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Belief-In Revisited: A Reply To Williams
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
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In ‘Belief-In and Belief in God’ (Religious Studies, 28, 1992), J. N. Williams suggests that belief in God cannot be rational unless one has rational beliefs that God exists. While agreeing with his conclusion (though not with his statement of it), I disagree at almost every step with his method of arriving at it. In particular I suggest that Williams goes astray concerning the dual aspect of belief in, the nature of performatives, the arousal of belief states, and the correct account of belief in God.
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References
1 Williams, J. N., ‘Belief-In and Belief in God’ Religious Studies, xxviii (1992), 401–6. Hereafter otherwise unspecified references to Williams are to this paper.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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33 The ‘reasonable man’ rule in the law of torts provides an example here. For a brief but interesting discussion of some of the main philosophical and legal points involved see White, Alan R., Grounds of Liability (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1985), chs. 6 and 7.Google Scholar
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38 Boyle Papers, vol. 2, f 64. Angle brackets enclose Boyle's inserted ‘existence’, replacing the manuscript's original ‘essence’.
39 I have been helped in writing this paper by suggestions from K. Walde, A. Kazmi, J. Baker, and M. Osier.
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