Guy Axtell's new book, as the title suggests, is an attempt to assess the limits of reasonable religious disagreement. In trying to delineate those limits Axtell thinks that it is useful to employ the notions of luck and risk in examining how reasonable a particular religious (or atheistic) stance is. A central concern of the book is with religious groups which exclude others in some way and which ascribe traits to those other groups that are very unlike the traits the group ascribes to themselves. For example, a group might describe its own members as being saved but describe members of other similar groups as being lost
Keeping Faith, Losing Faith: Religious Belief and Political Economy Bradley Bateman and H. Spencer B...
Review of Rethinking Gnosticism : An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category by Michael A. Will...
Review of the book Without Help or Hindrance: Religious Identity in American Culture by Eldon G. Ern...
The primary purpose of this book is to discuss the concept of religious luck as linked to ethical va...
To speak of being religious lucky certainly sounds odd. But then, so does “My faith holds value in G...
One main kind of etiological challenge to the well-foundedness of someone’s belief is the considerat...
A review of Book Review: "Hindu God, Christian God. How Reason Helps Break Down the Boundaries b...
[Extract] This book is about the existence of God. Hearsay's book review editor, Stephen Keim SC, ca...
This is a very significant publication. If it’s dangerous falsely to concretise religion and religio...
Four book reviews are included in this issue of Approaching Religion:The Process of Buddhist-Christi...
When it comes to understanding the natural world, from plants to planets, nothing beats a scientific...
What is religious freedom? What’s it got to do with democratization? Where does Islam come in? Relig...
A review of Comparative Theology and the Problem of Religious Rivalry by Hugh Nicholson
This book has argued that problems of religious luck, especially when operationalized into concerns ...
The Wealth of Religions by Barro and McCleary is an epoch-making work of the inter-discipline of rel...
Keeping Faith, Losing Faith: Religious Belief and Political Economy Bradley Bateman and H. Spencer B...
Review of Rethinking Gnosticism : An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category by Michael A. Will...
Review of the book Without Help or Hindrance: Religious Identity in American Culture by Eldon G. Ern...
The primary purpose of this book is to discuss the concept of religious luck as linked to ethical va...
To speak of being religious lucky certainly sounds odd. But then, so does “My faith holds value in G...
One main kind of etiological challenge to the well-foundedness of someone’s belief is the considerat...
A review of Book Review: "Hindu God, Christian God. How Reason Helps Break Down the Boundaries b...
[Extract] This book is about the existence of God. Hearsay's book review editor, Stephen Keim SC, ca...
This is a very significant publication. If it’s dangerous falsely to concretise religion and religio...
Four book reviews are included in this issue of Approaching Religion:The Process of Buddhist-Christi...
When it comes to understanding the natural world, from plants to planets, nothing beats a scientific...
What is religious freedom? What’s it got to do with democratization? Where does Islam come in? Relig...
A review of Comparative Theology and the Problem of Religious Rivalry by Hugh Nicholson
This book has argued that problems of religious luck, especially when operationalized into concerns ...
The Wealth of Religions by Barro and McCleary is an epoch-making work of the inter-discipline of rel...
Keeping Faith, Losing Faith: Religious Belief and Political Economy Bradley Bateman and H. Spencer B...
Review of Rethinking Gnosticism : An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category by Michael A. Will...
Review of the book Without Help or Hindrance: Religious Identity in American Culture by Eldon G. Ern...