2025 Southeast EPS Meeting Information and CFP
December 06, 2024
May 31, 2018
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In 2018, Oxford University Press published Knowledge, Belief, and God: New Insights in Religious Epistemology, edited by Matthew A. Benton, John Hawthorne and Dani Rabinowitz. Matthew A. Benton is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Seattle Pacific University. John Hawthorne is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern California. Dani Rabinowitz earned his PhD in philosophy from the University of Oxford. He is currently a trainee solicitor with Clifford Chance LLP.
From the publishers description of Knowledge, Belief, and God:
Recent decades have seen a fertile period of theorizing within mainstream epistemology which has had a dramatic impact on how epistemology is done. Investigations into contextualist and pragmatic dimensions of knowledge suggest radically new ways of meeting skeptical challenges and of understanding the relation between the epistemological and practical environment. New insights from social epistemology and formal epistemology about defeat, testimony, a priority, probability, and the nature of evidence all have a potentially revolutionary effect on how we understand our epistemological place in the world. Religion is the place where such rethinking can potentially have its deepest impact and importance. Yet there has been surprisingly little infiltration of these new ideas into philosophy of religion and the epistemology of religious belief.
Knowledge, Belief, and God incorporates these myriad new developments in mainstream epistemology, and extends these developments to questions and arguments in religious epistemology. The investigations proposed in this volume offer substantial new life, breadth, and sophistication to issues in the philosophy of religion and analytic theology. They pose original questions and shed new light on long-standing issues in religious epistemology; and these developments will in turn generate contributions to epistemology itself, since religious belief provides a vital testing ground for recent epistemological ideas.
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