic spawn of Leibniz's law—has achieved a place of prominence. It has become increasingly apparent that a certain style of linguistic analysis, which seeks to impose formal regimentation ruled by the constraints of classical quantification theory, does not yield results with the kind of uniformity and elegance one should hope for from a satisfyi.ng theory. The r…Read more
Iowa City, Iowa, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Religion |