First Published in 2004. On Christian Belief offers a defence of realism in the philosophy of religion. It argues that religious belief – with particular reference to Christian belief – is not something unlike any other kind of belief but is cognitive making claims about what is real and is open to rational discussion between believers and non-believers. The author begins by providing a critique of several views which try either to describe a faith without cognitive context or to justify believing on non-cognitive grounds. He then discusses what sense can be made of the phenomenon of religious conversion by realists and non-realists. After a chapter on knowledge in general he defends the idea that religious knowledge is very like other knowledge in being based on reliable testimony sifted by reason and tested by experience. The logical status of the content of religious belief is then discussed with reference to Christianity.
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