This book contains a collection of the essential readings treating both classic and contemporary issues in philosophy of religion.In addition to topics such as arguments for God's existence, the problem of evil, and divine attributes, it contains articles on divine hiddenness, the nature of revelation, and the doctrine of hell. As a result, this is an ideal text for use in courses on philosophy of religion and metaphysics at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. The text gives special attention to very recent work in philosophy of religion and includes a section devoted to multi-cultural perspectives.
Eleanore Stump, Robert J. Henle Professor of Philosophy at St. Louis University has published widely in the areas of Medieval philosophy, philosophy of religion, and metaphysics. She is also the current president of the Society of Christian Philosophers.
Michael Murray, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Franklin and Marshall College, works primarily in contemporary philosophy of religion and in early modern philosophy. He is currently a fellow at the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Title: Philosophy of Religion: The Big Questions (Philosophy: The Big Questions)
Author:
ISBN: 9780631206040
Binding:
Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Publication Date: 1999-01-08
Number of Pages: 502
Weight: 0.9074 kg
More advanced students will find this a valuable collection. Jeff Astley, Theology This book will help fill the need of those who want a collection of brief and generally interesting samples taken from what the editors find important in recent literature. David A. Pailin, The Expository Times Representative in content, broad in scope, coherent in structure, rich in information, this superbly crafted anthology is a very useful and highly interesting presentation of the philosophy of religion. It may well become the standard anthology in this field. Keith Yandell, University of Wisconsin-Madison Based on a variety of topics addressed and approaches taken by the essays' authors, as well as the quality of the selections, there is not a better collection for an upper-division philosophy of religion course to be found. Jon Kvanvig, Texas A & M University