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On not unnecessarily darkening the glass: a reply to Poston and Dougherty
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2007
Abstract
I argue that Poston and Dougherty are mistaken in supposing that the hiddenness argument contains ambiguities about the nature of belief. And the attempt to extract from their mistaken account some reasons for favouring a broad, disjunctive view of divine – creature relationship that will be convincing for individuals not in the grip of theological assumptions comes up dry.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007
References
Notes
1. The two pieces are ‘The hiddenness argument revisited (I)’, and ‘The hiddenness argument revisited (II),’ Religious Studies, 41 (2005), 201–215; 287–303CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The quotation is from 302.
2. Ted, Poston & Trent, Dougherty ‘Divine hiddenness and the nature of belief’, Religious Studies, 43 (2007), 183–198Google Scholar. All page references given in the text are to this article.
3. Though I have used slightly different phraseology here to parallel, where possible, the phraseology of the PD piece, the content of (6*) and (7*) is precisely what one will find in ‘The hiddenness argument revisited (I)’, 202–203.
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