Subjectivity and Religious Belief: An Historical, Critical Study

(1978)
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Abstract

Immanuel Kant, Soren Kierkegaard, and William James- three diverse philosophers from three different eras- have followed a similar route of non-theoretical justification of belief. This position states that there is no theoretical knowledge, positive or negative, of divine existence. The defense of religious belief, therefore, must be related to pervasive features of practical human existence; in other words, it must be subjective. While giving amble attention to the differences among these three philosophers, C. Stephen Evans finds and examines a common structure to all their arguments. This structure includes a theoretical skepticism about the existence of God, a repudiation of a neutral attitude on this question, and a deliberate shift of this question from theoretical reason to practical reason.

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edition Evans, Stephen C. (1982) "Subjectivity and Religious Belief: An Historical, Critical Study". Upa

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C. Stephen Evans
Baylor University

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