In ‘Utility of Religion’, Mill argues that a wholly naturalistic religion of humanity would promote individual and social welfare better than supernatural religions like Christianity; in ‘Theism’, however, Mill defends the salutary effects of hope in an afterlife. While commentators have acknowledged this discrepancy, they have not examined the utilitarian value of what Mill terms ‘illusions’. In this essay, I explain Mill\u27s case against the utility of supernatural religious belief and then argue that Mill cannot dismiss the utility of hope in an ultimate justice since it need not pervert the intellect or morality. There are thus utilitarian grounds to support some supernatural illusions, which undermines Mill\u27s defence of an exclusiv...
Few human phenomena in our time are as controversial or confusing as religion. People seem to live i...
Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring by-product of the complex evoluti...
This article examines interdisciplinary phenomena relating to the so-called ‘return of religion’ alo...
In ‘Utility of Religion’, Mill argues that a wholly naturalistic religion of humanity would promote ...
Should rational people be religious? What is the relationship between morality and religion? Would t...
The idea has been generally accepted that Positivism in the Nineteenth Century has shifted the immor...
John Stuart Mill was one of the most important political and social thinkers of the nineteenth centu...
This article explores pragmatic arguments for theistic belief - that is, arguments for believing i...
This article argues for a reassessment of James Mill’s anticlerical, and possibly atheistic, brand o...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation explores the moral and social implications ...
I criticize 5 arguments for the conclusion that religious belief is unreliably formed and hence epis...
The paper is an attempt to analyze the theses from James’ book Talks to Teachers on Psychology and t...
In contrast to the truth of religion, the utility of religion has been a historically-underappreciat...
I criticize 5 arguments for the conclusion that religious belief is unreliably formed and hence epis...
The importance of seventeenth-century religious epistemology is reflected in the enduring influence ...
Few human phenomena in our time are as controversial or confusing as religion. People seem to live i...
Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring by-product of the complex evoluti...
This article examines interdisciplinary phenomena relating to the so-called ‘return of religion’ alo...
In ‘Utility of Religion’, Mill argues that a wholly naturalistic religion of humanity would promote ...
Should rational people be religious? What is the relationship between morality and religion? Would t...
The idea has been generally accepted that Positivism in the Nineteenth Century has shifted the immor...
John Stuart Mill was one of the most important political and social thinkers of the nineteenth centu...
This article explores pragmatic arguments for theistic belief - that is, arguments for believing i...
This article argues for a reassessment of James Mill’s anticlerical, and possibly atheistic, brand o...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation explores the moral and social implications ...
I criticize 5 arguments for the conclusion that religious belief is unreliably formed and hence epis...
The paper is an attempt to analyze the theses from James’ book Talks to Teachers on Psychology and t...
In contrast to the truth of religion, the utility of religion has been a historically-underappreciat...
I criticize 5 arguments for the conclusion that religious belief is unreliably formed and hence epis...
The importance of seventeenth-century religious epistemology is reflected in the enduring influence ...
Few human phenomena in our time are as controversial or confusing as religion. People seem to live i...
Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring by-product of the complex evoluti...
This article examines interdisciplinary phenomena relating to the so-called ‘return of religion’ alo...