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91Mysticism and EpistemologyFaith and Philosophy 12 (2): 167-188. 1995.St. Teresa worried over the genuineness of her mystical experience. Her worries have sense within a form of life. Pike argues that her claims must be downgraded if no justification of the form of life can be given. The Devil could deceive us about any justification, Mavrodes argues, but certain experiences can be self-authenticating. Treating forms of life as though they were interpretations, Katz concludes that we must be agnostic about their truth. The paper argues that confusions between form…Read more
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58Does God’s Existence Need Proof? (review)International Studies in Philosophy 30 (4): 132-134. 1998.
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74Understanding Religious Convictions (review)International Studies in Philosophy 8 217-219. 1976.
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14Wittgenstein and the Possibility of Discourse (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 1998.Four years after the publication of Wittgenstein's Investigations, Rush Rhees began writing critical reflections on the masterpiece he had helped to edit. In this edited collection of his previously unpublished writings, Rhees argues, contra Wittgenstein, that although language lacks the unity of a calculus it is not simply a family of language games. The unity of language is found in its dialogical character. It is in this context that we say something, and grow in understanding: notions not ca…Read more
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26Rush Rhees on Religion and Philosophy (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 1997.Rush Rhees was a philosopher, and a pupil and close friend of Ludwig Wittgenstein. While some of Rhees's own published papers became classics, most of his work remained unpublished during his lifetime. After his death, his papers were found to comprise sixteen thousand pages of manuscript on every aspect of philosophy, from philosophical logic to Simone Weil. This collection of unpublished papers, edited by D. Z. Phillips, includes Rhees's outstanding work on philosophy and religion. Written ove…Read more
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250William Hasker’s avoidance of the problems of evil and GodInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 62 (1): 33-42. 2007.Our Book Review Editor, James Keller, invited William Hasker to write a review of the Book by D. Z. Phillips, "The Problem of Evil and the Problem of God" and then in consultation with the Editor-in-Chief invited Phillips to respond. Aware of both their respect for each other and their philosophical differences we planned that Hasker's review and Phillips' response would appear in the same issue of the "International Journal for Philosophy of Religion." Unfortunately that was not to be. Dewi, as…Read more
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58Faith and Philosophical EnquiryRoutledge. 2013.The concern of this book is the nature of religious belief and the ways in which philosophical enquiry is related to it. Six chapters present the positive arguments the author wishes to put forward to discusses religion and rationality, scepticism about religion, language-games, belief and the loss of belief. The remaining chapters include criticisms of some contemporary philosophers of religion in the light of the earlier discussions, and the implications for more specific topics, such as relig…Read more
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166The Concept of Prayer (Routledge Revivals)Routledge. 2013.Many contemporary philosophers assume that, before one can discuss prayer, the question of whether there is a God or not must be settled. In this title, first published in 1965, D. Z. Phillips argues that to understand prayer is to understand what is meant by the reality of God. Beginning by placing the problem of prayer within a philosophical context, Phillips goes on to discuss such topics as prayer and the concept of talking, prayer and dependence, superstition and the concept of community. T…Read more
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Through a Darkening Glass, Philosophy, Literature and Cultural ChangeReligious Studies 19 (3): 426-428. 1983.
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1Through a Darkening Glass Philosophy, Literature, and Cultural Change /D.Z. Phillips. --. --University of Notre Dame Press, C1982. 1982.
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33In locating friendly fire in contemporary philosophy of religion, D.Z. Phillips shows that more harm can be done to religion by its philosophical defenders than by its philosophical despisers. Friendly fire is the result of an uncritical acceptance of empiricism, and Phillips argues that we need to examine critically the claims that individual consciousness is the necessary starting point from which we have to argue: for the existence of an external world and the reality of God; that God is a pe…Read more
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120Religion and Morality (London: Macmillan 1996; New York: St. Martin's Press, 1996). (edited book)Macmillan and St. Martin's. 1996.Reflection on religion inevitably involves consideration of its relation to morality. When great evil is done to human beings, we may feel that something absolute has been violated. Can that sense, which is related to gratitude for existence, be expressed without religious concepts? Can we express central religious concerns, such as losing the self, while abandoning any religious metaphysic? Is moral obligation itself dependent on divine commands if it is to be objective, or is morality not only…Read more
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351
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3Ethics, Faith, and 'What Can Be Said'In Hans-Johann Glock (ed.), Wittgenstein: a critical reader, Blackwell. pp. 348--366. 2001.
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84Wittgensteinianism: Logic, Reality and GodIn William J. Wainwright (ed.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy of religion, Oxford University Press. pp. 447--71. 2005.Five reasons are given for why Wittgensteinianism, though a major movement in philosophy of religion, has never been a dominant one. The remainder of the chapter is divided as follows: - I: The influence of Descartes’ Legacy. - II: Philosophy of Religion’s epistemological inheritance as seen in Reformed epistemology and the influence of Thomas Reid, and in neo-Kantianism. - III: The return from metaphysical reality in Wittgenstein. - IV: Difficulties in the metaphysical notion of God: as being i…Read more
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1Wittgenstein's Full StopIn Irving Block & Ludwig Wittgenstein (eds.), Perspectives on the philosophy of Wittgenstein, Mit Press. pp. 179--200. 1981.
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2The holocaust and languageIn John K. Roth (ed.), Genocide and Human Rights: A Philosophical Guide, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 46--64. 2005.
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47A companion to Wittgenstein's philosophical investigationsPhilosophical Books 19 (2): 68-72. 1978.
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80Beyond rulesHistory of the Human Sciences 13 (2): 17-36. 2000.I: Winch’s emphasis on philosophy’s concern with language and on rule-following; II: Winch’s misgivings about limits of analogy between rules and language; III: Rhees’ comparison of the unity of discourse with conversation, and claim that language makes sense if living makes sense; IV: Winch’s later emphasis on the fragility of conditions for understanding both between cultures and within our own
Areas of Specialization
| History of Western Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| History of Western Philosophy |