Philosophical Foundations for a Christian WorldviewWinner of a 2004 ECPA Gold Medallion Award! Winner of an Award of Excellence in the 2003 Chicago Book Clinic!
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Contents
OUTLINE OF THE BOOK | 1 |
PARTI INTRODUCTION 1 WHAT IS PHILOSOPHY? | 11 |
ARGUMENTATION AND LOGIC | 28 |
EPISTEMOLOGY | 69 |
KNOWLEDGE AND RATIONALITY | 71 |
THE PROBLEM OF SKEPTICISM | 91 |
THE STRUCTURE OF JUSTIFICATION | 110 |
THEORIES OF TRUTH AND POSTMODERNISM | 130 |
PHILOSOPHY OF TIME AND SPACE | 368 |
ETHICS | 391 |
ETHICS MORALITY AND METAETHICS | 393 |
ETHICAL RELATIVISM AND ABSOLUTISM | 406 |
Egoism and Utilitarianism | 425 |
Deontological and Virtue Ethics | 446 |
PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHICAL THEOLOGY | 461 |
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD I | 463 |
RELIGIOUS EPISTEMOLOGY | 154 |
PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION | 155 |
METAPHYSICS | 171 |
WHAT IS METAPHYSICS? | 173 |
Existence Identity and Reductionism | 187 |
Two CategoriesProperty and Substance | 204 |
Dualism | 228 |
Alternatives to Dualism | 247 |
FREE WILL AND DETERMINISM | 267 |
FREE WILL AND DETERMINISM | 283 |
PERSONAL IDENTITY AND LIFE AFTER DEATH | 285 |
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE | 305 |
SCIENTIFIC METHODOLOGY | 307 |
THE REALISMANTIREALISM DEBATE | 326 |
PHILOSOPHY AND THE INTEGRATION OF SCIENCE AND THEOLOGY | 346 |
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD II | 481 |
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD II | 482 |
THE COHERENCE OF THEISM I | 501 |
THE COHERENCE OF THEISM II | 517 |
THE PROBLEM OF EVIL | 536 |
CREATION PROVIDENCE AND MIRACLE | 554 |
TheTrinity | 575 |
The Incarnation | 597 |
Christian Particularism | 615 |
627 | |
640 | |
642 | |
654 | |
Other editions - View all
Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview J. P. Moreland,William Lane Craig Limited preview - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
accept According action actually answer argue argument assert aware basic beliefs body called causal cause chapter Christ Christian claim coherence concept condition consider distinction divine duty entities ethical evidence evil example exist experience explain external fact false first follows function give given God’s grounds hold human idea identity implies important individual involves issues justification kinds knowledge least logic look matter means mental merely metaphysical mind moral nature necessary notion object observe one’s particular past person philosophical physical position possible premises present principle probability problem properties proposition question rational reality reason reference regarding relation relative requires rules scientific Second seems sense skepticism space statements substance theology theory things thought tion true truth understanding universe various virtue whole