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Knowledge, Belief, and God
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Table of Contents

Matthew A. Benton, John Hawthorne, and Dani Rabinowitz: Introduction
I. Historical
1: Charity Anderson: Hume, Defeat, and Miracle Reports
2: Richard Cross: Testimony, Error, and Reasonable Belief in Medieval Religious Epistemology
3: Billy Dunaway: Duns Scotus' Epistemic Argument against Divine Illumination
4: Dani Rabinowitz: Knowledge and the Cathartic Value of Repentance
II. Formal
5: Isaac Choi: Infinite Cardinalities, Measuring Knowledge, and Probabilities in Fine-Tuning Arguments
6: Hans Halvorson: A Theological Critique of the Fine-Tuning Argument
7: John Hawthorne and Yoaav Isaacs: Fine-Tuning Fine-Tuning
8: Roger White: Reasoning with Plenitude
III. Social
9: Max Baker-Hytch: Testimony Amidst Diversity
10: Rachel Elizabeth Fraser: Testimonial Pessimism
11: Jennifer Lackey: Experts and Peer Disagreement
12: Paulina Sliwa: Know How and Acts of Faith
IV. Rational
13: Matthew A. Benton: Pragmatic Encroachment and Theistic Knowledge
14: Keith DeRose: Delusions of Knowledge Concerning God's Existence: A Skeptical Look at Religious Experience
15: Margot Strohminger and Juhani Yli-Vakkuri: Moderate Modal Skepticism
16: Richard Swinburne: Phenomenal Conservatism and Religious Experience

About the Author

Matthew A. Benton is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Seattle Pacific University. Prior to that he held postdoctoral research fellowships at the University of Notre Dame and the University of Oxford. He earned his PhD in philosophy from Rutgers University. John Hawthorne is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern California, and formerly Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy at the University of Oxford. Dani Rabinowitz earned his PhD in
philosophy from the University of Oxford; he then held a Junior Research Fellowship at Somerville College, Oxford. He is currently a trainee solicitor with Clifford Chance LLP.

Reviews

an overall very high standard of ... contributions ... a fascinating field of discussion beyond the familiar or even well-trodden paths of the continentental tradition and reformed epistemology.
*Matthias Ruf, Philosophy, Theology and the Sciences*

[This book] is rich in suggestions for future reflection
*David Brown, University of St Andrews, Theology*

The collection of papers in this volume is impressive. All of the papers are solid pieces of scholarly work...
*Hans Van Eyghen, Sophia *

The papers are very good, and the book delivers what its title advertises: lots of new insights in religious epistemology. I recommend it to anyone who wishes to dig into cutting-edge religious epistemology.
*Andrew Moon, Faith & Philosophy*

This collection is brimming with insights for religious epistemology and more sparingly contains signposts toward new directions for the field
*T. Ryan Byerly, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews*

It gives a survey of the different views and new ideas that exist in the epistemology of religion. The book contains extremely valuable essays and it should be recommended to anyone with an interest in religious epistemology.
*Tyler Dalton McNabb, Journal of Biblical and Theological Studies *

This collection is, on the whole, a sizable step forward in the epistemology of religion ... and warmly recommended. The editors have engaged a cast of high-powered, creative, analytic philosophers who go well beyond what are now the stock battles on the topic.
*Jerome Yehuda Gellman, Reading Religion*

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