Philosophy of religion
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Libro |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Chantilly, Va. :
Teaching Co.,
©2003
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Colección: | (Great courses Teaching that engages the mind)
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Materias: |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Part 1. Lecture 1: What is philosophy
- lecture 2: What is religion?
- Lecture 3: What is philosophy of religion?
- Lecture 4: How is the word "God" generally used?
- Lecture 5: How do various theists use the word "God"?
- Lecture 6: What is knowledge?
- Lecture 7: What kinds of evidence count?
- Lecture 8: What constitutes good evidence?
- Lecture 9: Why argue for the existence of God?
- Lecture 10: How ontological argument works.
- Lecture 11: Why ontological argument is said to fail
- Lecture 12: How cosmological argument works.
- Part. 2. Lecture 13: Why cosmological argument is said to fail
- Lecture 14: How teleological argument works
- Lecture 15: How teleological argument works (continued)
- Lecture 16: Why teleological argument is said to fail
- Lecture 17: Divine encounters make argument necessary
- Lecture 18: Divine encounters require interpretation
- Lecture 19: Why is evil a problem?
- Lecture 20: Taking evil seriously
- Lecture 21: Non-justificatory theodicies
- Lecture 22: Justifying evil
- Lecture 23: Justifying natural evil
- Lecture 24: Justifying human evil.
- Part 3. Lecture 25: Evidence is irrelevant to faith
- Lecture 26: Groundless faith is irrelevant to Life
- Lecture 27: God is beyond human grasp, but that's O.K
- Lecture 28: Transcendental talk is "sound and fury"
- Lecture 29: Discourse in an intentionalist paradigm
- Lecture 30: Evaluating paradigms
- Lecture 31: Choosing and changing paradigms
- Lecture 32: Language games and theistic discourse
- Lecture 33: Fabulation: theism as story
- Lecture 34: Theistic stories, morality, and culture
- Lecture 35: Stories, moral progress, and culture reform
- Lecture 36: Conclusions and signposts