Knowledge of God * by Alvin Plantinga and Michael Tooley [Book Review]

Analysis 69 (3):591-592 (2009)
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Abstract

Knowledge of God takes the form of a debate between Alvin Plantinga and Michael Tooley. Plantinga opens the batting with a seventy-page laying out of his case ‘that theism has a significant epistemic virtue: if it is true, it is warranted; this is a virtue naturalism emphatically lacks’. Indeed, Plantinga argues that ‘if naturalism were true, there would be no such thing as knowledge’. It will be recalled [e.g. Plantinga and Plantinga ] that Plantinga's position is that warrant, understood as whatever it is that needs to be added to true belief to …

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Citations of this work

What certainty teaches.Tomas Bogardus - 2012 - Philosophical Psychology 25 (2):227 - 243.
Eternally Separated Lovers: The Argument from Love.Nicole Hassoun - 2015 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 93 (4):633-643.

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