The themes of God, Mind and Knowledge are central to the philosophy of religion but they are now being taken up by professional philosophers who have not previously contributed to the field. This book is a collection of original essays by eminent and rising philosophers and it explores the boundaries between philosophy of religion, philosophy of mind, metaphysics, and epistemology.
Dr Andrew Moore, is a Fellow of the Centre for Christianity and Culture at Regent's Park College, University of Oxford and has been a Member of the Theology Faculty since 2001. His publications on the borderlands of philosophy and theology include Realism and Christian Faith: God, Grammar, and Meaning (Cambridge University Press, 2003), Realism and Religion (ed., Ashgate, 2007) and articles in such journals as Religious Studies, Ars Disputandi, Modern Theology, International Journal of Systematic Theology, and Scottish Journal of Theology. He is Honorary Secretary of the British Society for the Philosophy of Religion.
Acknowledgements, Contributors, Foreword, 1. God, Mind and Knowledge in Contemporary Philosophy of Religion, PART I. The Epistemology of Religious Belief, 2. Knowledge of God: Insider Information or Objective Evidence?, 3. A Robust Reformed Epistemology, 4. Oracles, Obstacles and Revelations, 5. Belief in a Good and Loving God: A Case Study in the Varieties of a Religious Belief, PART II. Divine and Human Minds, 6. Belief Formation and Biased Minds, 7. W hen Does God Know? Open Theism, Simultaneous Causation, and Divine Knowledge of the Present, 8. Corcoran's Anthropological Constitutionalism and the Problem of Post-Mortem Survival, 9. The Paradox of Eden and Black-and-White Mary, PART III. The Status of God, 10. Theology as Metaphor, 11. Projecting God, 12. God, Reason and Extraterrestrials, Afterword, Index