Doubt and Religious Commitment: The Role of the Will in Newman's Thought |
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Doubt and Religious Commitment: The Role of the Will in Newman's Thought M. Jamie Ferreira No preview available - 1980 |
Common terms and phrases
acceptance according to Newman admission admit affirmation Alasdair MacIntyre analytic paradigm arguing arguments Cardinal Newman Catholic certitude chapter clusion compatible concerning conclusion concrete considered contemporary corrigibility criticizability D. Z. Phillips decision deliberate discussion distinction divine faith evidence experience fact Faith and Doubt fideists fides acquisita Froude G. E. M. Anscombe genuine dubitability Grammar of Assent H. H. Price Harper human Ibid immune to criticism implies indefectibility independence of assent informal reasoning intellectual John Henry Newman judgement justified kind of adherence kind of doubt legitimate logical dubitability London Max Black ment mind necessary Newman saw Newman's claim Newman's Grammar Newman's thought Newman's understanding Newman's view normative not-p objections Oxford Pailin particular Phillips Griffiths Philosophical practical certitude preclude premisses proof proposition question rational justification refer rejection relation religion religious belief religious certitude religious commitment role scepticism sense theism tion transcendentalist truth unconditional University Press warrant Wittgenstein