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  1. Is belief in God properly basic?Alvin Plantinga - 1981 - Noûs 15 (1):41-51.
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  • (1 other version)The Reformed Objection to Natural Theology.Alvin Plantinga - 1980 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 54:49.
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  • (1 other version)Conventionalism and the indeterminacy of translation.Barry Stroud - 1968 - Synthese 19 (1-2):82 - 96.
    Quine's arguments for the indeterminacy of translation demonstrate the existence and help to explain the rationale of restraints upon what we can say and understand. In particular they show that there are logical truths to which there are no intelligible alternatives. Thus the standard view that the truths of logic and mathematics differ from "synthetic" statements in being true solely by virtue of linguistic convention--Which requires for its plausibility the existence of intelligible alternatives to our present logical truth--Is opposed directly, (...)
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  • Angels.George MacDonald Ross - 1985 - Philosophy 60 (234):495 - 511.
    My general theme is the extent to which philosophers and others must be taken literally when they have written about angels, or anything else which is no longer generally believed in. However, since the title may perhaps have aroused expectations of angels dancing on points of needles, I shall take as my point of departure the question of whether or not the scholastics ever discussed how many angels could dance on the point of a needle. The answer would in fact (...)
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  • Basic Theistic Belief.Bredo C. Johnsen - 1986 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 16 (3):455 - 464.
    In several recent writings and in the 1980 Freemantle Lectures at Oxford, Alvin Plantinga has defended the idea that belief in God is ‘properly basic,’ by which he means that it is perfectly rational to hold such a belief without basing it on any other beliefs. The defense falls naturally into two broad parts: a positive argument for the rationality of such beliefs, and a rebuttal of the charge that if such a positive argument ‘succeeds,’ then a parallel argument will (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Reformed Objection to Natural Theology.Alvin Plantinga - 1982 - The Christian Scholars Review 11:187-198.
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