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The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy:
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8
Thomas Platt
Science and Religion:
Some Shared Presuppositions
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While many have claimed that there is a conflict between science and religion, it is not often noted that they share a number of assumptions. Here, I work toward identifying and clarifying some of these shared assumptions. I focus on some of the common commitments to metaphysical, epistemological and moral priorities which are necessary for human life in a democratic society. While this will not eliminate all conflict between science and religion, it will remind the disputants of their common goals and even common enemies.
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The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Sandra B. Rosenthal
Experience, Experimentalism, and Religious Overbelief:
James and Dewey
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William James and John Dewey hold the view that all knowledge and experience are experimental. Within this common pragmatic context, James's theism and Dewey's atheism offer contrasting - indeed, contradictory - interpretations of the object of religious experience. This essay explores the intertwining of their common pragmatic context and differing objects of religious belief to show the way in which this intertwining gives rise to a unique position which can appeal to theists and atheists alike.
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