6 found
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Myron B. Penner [4]Myron Bradley Penner [2]
  1.  14
    Alethic (Quasi-) Realism.Myron B. Penner - 2016 - Philosophia Christi 18 (1):167-177.
    Bradley N. Seeman charges that my book, The End of Apologetics: Christian Witness in a Postmodern Context, tends toward “the idolatry of linguistic license.” I point out some ways this runs against the text of the book and then outline a Wittgensteinian approach to language and truth that is alethically “quasi-realist.” On this view truth is both epistemic, or deflationary, in the sense that it depends upon assertability conditions for its truth values, while there is also a nonepistemic, realist component (...)
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  2.  8
    Cartesian Anxiety, Perspectivalism, and Truth.Myron B. Penner - 2006 - Philosophia Christi 8 (1):85-98.
  3.  3
    Christianity and the Postmodern Turn: Six Views.Myron B. Penner (ed.) - 2005 - Grand Rapids: Brazos.
    Addresses the perils and promises postmodernity holds for the tasks of Christian thinkers.
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  4.  12
    Referring to Words.Myron B. Penner - 2017 - Philosophia Christi 19 (1):157-169.
    Bradley N. Seeman has argued that The End of Apologetics comes perilously close to what he calls “the idolatry of linguistic license.” Despite my recent reply, Seeman continues to have a few concerns about my position. I offer a clarification regarding my description of theological language as “poetics,” and argue that it is a way of acknowledging the contingency of all theological descriptions and vocabularies. I also counter Seeman’s insistence on trans-language game truth-makers by noting that it begs the central (...)
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  5.  39
    The Unknown Mover.Myron Bradley Penner - 2019 - Philosophia Christi 21 (1):199-206.
    Andrew Shephardson contends in Who’s Afraid of the Unmoved Mover that the combined postmodern objections of Carl A. Raschke, James K. A. Smith, and me, to natural theology, fail. Here I focus only on the issue of idolatry and natural theology, as one way of demonstrating a fundamental inadequacy characteristic of Shephardson’s rebuttal of postmodern challenges to evangelical appropriations of natural theology. I argue that contrary to Shephardson’s contention, Acts 17 does not support evangelical appropriations of natural theology, but operates (...)
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  6.  47
    Kierkegaard on Faith and the Self. [REVIEW]Myron Bradley Penner - 2010 - Faith and Philosophy 27 (1):98-105.