Philosophy of religion : selected readings
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書誌事項
Philosophy of religion : selected readings
Oxford University Press, c2014
5th ed
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注記
Other editors: William Hasker, Bruce Reichenbach, David Basinger
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Incorporating twelve new readings, Philosophy of Religion: Selected Readings, Fifth Edition, presents eighty-two selections grouped into fourteen thematic sections, providing instructors with great flexibility in organizing their courses. While it deals primarily with the Western and analytic traditions in philosophy, the book also incorporates readings representing continental, Asian, and Islamic perspectives. The selections are enhanced by substantial
section introductions, study questions, suggested readings, and an extensive glossary at the end of the book. The fifth edition includes a new section, "Atheism and Nonreligious Approaches to Religion," featuring
work by Paul Draper, Ludwig Feuerbach, Michael Martin, Michael Peterson, and Michael Ruse. Seven other additional selections appear throughout the text. An excellent stand-alone text for courses in the philosophy of religion, Philosophy of Religion, Fifth Edition, is also a perfect companion to the editors' textbook, Reason and Religious Belief, Fifth Edition (OUP, 2012), as the two books share the same topical organization.Package
Philosophy of Religion, Fifth Edition, with Reason and Religious Belief, Fifth Edition, and save your students 20% (package ISBN 978-0-19-935952-3). To order, please contact your Oxford sales representative or call
800.280.0280.
目次
*=New to this Edition
Preface:
INTRODUCTION: Exploring the Philosophy of Religion
PART ONE: THE NATURE OF RELIGION
Daniel C. Dennett: An Evolutionary Account of Religion
Buddha: Buddhist Nonrealism
Roger Trigg: A Defense of Religious Realism
D. Z. Phillips: The Meaning of Religious Beliefs Is Their Use
PART TWO: RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE
St. Teresa of Jesus: Religious Experiences
William James: Religious Experience as Feelings Forming the Root of Religion
William P. Alston: Religious Experience as Perception of God
Wayne Proudfoot: Religious Experiences as Interpretative Accounts
Michael Martin: Critique of Religious Experience
Merold Westphal: A Phenomenological Account of Religious Experience
Hakuun Yasutani Roshi: * Religious Experience Brings About Awakening
PART THREE: FAITH AND REASON
Thomas Aquinas: The Harmony of Reason and Revelation
Blaise Pascal: The Wager
William Clifford: The Ethics of Belief
William James: The Will to Believe
Soren Kierkegaard: Truth Is Subjectivity
C. Stephen Evans: Critical Dialog in Philosophy of Religion
PART FOUR: ARGUMENTS ABOUT GOD'S EXISTENCE
St. Anselm: The Classical Ontological Argument
Gaunilo: Critique of Anselm's Argument
Alvin Plantinga: A Contemporary Modal Version of the Ontological Argument
Thomas Aquinas: The Classical Cosmological Argument
Bruce R. Reichenbach: The Cosmological Argument from Contingency
William Lane Craig: The Kalam Cosmological Argument
J. L. Mackie: Critique of the Cosmological Argument
William Paley: The Analogical Teleological Argument
David Hume: Critique of the Analogical Teleological Argument
Robin Collins: * The Anthropic Teleological Argument
C.S. Lewis: * A Moral Argument for God's Existence
PART FIVE: KNOWING GOD WITHOUT ARGUMENTS
Alvin Plantinga: The Reformed Objection to Natural Theology
Robert Pargetter: Experience, Proper Basicality, and Belief in God
William Hasker: The Case of the Intellectually Sophisticated Theist
PART SIX: THE DIVINE ATTRIBUTES
John Hick: God's Necessary Existence
Moses Maimonides: Negative Theology
Thomas Aquinas: God Is Omnipotent
George I. Mavrodes: Some Puzzles Concerning Omnipotence
Nelson Pike: Divine Omniscience and Voluntary Action
Boethius: God Is Timeless
Nicholas Wolterstorff: God Is Everlasting
The Upanishads: Atman Is Brahman
PART SEVEN: DIVINE ACTION
Paul Helm: Providence: Risky or Risk-Free?
David Basinger: Middle Knowledge and Classical Christian Thought
Robert Merrihew Adams: An Objection to Middle Knowledge
J. R. Lucas: The Vulnerability of God
John B. Cobb and David Ray Griffin: God Is Creative-Responsive Love
PART EIGHT: THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
David Hume: Evil Makes a Strong Case against God's Existence
Gottfried Leibniz: Best of All Possible Worlds Theodicy
J. L. Mackie: Evil and Omnipotence
Alvin Plantinga: The Free Will Defense
John Hick: Soul-Making Theodicy
William Rowe: The Evidential Argument from Evil
Marilyn McCord Adams: Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God
Mohammed Ghaly: * Evil and Suffering in Islam
* PART NINE: ATHEISM AND NONRELIGIOUS APPROACHES TO RELIGION
Ludwig Feuerbach: * God Is a Projection of Human Nature
Michael Martin: * Conflicts Between the Divine Attributes
Paul Draper: * Pain, Pleasure, and the Evidence for Atheism
Michael Ruse: * The Naturalist Challenge to Religion
Michael Peterson: * The Encounter Between Atheistic Naturalism and Christian Theism
PART TEN: MIRACLES
Stephen T. Davis: Is it Possible to Know That Jesus Was Raised from the Dead?
David Hume: The Evidence for Miracles Is Weak
J. L. Mackie: Miracles and Testimony
Richard Swinburne: Miracles and Historical Evidence
PART ELEVEN: LIFE AFTER DEATH
H. H. Price: The Soul Survives and Functions after Death
Richard Swinburne: The Soul Needs a Brain to Continue to Function
Linda Badham: Problems with Accounts of Life after Death
John Hick: Resurrection of the Person
Anonymous: The Buddhist View of Rebirth
Sri Aurobindo: A Hindu View of Rebirth
PART TWELVE: RELIGION AND SCIENCE
Stephen Jay Gould: Two Separate Domains
Richard Dawkins: Science Discredits Religion
William Dembski: Reinstating Design within Science
Phillip Kitcher: At the Mercy of Chance?
Alvin Plantinga: * Naturalism and Science Are Incompatible
John Polkinghorne: The Universe as Creation
PART THIRTEEN: RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY
Dalai Lama: Buddhism and Other Religions
Paul Griffiths: The Universality and Uniqueness of Religious Doctrines
Karl Rahner: Religious Inclusivism
John Hick: Religious Pluralism
PART FOURTEEN: RELIGION AND MORALITY
Plato: * The Relation of Good to the Divine Will
Alasdair MacIntyre: Which God Ought We to Obey?
Thomas Aquinas: Ethics and Natural Law
Mengzi (Mencius): * A Confucian View of Morality
Jean-Paul Sartre: Ethics Without Religion
Glossary:
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