Results for ' direct, firsthand, and incontrovertible knowledge of God's existence'

965 found
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  1.  13
    Born Again, Briefly.Greg Egan - 2009 - In Russell Blackford & Udo Schüklenk, 50 Voices of Disbelief. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 172–176.
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  2.  20
    Does God Exist?: A Dialogue on the Proofs for God’s Existence.Todd C. Moody - 2013 - Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company.
    In this engaging introductory dialogue, Todd Moody maps the spectrum of philosophical arguments and counterarguments for the existence of God. Structuring colloquial conversations along classical lines, he presents a lively and accessible discussion of issues that are central to both theist and atheist thinking, including the burden of proof, the first cause, a necessary being, the natural order, suffering, miracles, experience as knowledge, and rationality without proof. The second edition is a significant and comprehensive revision. Moody broadens and (...)
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  3.  39
    Avicenna’s Proof for God’s Existence: the Proof from Ontological Considerations.Vladimir Lasica - 2020 - Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 26 (2):25-47.
    This paper argues that there is only one proof for God’s existence in Avicenna, and only one way for establishing the proof within his metaphysical system. This metaphysical proof is essentially derived from a priori notions, among which the notion of existence has the central role. Avicenna’s proof is structured in such a way that all its concepts are either derived from the meaning of ‘existence’ or are connected with this meaning. In this sense Avicenna’s proof sets (...)
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  4.  10
    Aquinas' proofs for God's existence.Dennis Bonnette - 1972 - The Hague,: M. Nijhoff.
    The purpose of this study is to investigate the legitimacy of the principle, "The per accidens necessarily implies the per se," as it is found in the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas. Special emphasis will be placed upon the function of this principle in the proofs for God's existence. The relevance of the principle in this latter context can be seen at once when it is observed that it is the key to the solution of the well known (...)
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  5.  38
    Evil As Evidence Against God's Existence.David Basinger - 1981 - Modern Schoolman 58 (3):175-184.
  6. Does God's Existence Need Proof?Richard Messer - 1993 - New York: Oxford University Press UK.
    The possibility of proving the existence of God has fascinated thinkers and believers throughout the centuries. For those like Richard Swinburne, such a project is both worthwhile and successful. For others, like D. Z. Phillips, it is wholly inappropriate. Most critics have simply taken sides at this point; but this book argues a way forward, showing that the disparity between Swinburne and Phillips goes deeper - questioning the fundamental nature of God, the meaning of religious language, and the proper (...)
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  7.  50
    Oakes’ New Argument for God’s Existence.Theodore J. Kondoleon - 1982 - New Scholasticism 56 (1):100-109.
  8.  17
    A Contemporary Approach to God’s Existence.Jules M. Brady - 1977 - New Scholasticism 51 (1):1-20.
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  9. Augustine’s Argument for God’s Existence de Libero Arbitrio, Book II.Theodore Kondoleon - 1983 - Augustinian Studies 14:105-115.
  10. The Case against theism: why the evidence disproves god’s existence.Jacobus Erasmus - 2019 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 80 (3):303-304.
    Volume 80, Issue 3, July 2019, Page 303-304.
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  11. God's Knowledge.E. Stump & N. Kretzmann - 1995 - In Thomas David Senor, The Rationality of Belief and the Plurality of Faith. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 94--124.
  12. A Conditional Proof for God's Existence' in 'Newsletter on Teaching Philosophy.Morgan Luck - 2008 - American Philosophical Association Newsletters 8 (1):9 - 11.
    In this paper I outline an argument for the existence of God. This argument suggests that, if an all-good supernatural agent were to exist, such as the God of Theism, then He could not perform an immoral act. From this premise alone a formal proof for the existence of God can be derived. Perhaps unsurprisingly, when this argument is examined closely it is revealed to be fallacious. However, what we find is that the fallacy involves a special type (...)
     
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  13. Treating God's Existence as an Explanatory Hypothesis.David M. Holley - 2010 - American Philosophical Quarterly 47 (4):377-388.
    When theists and atheists argue about the existence of God, the dispute is most often framed by a shared assumption: that the appropriate way to consider God's existence is to think of it as a hypothesis posited to explain observational data. Theists argue that such a hypothesis provides the best explanation for agreed-upon facts, while atheists argue that no such explanation is needed or that theistic explanation is incoherent. This way of structuring discussion of God's (...) interprets the question as a theoretical issue to be decided by considering empirical evidence objectively and dispassionately in order to determine the most reasonable way of accounting for the observational data. (shrink)
     
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  14.  41
    Talk about God’s Existence.Tziporah Kasachkoff - 1970 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 19:181-192.
    PHILOSOPHICAL defenses of the intelligibility of religious utterances, and of the tenability of religious beliefs, have come more and more to appeal to the Wittgensteinian claim that concepts must be understood in terms of the forms of life which give rise to them.
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  15.  11
    Who designed the designer?: a rediscovered path to God's existence.Michael Augros - 2015 - San Francisco: Ignatius Press.
    The "New Atheists" are pulling no punches. If the world of nature needs a designer, they ask, then why wouldn't the designer itself need a designer, too? Or if it can exist without any designer behind it, then why can't we just say the same for the universe and wash our hands of a designer altogether? Interweaving its pursuit of the First Cause with personal stories and humor, this ground-breaking book takes a fresh approach to ultimate questions. While attentive to (...)
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  16.  60
    Omnipotence: The Real Power Behind Descartes’ Proofs for God’s Existence.Jack Davidson - 2004 - Modern Schoolman 81 (4):275-294.
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  17.  77
    Kant on Proofs for God's Existence.Ina Goy (ed.) - 2023 - Boston: De Gruyter.
    The essay collection "Kant on Proofs for God's Existence" provides a highly needed, comprehensive analysis of the radical turns of Kant's views on proofs for God's existence.— In the "Theory of Heavens" (1755), Kant intends to harmonize the Newtonian laws of motion with a physico-theological argument for the existence of God. But only a few years later, in the "Ground of Proof" essay (1763), Kant defends an ontological ('possibility' or 'modal') argument on the basis of (...)
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  18. An Argument for God’s Existence from Non-Bruteness.Emanuel Rutten - manuscript
    In this article, I present a new argument for God’s existence, which I term the argument from non-bruteness. The argument is premised on the idea that the fundamental structure of reality cannot be a brute fact and must have an ultimate reason. By focusing on the concept of self-evidence, I first examine the relationship between possible worlds and what I refer to as cognitive perspectives. I then argue that an ultimate explanation for reality's fundamental structure necessitates an absolute perspective—one (...)
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  19. Kant's Arguments for God's Existence.John-Michael Kuczynski - 2020 - Madison, WI, USA: Freud Institute.
    A clear and concise exposition and critique of Kant's arguments for God's existence.
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  20. Morning Hours, or Lectures on God's Existence.Moses Mendelssohn, Daniel Dahlstrom & Corey W. Dyck - 2011 - Springer.
    Morning Hours is the first English translation of Morgenstunden by Moses Mendelssohn, the foremost Jewish thinker of the German Enlightenment. Published six months before Mendelssohn's death on January 4, 1786, Morning Hours is the most sustained presentation of his mature epistemological and metaphysical views, all elaborated in the service of presenting his son with proofs for the existence of God. But Morning Hours is much more than a theoretical treatise. It also plays a central role in the drama of (...)
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  21.  13
    Malebranche’s approach to God’s existence.Juan Diego M. Moya Bedoya - 2024 - Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology 28 (1):29-37.
    In this paper, the author reproduces one of Nicolas Malebranche’s arguments for God’s existence. The text offers (I) a logical formalization of the argument, (II) a formal proof of validity of the argument and, finally, some philosophical reflections concerning not only (III.I) the soundness of the argument, but (III.II) the intellectual benefits that a logical formalization offers to a philosophical historian of philosophy.
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  22. ARGUING FROM CONSCIOUSNESS TO GOD's EXISTENCE VIA LOWE's DUALISM.Eric LaRock & Mostyn W. Jones - manuscript
    Arguments from consciousness to God’s existence (ACs) contend that physicalism is too problematic to explain the mind’s ultimate source. They add that theism probably better explains this source in terms of God making us in his own image (with conscious, unified, rational minds). But ACs are problematic too. First, physicalism has various competitors beside theism. Russellian monism and dual-aspect theory are examples. Second, all these theories, including theism, are seriously flawed. For example, it’s tied to traditional dualism, which has (...)
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  23. Pauline Arguments for God’s Existence.Daniel A. Bonevac - 2018 - Philosophia Christi 20 (1):155-168.
    In Acts 17, Paul offers general framework for demonstrating the existence of God—a supernatural being, a creator, designer, and ultimate purpose of the universe, who cannot be identified with anything natural but instead underlies and explains the natural world as a whole. What Paul says, combined with unstated theses about causation and explanation that his Stoic and Epicurean audience would have shared, adds up to a powerful argument for God’s existence. Cosmological and design arguments emerge as special cases.
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  24.  38
    The Metaphysical Argument for God’s Existence.Krzysztof Ośko - 2019 - Roczniki Filozoficzne 67 (4):53-69.
    In this paper, I present main theses of Aquinas Way to God: The Proof in the De Ente et Essentia by Gaven Kerr. The book in question is a contemporary interpretation and defence of Thomas Aquinas’s argument for the existence of God, based on the real distinction between the essence of the thing and its act of being. I stress the fact that Kerr underlines the metaphysical character of Thomas’s argument and the role of participation in Aquinas’s understanding of (...)
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  25. A Critical Examination on the Religious Argument for God's Existence.Juyong Kim - 2020 - 신학과 학문 (Theology and Other Disciplines) 1 (22):107-123.
    In this article, I critically examine the religious argument for the existence of God, which Palmquist formulated from Kant’s Religion within the Bounds of Bare Reason. After showing the structure of the argument, I point the problematic point of the argument and focus on the concept of Gesinnung. The privateness of Gesinnung is problematized in the analysis of it, and I briefly suggest that an alternative account of the Gesinnung is possible. Yet I emphasize the advantage that this argument (...)
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  26. Knowledge Is All You Need.Lisa Miracchi - 2015 - Philosophical Issues 25 (1):353-378.
    Here’s a nice, simple view. Knowing that p is the sole fundamental aim and achievement in the epistemic domain. It is a manifestation of epistemic competence, and we can metaphysically explain both the existence and the normative status of all other epistemic states in terms of knowledge and the competence it manifests. In this paper I will defend this view from a challenge from Ernest Sosa that knowledge is too weak and primitive to do the work the (...)
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  27. Aquinas on God’s Causal Knowledge.Brian J. Shanley - 1998 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 72 (3):447-457.
  28.  34
    The Case Against Theism: Why the Evidence Disproves God’s Existence.Raphael Lataster - 2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This monograph offers a critique of arguments for the existence of a specifically Christian God advanced by prominent scholar William Lane Craig. The discussion incorporates philosophical, mathematical, scientific, historical, and sociological approaches. The author does not seek to criticize religion in general, or Christianity specifically. Rather, he examines the modern and relatively sophisticated evidential case for Christian theism. Scholars have been arguing for theism or naturalism for centuries, and there seems little to add to the discussion, especially from the (...)
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  29. Kant's Pre-Critical Proof for God's Existence.Steven M. Duncan - manuscript
    In his Beweisgrund (1762), Kant presents a sketch of "the only possible basis" for a proof of God's existence. In this essay, I attempt to present that proof as a valid and sound argument for the existence of God.
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  30. Desiring the Hidden God: Knowledge Without Belief.Julian Perlmutter - 2016 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 8 (4):51--64.
    For many people, the phenomenon of divine hiddenness is so total that it is far from clear to them that God exists at all. Reasonably enough, they therefore do not believe that God exists. Yet it is possible, whilst lacking belief in God’s reality, nonetheless to see it as a possibility that is both realistic and attractive; and in this situation, one will likely want to be open to the considerable benefits that would be available if God were real. In (...)
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  31.  46
    Common Ritual Knowledge.Joshua Cockayne - 2019 - Faith and Philosophy 36 (1):33-55.
    How can participating in a liturgy allow us to know God? Recent pathbreaking work on the epistemology of liturgy has argued that liturgy allows individuals to gain ritual knowledge of God by coming to know-how to engage God. However, since liturgy (as it is ordinarily practiced) is a group act, I argue that we need to give an account to explain how a group can know God by engaging with liturgy. If group know-how is reducible to instances of individual (...)
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  32. Is the ontological proof for God’s existence an ontological proof for God’s existence?Marcin Tkaczyk - 2007 - Logic and Logical Philosophy 16 (4):289-309.
    Two questions concerning Anselm of Canterbury’s theistic argument provided in Proslogion Ch. 2 are asked and answered: is the argument valid? under what conditions could it be sound? In order to answer the questions the argument is formalized as a first-order theory called AP2. The argument turns out to be valid, although it contains a hidden premise. The argument is also claimed not to be ontological one, but rather an a posteriori argument. One of the premises is found to be (...)
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  33.  27
    Does God’s Existence Need Proof? [REVIEW]Alan Padgett - 1995 - Faith and Philosophy 12 (3):434-436.
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  34. By Whose Authority: A Political Argument for God's Existence.Tyler McNabb & Jeremy Neill - 2019 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 11 (2):163-189.
    In The Problem of Political Authority, Michael Huemer argues that the contractarian and consequentialist groundings of political authority are unsuccessful, and, in fact, that there are no adequate contemporary accounts of political authority. As such, the modern state is illegitimate and we have reasons to affirm political anarchism. We disagree with Huemer’s conclusion. But we consider Huemer’s critiques of contractarianism and consequentialism to be compelling. Here we will juxtapose, alongside Huemer’s critiques, a theistic account of political authority from Nicholas Wolterstorff’s (...)
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  35.  30
    On Adams’ Moral Argument for God’s Existence.Mustafa Polat - 2022 - Tabula Rasa: Felsefe Ve Teoloji 39:19-29.
    Robert M. Adams (1979, 1987a, 1987b) defends a modified variant of the divine command theory (hereafter MDCT) to the effect that he proposes a moral argument for God’s existence driven in the form of practical reasoning with respect to rational moral agents’ beliefs in the adequacy of MDCT. For Adams, one’s commitment to MDCT as the most adequate theory legitimately provides her a practical reason for why she ought to believe in God’s existence which MDCT implies. In this (...)
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  36.  23
    God's Willing Knowledge, Redux.Douglas Langston - 2010 - Recherches de Theologie Et Philosophie Medievales 77 (2):235-282.
    God’s Willing Knowledge argued that Scotus should be seen as offering a non-libertarian view of freedom. Some critics of this interpretation point to Scotus’s texts that offer a synchronic view of possibility, which is seen as necessarily implying a libertarian view. Other critics point to the debt that Scotus owes to his libertarian predecessors and argue that Scotus follows their view. In order to address these critics, in the first section of the paper, some of the thinkers Scotus draws (...)
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  37. What is scientific knowledge?A. G. Ramsperger - 1939 - Philosophy of Science 6 (4):390-403.
    No philosopher is needed to say where reality may be found. The fool no less than the wise man is in direct touch with real existence at every moment of his waking or dreaming life. To find reality might be a problem for timeless gods beyond the flux of nature—if timeless gods can be said to have problems—but natural creatures encounter reality at every turn. Nor need we look to the philosopher for knowledge. A division of labor having (...)
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  38. Skeptheism: Is Knowledge of God’s Existence Possible?Moti Mizrahi - 2017 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 9 (1):41-64.
    In this paper, I sketch an argument for the view that we cannot know (or have good reasons to believe) that God exists. Some call this view “strong agnosticism” but I prefer the term “skeptheism” in order to clearly distinguish between two distinct epistemic attitudes with respect to the existence of God, namely, agnosticism and skepticism. For the skeptheist, we cannot know (or have good reasons to believe) that God exists, since there can be neither conceptual (a priori) nor (...)
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  39.  93
    Proving God’s Existence.Brian Davies - 1987 - Cogito 1 (1):7-8.
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  40.  24
    Proving God’s Existence II.Brian Davies - 1987 - Cogito 1 (2):5-7.
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  41.  49
    God’s Existence.Harry La Plante - 1967 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 16:30-45.
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  42. (1 other version)Teleological Arguments for God's Existence.Del Ratzsch - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
     
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  43.  99
    On Preferring that God Not Exist : A Dialogue.Stephen T. Davis - 2014 - Faith and Philosophy 31 (2):143-159.
    Recently a new question has emerged in the philosophy of religion: not whether God exists, but whether God’s existence is or would be preferable. The existing literature on the subject is sparse. The present essay, in dialogue form, is an attempt to marshal and evaluate arguments on both sides.
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  44.  56
    Post-Gödelian Ontological Argumentation for God’s Existence.Joshua R. Brotherton - 2018 - International Philosophical Quarterly 58 (4):371-387.
    The so-called ontological argument has a complex and controverted history, rising to particular prominence in contemporary analytic philosophy. Against this backdrop I will present a non-analytic interpretation of ontological argumentation for God’s existence by attempting to fuse Anselmian and Gödelian perspectives. I defend ontological argumentation in a number of slightly variant forms as neither a priori nor a posteriori, but ab actu exercito. Kantian and especially Thomistic critiques are confronted in the course of explaining how ontological argumentation may be (...)
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  45. Arguments for God's existence.David Braine - 1998 - In Brian Davies, Philosophy of Religion: A Guide to the Subject. Georgetown University Press. pp. 42.
     
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  46. Arguments for God's existence.D. Vas - 1998 - Journal of Dharma 23 (2):209-230.
     
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  47.  91
    The Conceptualist Argument for God's Existence.Quentin Smith - 1994 - Faith and Philosophy 11 (1):38-49.
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  48.  55
    Is God’s Non-Existence Conceivable?Robert W. Beard - 1980 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 18 (3):251-257.
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  49. An Argument for God's Existence.David E. White - 1979 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 10 (2):101 - 115.
  50.  53
    A recent attempt to prove God's existence.Henry Jack - 1965 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 25 (4):575-579.
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