Swinburne's explanation of the universe [Book Review]
Religious Studies 34 (1):91-102 (1998)
Abstract
Swinburne's Is There A God? presents a brief, updated version of his book, The Existence of God, in which Swinburne argued that criteria used in scientific reasoning could be used to argue that God probably exists. This new book is designed for a wider audience than professional philosophers. Nonetheless, there is much that is new and of interest to philosophers in Is There a God? For example, there is a discussion of Stephen Hawking's cosmology, some new ideas in the philosophy of mind, and a new way of formulating the argument that theism is a simpler explanation of the universe than is materialismDOI
10.1017/s0034412597004228
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Richard Swinburne, the existence of God, and principle P.Jeremy Gwiazda - 2009 - Sophia 48 (4):393-398.
References found in this work
Causation and the Logical Impossibility of a Divine Cause.Quentin Smith - 1996 - Philosophical Topics 24 (1):169-191.