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54The Metaphysics of ModalityOxford University Press USA. 2003.These essays, dating from the late 1960's to the present, chronicle the development of Plantinga's thoughts about some of the most fundamental issues in metaphysics: what is the nature of abstract objects like possible worlds, properties, propositions, and such phenomena? Are there possible but non-actual objects? Can objects that do not exist exemplify properties? Plantinga gives thorough and penetrating answers to these and other questions.
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242Response to William Lane Craig’s Review of Where the Conflict Really LiesPhilosophia Christi 15 (1): 175-179. 2013.I try to clear up a couple of misunderstandings in William Craig’s review. The first has to do with the difference between what I call “Historical Biblical Criticism” and historical scholarship. I claim there is conflict between the first and Christian belief; I don’t for a moment think there is conflict between historical scholarship and Christian belief. The second has to do with Platonism, theism and causality. I point out that theism has the resources to see abstract objects as like divine t…Read more
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203Precis of Warrant: The Current Debate and Warrant and Proper FunctionWarrant: The Current Debate.Warrant and Proper FunctionPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (2): 393. 1995.
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God and Other Minds: A Study of the Rational Justification of Belief in GodReligious Studies 4 (2): 288-291. 1969.
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56The Foundations of TheismFaith and Philosophy 3 (3): 298-313. 1986.Philip Quinn’s “On Finding the Foundations of Theism” is both challenging and important. Quinn proposes at least the following four theses: (a) my argument against the criteria of proper basicality proposed by classical foundationalism is unsuccessful, (b) the quasi-inductive method I suggest for arriving at criteria of proper basicality is defective, (c) even if belief in God is properly basic, it could without loss of justification be accepted on the basis of other propositions, and (d) belief…Read more
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543On Ockham’s Way OutFaith and Philosophy 3 (3): 235-269. 1986.In Part I, I present two traditional arguments for the incompatibility of divine foreknowledge with human freedom; the first of these is clearly fallacious; but the second, the argument from the necessity of the past, is much stronger. In the second section I explain and partly endorse Ockham’s response to the second argument: that only propositions strictly about the past are accidentally necessary, and past propositions about God’s knowledge of the future are not strictly about the past. In th…Read more
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132What’s The Question?Journal of Philosophical Research 20 19-43. 1995.Two kinds of critical questions have been asked about the propriety or rightness of Christian beliefs. The first is the de facto question: is Christian belief true? The second is the de jure question: is it rational, or reasonable, or intellectually acceptable, or rationally justifiable? This second question is much harder to locate than you’d guess from looking at the literature. In “Perceiving God” William AIston suggests that the (or a) right question here is the question of “the practical ra…Read more
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292De EssentiaGrazer Philosophische Studien 7 (1): 101-121. 1979.In this paper I propose an amendment to Chisholm's definition of individual essence. I then argue that a thing has more than one individual essence and that there is no reason to believe no one grasps anyone else's essence. The remainder of the paper is devoted to a refutation of existentialism, the view that the essence of an object X (along with propositions and states of affairs directly about x) is ontologically dependent upon x in the sense that it could not have existed if x had not existe…Read more
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21 On Being Evidentially Challenged 'Alvin Plantinga'In Eleanore Stump & Michael J. Murray (eds.), Philosophy of Religion: The Big Questions, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 6--176. 1999.
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99Replies to my commentatorsIn Dieter Schönecker (ed.), Plantinga's Warranted Christian Belief: Critical Essays with a Reply by Alvin Plantinga, De Gruyter. pp. 237-262. 2015.
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45Gewährleisteter Christlicher GlaubeDe Gruyter. 2015.Gewahrleisteter Christliche Glaube is the German translation of Alvin Plantinga s seminal work, Warranted Christian Belief. Plantinga was among the most influential religious philosophers of the 20th century. His notion of warrant is difficult to translate, referring to the quality that distinguishes a true belief from knowledge. Plantinga s core thesis is that religious beliefs can be warranted."
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361The probabilistic argument from evilPhilosophical Studies 35 (1). 1979.First I state and develop a probabilistic argument for the conclusion that theistic belief is irrational or somehow noetically improper. Then I consider this argument from the point of view of the major contemporary accounts of probability, Concluding that none of them offers the atheologian aid and comfort
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252Materialism and Christian BeliefIn Peter van Inwagen & Dean Zimmerman (eds.), Persons: Human and Divine, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 99--141. 2007.
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133Anselm's Discovery: A Re-Examination of the OntoLogical Proof for God's ExistencePhilosophical Review 78 (3): 405. 1969.
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296Evolution, epiphenomenalism, reductionismPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 68 (3): 602-619. 2004.A common contemporary claim is the conjunction of metaphysical naturalism—the idea, roughly, that there is no such person as God or anything at all like God—with the view that our cognitive faculties have come to be by way of the processes to which contemporary evolutionary theory direct our attention. Call this view ‘N&E’. I’ve argued elsewhere that this view is incoherent or self-defeating in that anyone who accepts it has a defeater for R, the proposition that her cognitive faculties are reli…Read more
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203The Foundations of Theism: A ReplyFaith and Philosophy 3 (3): 313-396. 1986.Philip Quinn’s “On Finding the Foundations of Theism” is both challenging and important. Quinn proposes at least the following four theses: (a) my argument against the criteria of proper basicality proposed by classical foundationalism is unsuccessful, (b) the quasi-inductive method I suggest for arriving at criteria of proper basicality is defective, (c) even if belief in God is properly basic, it could without loss of justification be accepted on the basis of other propositions, and (d) belief…Read more
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1867Proper functionalismIn Andrew Cullison (ed.), The Continuum Companion to Epistemology, Continuum. pp. 124. 2012.
Notre Dame, Indiana, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Religion |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Religion |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |