281.
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Philosophia Christi:
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19 >
Issue: 2
Paul M. Gould
God over All: Divine Aseity and the Challenge of Platonism
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282.
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Philosophia Christi:
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19 >
Issue: 2
William Lane Craig
Robust Ethics: The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Godless Normative Realism
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283.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 2
Andrew Tsz Wan Hung
The Tyranny of the Ideal: Justice in a Diverse Society
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284.
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Philosophia Christi:
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19 >
Issue: 2
Todd R. Long
The God Relationship: The Ethics for Inquiry about the Divine
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285.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
20 >
Issue: 1
Benjamin C. F. Shaw, Gary Habermas
Miracles, Evidence, and Agent Causation:
A Review Article
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rights & permissions
Here we interact critically with the volume The Miracle Myth: Why Belief in the Resurrection and the Supernatural Is Unjustified (Columbia University, 2016) by University of Wisconsin philosopher Lawrence Shapiro, who contends that even if miracles occur, proper epistemological justification is unattainable. In addition, he argues that the historical evidence for Jesus’s resurrection is deeply problematic. We engage Shapiro’s philosophical and historical arguments by raising several significant issues within his own arguments, while also briefly providing some positive reasons to think that if a miracle did occur, one may be epistemologically justified in believing it.
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286.
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Philosophia Christi:
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20 >
Issue: 1
Kirk Lougheed
The Epistemic Significance of Disagreement
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287.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
20 >
Issue: 1
Derek McAllister
The Epistemology of Disagreement: New Essays
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288.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
20 >
Issue: 1
Winfried Löffler
Challenges to Moral and Religious Belief: Disagreement and Evolution
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289.
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Philosophia Christi:
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20 >
Issue: 1
Paul Copan
The Allure of Gentleness: Defending the Faith in the Manner of Jesus
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290.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
20 >
Issue: 2
William Lane Craig
A Fortunate Universe: Life in a Finely Tuned Cosmos
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291.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
20 >
Issue: 2
Lydia McGrew
Becoming a Christian: Combining Prior Belief, Evidence, and Will
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292.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
20 >
Issue: 2
J. P. Moreland
Metaphysical Perspectives
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293.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 2
Chad Bogosian
Recovering Our Knowledge of the Good Person:
A Review Essay of Dallas Willard’s The Disappearance of Moral Knowledge
abstract |
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rights & permissions
Have you wondered how your students or friends simultaneously deny moral facts yet accept the universal wrongness of bullying, sexual assault, or greed? Dallas Willard’s much anticipated final philosophical work offers an incisive analysis of and solution to this phenomenon. Here I provide a brief overview of Willard’s main argument for how moral knowledge disappeared and has thereby become publicly unavailable for teaching it to emerging generation. We first look at what caused this “disappearance” at a social level, and then consider how have contributed to the problem. Finally, we look at Willard’s proposal for how we might recover moral knowledge, and I offer three lingering questions that may provide a springboard for those interested in extending his important project.
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294.
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Issue: 2
Robert C. Koons
Advancing the Aristotelian Project in Contemporary Metaphysics: A Review Essay
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In a recent book, Substance and the Fundamentality of the Familiar, Ross Inman demonstrates the contemporary relevance of an Aristotelian approach to metaphysics and the philosophy of nature. Inman successfully applies the Aristotelian framework to a number of outstanding problems in metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of physics. Inman tackles some intriguing questions about the ontological status of proper parts, questions which constitute a central focus of ongoing debate and investigation.
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295.
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Philosophia Christi:
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21 >
Issue: 2
Graham Oppy
Paul Copan and William Lane Craig, eds., The Kalām Cosmological Argument
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296.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 2
Thomas W. Duttweiler
Matthew A. Benton, John Hawthorne, and Dani Rabinowitz, eds., Knowledge, Belief, and God: New Insights in Religious Epistemology
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297.
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Philosophia Christi:
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21 >
Issue: 2
Francis J. Beckwith
Matthew D. Wright, A Vindication of Politics: On the Common Good and Human Flourishing
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298.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 2
Todd Buras
Joshua Rasmussen, How Reason Can Lead to God: A Philosopher’s Bridge to Faith
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299.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 2
R. Keith Loftin
Natalja Deng, God and Time
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300.
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Philosophia Christi:
Volume >
3 >
Issue: 1
Evan Fales
Successful Defense?:
A Review of In Defense of Miracles
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