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Christian Weidemann

Ruhr-Universität Bochum
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  •  Publications
    29
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 More details
  • Ruhr-Universität Bochum
    Catholic Theology Department
    Regular Faculty
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics and Epistemology
  • All publications (29)
  •  19
    About the Authors
    with René van Woudenberg, Bence Nanay, Igor Douven, Ron Rood, Bob Hale, Steven D. Hales, Christian B. Miller, Duncan Pritchard, Sabine Roeser, David Eng, and Andy Hamilton
    In René Woudenberg, Sabine Roeser & Ron Rood (eds.), Basic Belief and Basic Knowledge: Papers in Epistemology, De Gruyter. pp. 293-293. 2005.
  •  20
    Introduction
    with René van Woudenberg, Bence Nanay, Igor Douven, Ron Rood, Bob Hale, Steven D. Hales, Christian B. Miller, Duncan Pritchard, Sabine Roeser, David Eng, and Andy Hamilton
    In René Woudenberg, Sabine Roeser & Ron Rood (eds.), Basic Belief and Basic Knowledge: Papers in Epistemology, De Gruyter. pp. 7-12. 2005.
  •  121
    ›Schönstes Erbteil der Lebendigen‹ oder ›Großgrundbesitz auf dem Mond‹? Jonas Grethlein über die Geschichte der Hoffnung (review)
    Ethik Und Gesellschaft 18 (1). 2025.
    History of Western Philosophy, MiscPhilosophy, MiscValue Theory
  •  13
    Inhaltsverzeichnis
    with Christoph Halbig, Christian Suhm, Christoph Demmerling, Marcus Willaschek, Michael Esfeld, Thomas Blume, Ludger Jansen, Holger Lyre, Daniela M. Bailer-Jones, Meinard Kuhlmann, Renate Huber, Frank Köhler, Tatjana Tarkian, Uwe Czaniera, and Kirsten B. Endres
    In Christoph Halbig & Christian Suhm (eds.), Was ist wirklich?: Neuere Beiträge zu Realismusdebatten in der Philosophie, De Gruyter. 2004.
  •  20
    Einleitung
    with Christoph Halbig, Christian Suhm, Christoph Demmerling, Marcus Willaschek, Michael Esfeld, Thomas Blume, Ludger Jansen, Holger Lyre, Daniela M. Bailer-Jones, Meinard Kuhlmann, Renate Huber, Frank Köhler, Tatjana Tarkian, Uwe Czaniera, and Kirsten B. Endres
    In Christoph Halbig & Christian Suhm (eds.), Was ist wirklich?: Neuere Beiträge zu Realismusdebatten in der Philosophie, De Gruyter. pp. 9-28. 2004.
  •  15
    Vorwort
    with Christoph Halbig, Christian Suhm, Christoph Demmerling, Marcus Willaschek, Michael Esfeld, Thomas Blume, Ludger Jansen, Holger Lyre, Daniela M. Bailer-Jones, Meinard Kuhlmann, Renate Huber, Frank Köhler, Tatjana Tarkian, Uwe Czaniera, and Kirsten B. Endres
    In Christoph Halbig & Christian Suhm (eds.), Was ist wirklich?: Neuere Beiträge zu Realismusdebatten in der Philosophie, De Gruyter. pp. 5-6. 2004.
  •  10
    List of Abbreviations
    with Richard Rorty, Tim Henning, Eva-Maria Parthe, Thilo Rissing, Judith Sieverding, Mario Wenning, Simon Derpmann, Georg M. Kleemann, Andreas Kösters, Sebastian Laukötter, David Schweikard, Marius Backmann, Andreas Berg-Hildebrand, Marie Kaiser, Michael Pohl, Raja Rosenhagen, Christian Suhm, Robert Velten, Attila Karakuş, Andreas Vieth, Nikola Kompa, Sebastian Muders, Sebastian Schmoranzer, Stefan Heßbrüggen, Julia Heße, Rudolf Owen Müllan, Stefan Reins, Ulrike Schuster, Markus Seidel, and Ludwig Siep
    In Andreas Vieth (ed.), Richard Rorty: His Philosophy Under Discussion, Verlag. pp. 11-12. 2005.
  •  22
    Preface
    with Nicola Mößner and Sebastian Schmoranzer
    In Nicola Mößner, Sebastian Schmoranzer & Christian Weidemann (eds.), Richard Swinburne: Christian Philosophy in a Modern World, Ontos. pp. 9-12. 2008.
  •  28
    List of Abbreviations of Richard Swinburne’s Major Works
    with Nicola Mößner and Sebastian Schmoranzer
    In Nicola Mößner, Sebastian Schmoranzer & Christian Weidemann (eds.), Richard Swinburne: Christian Philosophy in a Modern World, Ontos. pp. 13-14. 2008.
  •  26
    References
    with Nicola Mößner and Sebastian Schmoranzer
    In Nicola Mößner, Sebastian Schmoranzer & Christian Weidemann (eds.), Richard Swinburne: Christian Philosophy in a Modern World, Ontos. pp. 225-226. 2008.
  •  21
    Contents
    with Richard Swinburne, Julia Göhner, Marie I. Kaiser, Christian Suhm, Johannes Korbmacher, Sebastian Schmoranzer, Ansgar Seide, Nicola Mößner, Markus Seidel, Benedikt Paul Göcke, Matthias Hoesch, Peter Rohs, Jennifer Hankeln, Matthias Schleiff, Paul Schöttner, Gordon Leonhard, Jan G. Michel, Bernd Prien, Ana Honnacker, Martin W. Richter, Arne M. Weber, Arnold Ziesche, Anna Brückner, Jana Lührmann, Michael Pohl, Raja Rosenhagen, Norbert Jömann, Rebekka Kammesheidt, Sebastian Laukötter, Sebastian Muders, Thimo Zirpel, Katharina König, Andreas Kösters, Claus Lüdenbach, and Martin Pleitz
    In Nicola Mößner, Sebastian Schmoranzer & Christian Weidemann (eds.), Richard Swinburne: Christian Philosophy in a Modern World, Ontos. 2008.
  •  26
    Conspiracy Theories and Religious Worldviews: Unraveling a Complex Relationship – CORRIGENDUM
    with Jacob Hesse
    Episteme 1-1. forthcoming.
    Social Epistemology
  •  27
    Brandom and Frege
    with Ulrike Kleemeier
    In Bernd Prien & David P. Schweikard (eds.), Robert Brandom: Analytic Pragmatist, Ontos. pp. 115-124. 2007.
  •  23
    Realismus und Antirealismus
    In Heiko Schulz, Knut Wenzel & Christian Wiese (eds.), Handbuch Religionsphilosophie: Geschichte – Konzepte – Kontroversen, J.b. Metzler. pp. 627-644. 2025.
    Laut theologischem Realismus beanspruchen Christen (Juden, Muslime...) mit Äußerungen wie „Gott hat die Welt erschaffen“ wahre oder falsche Aussagen über eine nicht auf Moral oder Anthropologie reduzierbare, genuin theologische, von menschlichem Denken, Handeln und Sprechen unabhängige Wirklichkeit zu treffen. Der Artikel erläutert diese Bestimmung, führt in die Geschichte der Kritik am Realismus ein, unterscheidet drei Typen von theologischem Antirealismus und grenzt sie vom klassischen Atheism…Read more
    Laut theologischem Realismus beanspruchen Christen (Juden, Muslime...) mit Äußerungen wie „Gott hat die Welt erschaffen“ wahre oder falsche Aussagen über eine nicht auf Moral oder Anthropologie reduzierbare, genuin theologische, von menschlichem Denken, Handeln und Sprechen unabhängige Wirklichkeit zu treffen. Der Artikel erläutert diese Bestimmung, führt in die Geschichte der Kritik am Realismus ein, unterscheidet drei Typen von theologischem Antirealismus und grenzt sie vom klassischen Atheismus ab. Da es sich beim Antirealismus um eine vergleichsweise junge, revisionäre Auffassung handelt, liegt die Beweislast bei seinen Vertretern. Sieben Einwände gegen den theologischen Realismus werden vorgestellt, expliziert und als nicht-triftig zurückgewiesen. Dass ein gütiges und mächtiges Wesen unseren Kosmos (buchstäblich!) geschaffen hat und den Schlüssel zu ewigem Leben und universaler Gerechtigkeit in Händen hält, ist eine aufregende Behauptung. Es besteht für die Theologie kein Anlass, statt dieser originalen, gewiss klärungsbedürftigen, womöglich irrigen und skandalösen, aber doch jederzeit interessanten Sache einen blutleeren antirealistischen Wiedergänger als ihren Gegenstand auszugeben.
  •  27
    The Strange Cases of Henry T. and Walter B.: Van Inwagen on Personal Identity, Accountability and Mitigating Circumstances
    with Andrea Strickmann
    In Ludger Jansen & Paul M. Näger (eds.), Peter van Inwagen: Materialism, Free Will and God, Springer Verlag. pp. 167-178. 2018.
    This paper deals with two problems that arise in the context of Peter van Inwagen’s treatment of responsibility. First, according to van Inwagen, a human person is identical with a human organism. If so, even drastic events, like an irreversible memory loss accompanied by a severe personality change, would not affect the diachronic identity of persons. It seems at least as plausible, however, to treat the amnesiac like a legal successor who inherits certain obligations without being morally acco…Read more
    This paper deals with two problems that arise in the context of Peter van Inwagen’s treatment of responsibility. First, according to van Inwagen, a human person is identical with a human organism. If so, even drastic events, like an irreversible memory loss accompanied by a severe personality change, would not affect the diachronic identity of persons. It seems at least as plausible, however, to treat the amnesiac like a legal successor who inherits certain obligations without being morally accountable for actions of her predecessor. Second, van Inwagen has argued that neither external (skills, number of opportunities etc.) nor internal (desires, values) factors that have statistical effects on human behavior can provide a moral excuse or mitigating circumstance. We present examples that strongly suggest that van Inwagen’s claim is wrong.
  •  71
    Conspiracy Theories and Religious Worldviews: Unraveling a Complex Relationship
    with Jacob Hesse
    Episteme 1-20. 2025.
    After offering a definition of “conspiracy theory” and highlighting some interesting interconnections between conspiracy theories and religious worldviews, we turn to epistemologically relevant analogies. Proponents of conspiracy theories and religions have often been accused of the same biases and epistemic vices, e.g., gullibility, hypersensitive proneness to personal explanations, or overemphasis on holistic thinking. So-called Generalism is best understood as the thesis that conspiracy theor…Read more
    After offering a definition of “conspiracy theory” and highlighting some interesting interconnections between conspiracy theories and religious worldviews, we turn to epistemologically relevant analogies. Proponents of conspiracy theories and religions have often been accused of the same biases and epistemic vices, e.g., gullibility, hypersensitive proneness to personal explanations, or overemphasis on holistic thinking. So-called Generalism is best understood as the thesis that conspiracy theories are guilty until proven innocent because they share certain “bunkum-making properties.” However, we argue for the particularist position, i.e. the position that a general epistemic presumption against conspiracy theories is not tenable. Building a negative valence into the very notion of conspiracy theory is not convincing either. Given the analogies, our analysis supports similar verdicts with respect to religious worldviews: Like conspiracy theories, they should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis rather than being dismissed simply for being religious. Finally, we reject Bezazel’s view that both conspiracy theories and religious worldviews constitute a-rational frames or “bliks” that, besides other things, ground what counts as an explanation. Such a proposal squares badly with epistemic misgivings about particularly preposterous examples of conspiracy theories and religious worldviews.
    Philosophy of ReligionConspiracy Theories
  •  25
    Skepticism, Correspondence, and Truth
    with Nikola Kompa, Sebastian Muders, and Sebastian Schmoranzer
    In Andreas Vieth (ed.), Richard Rorty: His Philosophy Under Discussion, Verlag. pp. 97-108. 2005.
    Skepticism
  •  30
    Freie Subjekte in der Welt der Physik: die analytische Transzendentalphilosophie von Peter Rohs in der Diskussion (edited book)
    with Attila Karakuş and Martin Pleitz
    Mentis. 2014.
  •  17
    Why basic theistic belief is probably not warranted, even if it is true
    In René Woudenberg, Sabine Roeser & Ron Rood (eds.), Basic Belief and Basic Knowledge: Papers in Epistemology, De Gruyter. pp. 211-228. 2005.
  •  15
    Theologischer Antirealismus – und warum er so uninteressant ist
    In Christoph Halbig & Christian Suhm (eds.), Was ist wirklich?: Neuere Beiträge zu Realismusdebatten in der Philosophie, De Gruyter. pp. 397-428. 2004.
  • Gott liebt uns nicht
    In Benedikt Paul Göcke & Ruben Schneider (eds.), Gottes Handeln in der Welt, Verlag Friedrich Pustet. 2017.
  •  49
    Thomas Buchheim/Friedrich Hermanni/Axel Hutter/Christoph Schwöbel (Hgg.), Gottesbeweise als Herausforderung für die moderne Vernunft (= Collegium Metaphysicum, Bd. 4)
    with Karl-Heinz Nusser
    Philosophisches Jahrbuch 121 (1): 163-168. 2014.
  •  28
    Franz von Kutschera: Analytische Philosophie jenseits des Materialismus (edited book)
    with Christoph Halbig
    Lit Verlag Münster. 2005.
  •  26
    Is the Origin of Life a Fluke? Why the chance hypothesis should not be dismissed too quickly
    In Andreas Losch (ed.), What Is Life? On Earth and Beyond, Cambridge University Press. pp. 132-155. 2017.
    The origin of life on Earth is one of the great unsolved mysteries of science. Although no complete account of life’s beginnings is available and although no life forms that emerged independently on other planets have been discovered, most origin-of-life-researchers and astrobiologists dismiss a chance scenario out of hand. I argue that this is a mistake for at least two reasons. First, given a sufficiently big and adequately variegated cosmos any finite chance of life emerging on Earth-like pla…Read more
    The origin of life on Earth is one of the great unsolved mysteries of science. Although no complete account of life’s beginnings is available and although no life forms that emerged independently on other planets have been discovered, most origin-of-life-researchers and astrobiologists dismiss a chance scenario out of hand. I argue that this is a mistake for at least two reasons. First, given a sufficiently big and adequately variegated cosmos any finite chance of life emerging on Earth-like planets will virtually guarantee the formation of life somewhere. An observational selection effect could then explain why the cosmic neighbourhood we find ourselves in is a very special place (Vast Cosmos Argument). Second, as White (2007) has pointed out, there seems to be no conceivable a priori reason to suppose that processes by which complex molecules arise are more likely to be unintentionally biased towards self-replicating, life-producing molecules than to other types of molecules (Indifferent Nature Argument). Objections to both arguments are discussed and rejected.
    Philosophy of BiologyPhilosophy of Cosmology
  •  606
    Providence and the Magnitude of the Universe
    Dialog 61. 2022.
    Why did God create a vast universe? Various answers are discussed and rejected: a) for its beauty; b) to instill a sense of the sublime in his intelligent creatures; c) to demonstrate his glory, d) to provide a home for extraterrestrial species; e) to guarantee that the natural emergence of (intelligent) life, though extremely rare, happens nonetheless somewhere; f) for no reason at all, because the human notion of efficiency does not apply to God’s actions. Instead, the paper suggests that the …Read more
    Why did God create a vast universe? Various answers are discussed and rejected: a) for its beauty; b) to instill a sense of the sublime in his intelligent creatures; c) to demonstrate his glory, d) to provide a home for extraterrestrial species; e) to guarantee that the natural emergence of (intelligent) life, though extremely rare, happens nonetheless somewhere; f) for no reason at all, because the human notion of efficiency does not apply to God’s actions. Instead, the paper suggests that the universe is intended for Space settlements. Several objections to this proposal are considered and deemed unconvincing.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  50
    Methodus als Lebensweg bei Johann Conrad Dannhauer. Existentialisierung der Dialektik in der Lutherischen Orthodoxie: D. Bolliger. Berlin: de Gruyter, 2020, ix + 710 pp. €149,95. ISBN 978-3-11-046504-4
    History and Philosophy of Logic 43 (2): 198-200. 2022.
    As the author of the first book on general hermeneutics Johann Conrad Dannhauer occupies a place in the pantheon of philosophy. The Lutheran theologian wo...
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  •  78
    D. Bolliger
    History and Philosophy of Logic 1-3. forthcoming.
    As the author of the first book on general hermeneutics Johann Conrad Dannhauer occupies a place in the pantheon of philosophy. The Lutheran theologian wo...
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  •  25
    Why basic theistic belief is probably
    In René van Woudenberg, Sabine Roeser & Ron Rood (eds.), Basic Belief and Basic Knowledge: Papers in Epistemology, Ontos-verlag. pp. 4--211. 2005.
    Epistemology of ReligionReformed Epistemology
  •  126
    Richard Swinburne: Christian Philosophy in a Modern World (edited book)
    with Nicola Mößner and Sebastian Schmoranzer
    ontos. 2008.
    Richard Swinburne is one of the most influential contemporary proponents of the analytical philosophy of religion. He is, above all, a traditional theist. However, his interests are very wide-ranging. He has written about nearly all central theological and philosophical issues such as epistemology, metaphysics, theory of mind and ethics. During the “Münstersche Vorlesungen 2007” students and faculty members of the Department of Philosophy at Münster University entered into a skilful and interes…Read more
    Richard Swinburne is one of the most influential contemporary proponents of the analytical philosophy of religion. He is, above all, a traditional theist. However, his interests are very wide-ranging. He has written about nearly all central theological and philosophical issues such as epistemology, metaphysics, theory of mind and ethics. During the “Münstersche Vorlesungen 2007” students and faculty members of the Department of Philosophy at Münster University entered into a skilful and interesting discussion concerning most of Swinburne’s positions. This volume presents their contributions as well as Swinburne's replies.
    Philosophy of Religion, General Works
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