Swinburne's explanation of the universe
Religious Studies 34 (1):91-102 (1998)
| Abstract | Swinburne's Is There A God? presents a brief, updated version of his book, The Existence of God, in which Swinburne argued that criteria used in scientific reasoning could be used to argue that God probably exists. This new book is designed for a wider audience than professional philosophers. Nonetheless, there is much that is new and of interest to philosophers in Is There a God? For example, there is a discussion of Stephen Hawking's cosmology, some new ideas in the philosophy of mind, and a new way of formulating the argument that theism is a simpler explanation of the universe than is materialism | |||||||||
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Richard Swinburne (1990). The Limits of Explanation. Philosophy 27 (Supplement):177 - 193.
Charles E. Gutenson (1997). What Swinburne Should Have Concluded. Religious Studies 33 (3):243-247.
Jeremy Gwiazda (2010). Richard Swinburne, the Existence of God, and Exact Numerical Values. Philosophia 38 (2):357-363.
Richard Swinburne (2002). Arguments From Design. Think 1:49 - 54.
Richard Swinburne (2004). The Existence of God. Oxford University Press.
Lewis Vaughn (2000). The Failure of Supernatural Hypotheses. Philo 3 (2):68-73.
Quentin Smith (1992). The Anthropic Coincidences, Evil and the Disconfirmation of Theism. Religious Studies 28 (3):347 - 350.
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