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TheOxfordHandbookofPhilosophyofReligion WILLIAM J. WAINWRIGHT, Editor OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS theoxfordhandbookofPHILOSOPHYOFRELIGIONOXFORD HANDBOOKS IN PHILOSOPHY PAUL K. MOSER, general editor Series Advisory Board ROBERT AUDI University of Nebraska MARTHA NUSSBAUM University of Chicago ALVIN PLANTINGA University of Notre Dame ERNEST SOSA Brown University theoxfordhandbook of PHILOSOPHYOF RELIGION Edited by WILLIAM J. WAINWRIGHT 1 2005 1 Oxford New York Auckland Bangkok Buenos Aires Cape Town Chennai Dar es Salaam Delhi Hong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kolkata Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Mumbai Nairobi Sa˜o Paulo Shanghai Taipei Tokyo Toronto Copyright ᭧ 2005 by Oxford University Press, Inc. Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 www.oup.com Oxford is a registered trademark ofOxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission ofOxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data TheOxfordhandbookofphilosophyofreligion / edited by William J. Wainwright. p. cm.—(Oxford handbooks in philosophy) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-19-513809-0 1. Religion—Philosophy. I. Wainwright, William J. II. Series. BL51.O94 2004 210—dc22 2004043890 135798642 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper TO MIMI, REBECCA, SARAH, CHANTAL, AND NICHOLAS This page intentionally left blank Contents Contributors, ix Introduction, 3 William J. Wainwright Part I Problems 1. Divine Power, Goodness, and Knowledge, 15 William L. Rowe 2. Divine Sovereignty and Aseity, 35 William E. Mann 3. Nontheistic Conceptions ofthe Divine, 59 Paul J. Griffiths 4. The Ontological Argument, 80 Brian Leftow 5. Cosmological and Design Arguments, 116 Alexander R. Pruss and Richard M. Gale 6. Mysticism and Religious Experience, 138 Jerome I. Gellman 7. Pascal’s Wagers and James’s Will to Believe, 168 Jeffrey Jordan 8. The Problem of Evil, 188 Peter van Inwagen viii contents 9. Religious Language, 220 William P. Alston 10. Religious Epistemology, 245 Nicholas Wolterstorff 11. God, Science, and Naturalism, 272 Paul Draper 12. Miracles, 304 George I. Mavrodes 13. Faith and Revelation, 323 C. Stephen Evans 14. Morality and Religion, 344 Linda Zagzebski 15. Death and the Afterlife, 366 Lynne Rudder Baker 16. Religious Diversity: Familiar Problems, Novel Opportunities, 392 Philip L. Quinn Part II Approaches 17. Analytic Philosophyof Religion, 421 William Hasker 18. Wittgensteinianism: Logic, Reality, and God, 447 D. Z. Phillips 19. Continental Philosophyof Religion, 472 Merold Westphal 20. Feminism and Analytic Philosophyof Religion, 494 Sarah Coakley Index, 527 Contributors william p. alston Professor ofPhilosophy Emeritus, Syracuse University. lynne rudder baker Professor of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts– Amherst. sarah coakley Edward Mallinckrodt Professor of Divinity, Divinity School, Harvard University. paul draper Professor of Philosophy, Florida International University. c. stephen evans University Professor ofPhilosophy and Humanities, Baylor University. richard m. gale Professor ofPhilosophy Emeritus, University of Pittsburgh. jerome i. gellman Professor of Philosophy, Ben Gurion University ofthe Negev. paul j. griffiths Schmitt Professor of Catholic Studies, University of Illinois– Chicago. william hasker Professor ofPhilosophy Emeritus, Huntington College. jeffrey jordan Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Delaware. brian leftow Nolloth Professor ofPhilosophyofthe Christian Religion, University of Oxford. william e. mann Marsh Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy, University of Vermont. george i. mavrodes Professor ofPhilosophy Emeritus, University of Michigan. [...]... history and nature ofthe philosophical approach to thephilosophyofreligion that they are discussing (the analytic, say, or feminist) In being critical, the chapters carefully assess the views presented on their topics or the strengths and alleged weakness of their approach to thephilosophyofreligion Readers will thus see not only what the prominent views and approaches in philosophyofreligion are... pervades their work They were thus appealing models for contemporary philosophers ofreligion with similar commitments A second feature of contemporary analytic philosophyofreligion is the wide array of topics it addresses The first fifteen years or so ofthe period in question were dominated by discussions of issues traditionally central to thephilosophyof religion: Is the concept of God coherent? Are there... from each other One can only hope that this trend increases in the future The OxfordHandbookof Philosophy ofReligion is divided into two parts Part 1 covers the most frequently discussed problems in the field Part 2 consists of essays assessing the advantages and disadvantages ofthe four currently most influential ways of doing philosophyof religion; each is by a well-known practitioner ofthe way... Professor of thePhilosophyof Religion, Claremont Graduate University and Rush Rhees Research Professor, University of Wales– Swansea alexander r pruss sity philip l quinn Dame Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Georgetown Univer- John A O’Brien Professor of Philosophy, University of Notre william l rowe Professor of Philosophy, Purdue University peter van inwagen John Cardinal O’Hara Professor of Philosophy, ... have tried to show that theism can cast light on problems in other areas ofphilosophy that it can give a better account ofthe logical features of natural laws, for example, or ofthe nature of introduction 7 numbers, sets, and other mathematical objects, or ofthe apparent objectivity of moral claims.2 (On the last, see chapter 14.) A third characteristic of recent philosophyofreligion is its turn... although the evidence for the truth ofthe Christian religion is ambiguous, it is sufficient to convince those who seek God or “have the living faith in their hearts.” Reflection on the work of predecessors like these suggests two things The first is that the aim of philosophical theology is not, primarily, to convince nonbelievers ofthe truth of religious claims but, rather, self-understanding: to enable the. .. thephilosophyofreligion that ignores them can be complete Second, although the analytic approach dominates the practice of philosophyof religion in English-speaking countries and is beginning to make significant inroads on the continent, there are other historically important and potentially illuminating ways of doing philosophyofreligion It is therefore important that a general reference work of. .. Continental philosophers of religion, on the other hand, are often (although not always) trained and housed in departments ofreligion or theology Their interests, too, are different Analytic philosophers ofreligion have tended to focus on God or the religious object and on the rational credentials of claims about it Continental philosophyofreligion has tended to focus on religion and the human subject;... of Notre Dame william j wainwright Distinguished Professor ofPhilosophy Emeritus, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee merold westphal sity Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Fordham Univer- nicholas wolterstorff Noah Porter Professor of Philosophical Theology Emeritus, Yale Divinity School linda zagzebski Kingfisher College Chair of thePhilosophyof Religion and Ethics, University of Oklahoma the. .. Schleiermacher and others turned to religious feelings (a sense of absolute dependence or ofthe unity of all things in the infinite) to justify religion to its “cultured despisers.” But although Schleiermacher thought that the heart and not the head is religion s primary source, the aim of his argument was still apologetic Yet philosophyofreligion can have other purposes Theistic proofs, for example, . The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Religion WILLIAM J. WAINWRIGHT, Editor OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS the oxford handbook of PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION OXFORD HANDBOOKS IN PHILOSOPHY PAUL. Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Delaware. brian leftow Nolloth Professor of Philosophy of the Christian Religion, University of Oxford. william e. mann Marsh Professor of Intellectual. Chair of the Philosophy of Religion and Ethics, University of Oklahoma. the oxford handbook of PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION This page intentionally left blank INTRODUCTION william j. wainwright The