The paper is a critique of Alvin Plantinga's notion that belief in God is properly basic - evidence is not needed to justify such belief - in light of Thomas Aquinas' religious epistemology. The latter's epistemology proves that, while evidence is not a necessary condition for bel...
providing an intrinsic assurance of its truth. Plantinga argues that belief in God can be properly basic, meaning it does not require evidence or arguments to
Filip Boork
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 ...
Plantinga, Alvin. Warranted Christian BeliefCatholic TraditionContemporary PhilosophyGeneral InterestThis article has no associated abstract. ( fix it )Copan,PaulReview of Metaphysics
More technically, Reformed epistemology is the view that belief in God can be, and often is, "properly basic.".;Plantinga's religious epistemology can be conveniently divided into two stages: the early stage, which is best represented by his 1983 essay "Reason and Belief in God"; and the ...
Plantinga, Alvin. Knowledge and Christian BeliefPLANTINGA, Alvin. Knowledge and Christian Belief. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans Publishing Co.,...Dyrness, William APhilosophy Education SocietyReview of ...
LöfflerWinfried
SchärtlThomas
TAYLORING REFORMED EPISTEMOLOGY: CHARLES TAYLOR, ALVIN PLANTINGA AND THE DE JURE CHALLENGE TO CHRISTIAN BELIEF by Deane‐Peter Baker THEOLOGY, PSYCHOANALYSIS AND TRAUMA by Marcus Pound - ResearchGatedoi:10.1111/j.1741-2005.2008.00260_5.xGRAEME RICHARDSON...