21.
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The New Scholasticism:
Volume >
40 >
Issue: 4
Ernan McMullin
Recent Work in Philosophy of Science
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22.
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The New Scholasticism:
Volume >
47 >
Issue: 2
Edward Regis, Jr.
Apostle’s Translations of Aristotle
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23.
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The New Scholasticism:
Volume >
47 >
Issue: 3
Charles F. Kielkopf
Recent Trends in Logic
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24.
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Newman Studies Journal:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 2
John T. Ford
Edward Bellasis: Carinal Newman as a Musician
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
One of the major benefits of the Internet is that numerous books and essays that have long been out of print are now readily accessible—including the following booklet (44 pages).
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25.
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Newman Studies Journal:
Volume >
8 >
Issue: 2
John T. Ford, C.S.C.
A Companion for Newman Studies
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26.
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Newman Studies Journal:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 1
Donald G. Graham
Frank Turner on John Henry Newman and Development:
An Example of Eisegesis
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
The late Frank M. Turner’s revisionist biography, John Henry Newman: The Challenge to Evangelical Religion has caused controversy. This essay considers one of Turner’s controversial contentions, namely, that Newman’s Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (1845) is a naturalistic account of the history of the Christian church—an account devoid of the presence of Providence.
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27.
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Philo:
Volume >
12 >
Issue: 1
Christopher Grau
Critical Study of Alice Crary:
Beyond Moral Judgment
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
This study offers a comprehensive summary and critical discussion of Alice Crary’s Beyond Moral Judgment. While generally sympathetic to her goal of defending the sort of expansive vision of the moral previously championed by Cora Diamond and Iris Murdoch, concerns are raised regarding the potential for her account to provide a satisfactory treatment of both “wide” objectivity and moral disagreement. Drawing on the work of Jonathan Lear and Jonathan Dancy, I suggest possible routes by which her position could be expanded and possibly strengthened.
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28.
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Philo:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 1
Paul Gould
Intentionality and God: A Review Essay of R. Scott Smith’s Naturalism and Our Knowledge of Reality
abstract |
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rights & permissions
R. Scott Smith argues that it is only theism, and not naturalism, that can deliver us knowledge. In this brief essay, I focus on the phenomenon of intentionality as articulated and developed by Smith and explore implications of his thesis for metaphysics, philosophy of religion, and philosophical theology.
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29.
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Philo:
Volume >
3 >
Issue: 2
Mark I. Vuletic
Destined for Greatness
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view |
rights & permissions
In an expansion of the fine-tuning argument, Michael Denton argues that every aspect of the universe is ideally suited for the production and maintenance of familiar and anthropomorphic forms of life. He further argues that the ideal nature of these aspects is extremely improbable unless one postulates a designer who tooled them for the express purpose of producing familiar and anthropomorphic life. I point out shortcomings in Denton’s line of argument, focusing in particular on the premise that the ideal nature of the aspects in question is improbable absent a designer.
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30.
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Philo:
Volume >
5 >
Issue: 1
Tyler Wunder
Warranted Christian Belief by Alvin Plantinga
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
Alvin Plantinga’s Warranted Christian Belief (2000) is the capstone to the latest stage in his views on the intellectual credibility of theism in general, and Christian theism in particular. While Plantinga’s stature in the community of Christian philosophers alone makes gaining familiarity with this text a good idea for contemporary analytic philosophers of religion, its vigorous, innovative defense of specifically Christian theism and daring suggestions for renovating the landscape of analytic philosophy of religion merit serious consideration. I aim to provide a useful introduction to the book’s contents and critique some of its main claims.
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31.
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Philo:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
William F. Vallicella
The Problem of Existence by Arthur Witherall
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32.
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Philo:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
Kristin Andrews
Neurophilosophy of Free Will by Henrik Walter
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33.
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Philo:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 1
Graham Oppy
Logic and Theism:
Arguments for and Against Beliefs in God
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34.
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Philo:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 2
John Shook
The Cambridge Companion to Atheism, edited by Michael Martin
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35.
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Philotheos:
Volume >
9
Bogdan Lubardić
The Crushed Nightingale: Passio secundum Slavoj
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36.
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Process Studies:
Volume >
1 >
Issue: 2
David Griffin
The Process Theology of Norman Pittenger:
A Review Article
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37.
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Process Studies:
Volume >
16 >
Issue: 1
Duane H. Whittier
The Acts of Our Being:
A Reflection on Agency and Responsibility
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38.
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Process Studies:
Volume >
16 >
Issue: 1
Carol Johnston
Community:
A Trinity of Models
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39.
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Process Studies:
Volume >
16 >
Issue: 1
Donald Wayne Viney
God’s World, God’s Body
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40.
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Process Studies:
Volume >
16 >
Issue: 1
Bob Mesle
Evil and the Process God
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