Thursday, December 13, 2012
Philosophia Christi Winter 2012: Paul Moser's Religious Epistemology
The very next issue of Philosophia Christi has now mailed! If you are not a current member/subscriber, you can become one today by purchasing here.
This packed issue leads with a resourceful discussion on Paul K. Moser's religious epistemology, with contributions by Katharyn Waidler, Charles Taliaferro, Harold Netland and a final reply by Moser. This journal contribution not only extends interest and application of Moser's epistemology but also compliments the EPS web project on "Christ-Shaped Philosophy".
We also feature interesting work in philosophical theology, including how one might understand "friendship with Jesus" (Michael McFall), the scope of divine love (Jordan Wessling), and how one's view of original sin relates to a broad free-will defense (W. Paul Franks).
Other significant article contributions address criticisms against Plantinga's conditions for warrant (Mark Boone), the latest in cosmology and arguments for God's existence (Andrew Loke) along with further challenges against "central state materialism" (Eric LaRock).
Readers will not want to miss J.P. Moreland's critique of Thomas Nagel's Mind and Cosmos along with the critique of Christian physicalism by Jonathan Loose. Michael Austin provides a helpful philosophical account of the virtue of humility in light of social science considerations, and Amos Yong critically assesses "relational apologetics" in a global context.
Finally, this issue features book reviews by William Lane Craig, James Stump, Paul Copan, James Bruce and Jason Cruze about books related to the latest on science and theology, cosmology, metaethics, and ethics of abortion.
See all the articles included in this issue by clicking here.
This packed issue leads with a resourceful discussion on Paul K. Moser's religious epistemology, with contributions by Katharyn Waidler, Charles Taliaferro, Harold Netland and a final reply by Moser. This journal contribution not only extends interest and application of Moser's epistemology but also compliments the EPS web project on "Christ-Shaped Philosophy".
We also feature interesting work in philosophical theology, including how one might understand "friendship with Jesus" (Michael McFall), the scope of divine love (Jordan Wessling), and how one's view of original sin relates to a broad free-will defense (W. Paul Franks).
Other significant article contributions address criticisms against Plantinga's conditions for warrant (Mark Boone), the latest in cosmology and arguments for God's existence (Andrew Loke) along with further challenges against "central state materialism" (Eric LaRock).
Readers will not want to miss J.P. Moreland's critique of Thomas Nagel's Mind and Cosmos along with the critique of Christian physicalism by Jonathan Loose. Michael Austin provides a helpful philosophical account of the virtue of humility in light of social science considerations, and Amos Yong critically assesses "relational apologetics" in a global context.
Finally, this issue features book reviews by William Lane Craig, James Stump, Paul Copan, James Bruce and Jason Cruze about books related to the latest on science and theology, cosmology, metaethics, and ethics of abortion.
See all the articles included in this issue by clicking here.
Labels: christ-shaped philosophy, paul k.moser, religious epistemology, thomas nagel