Religious Experience and Religious Diversity: A Reply to Alston

Religious Studies 30 (2):151 - 159 (1994)
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Abstract

William Alston's Perceiving God: The Epistemology of Religious Experience is a most significant contribution to the philosophy of religion. The product of 50 years' reflection on its topic , this work provides a very thorough explication and defence of what Alston calls the ‘mystical perceptual practice’ – the practice of forming beliefs about the Ultimate on the basis of putative ‘direct experiential awareness’ thereof . Alston argues, in particular, for the rationality of engaging in the Christian form of MP . On his view, those who participate in CMP are justified in forming beliefs as they do because their practice is ‘socially established’, has a ‘functioning overrider system’ and a ‘significant degree of self-support’; and because of the ‘lack of sufficient reasons to take the practice as unreliable’

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J. L. Schellenberg
Mount Saint Vincent University

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Why you should be a religious skeptic.Sebastian Gäb - 2023 - Philosophical Forum (4):303-314.

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