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Philosophy of Religion

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James Hall

18:17:15

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  • 4680 Philosophy of Religion.pdf
  • 4680-01 - What is Philosophy.mp4
    32:41
  • 4680-02 - What is Religion.mp4
    30:55
  • 4680-03 - What is Philosophy of Religion.mp4
    30:49
  • 4680-04 - How is the Word God Generally Used.mp4
    30:37
  • 4680-05 - How Do Various Theists Use the Word God.mp4
    30:19
  • 4680-06 - What is Knowledge.mp4
    30:16
  • 4680-07 - What Kinds of Evidence Count.mp4
    30:16
  • 4680-08 - What Constitutes Good Evidence.mp4
    30:26
  • 4680-09 - Why Argue for the Existence of God.mp4
    30:46
  • 4680-10 - How Ontological Argument Works.mp4
    29:56
  • 4680-11 - Why Ontological Argument is Said to Fail.mp4
    30:07
  • 4680-12 - How Cosmological Argument Works.mp4
    30:14
  • 4680-13 - Why Cosmological Argument is Said to Fail.mp4
    30:36
  • 4680-14 - How Teleological Argument Works.mp4
    30:24
  • 4680-15 - How Teleological Argument Works (continued).mp4
    30:25
  • 4680-16 - Why Teleological Argument is Said to Fail.mp4
    30:24
  • 4680-17 - Divine Encounters Make Argument Unnecessary.mp4
    30:23
  • 4680-18 - Divine Encounters Require Interpretation.mp4
    30:30
  • 4680-19 - Why is Evil a Problem.mp4
    30:15
  • 4680-20 - Taking Evil Seriously.mp4
    30:23
  • 4680-21 - Non-Justificatory Theodicies.mp4
    30:42
  • 4680-22 - Justifying Evil.mp4
    30:18
  • 4680-23 - Justifying Natural Evil.mp4
    30:22
  • 4680-24 - Justifying Human Evil.mp4
    30:18
  • 4680-25 - Evidence is Irrelevant to Faith.mp4
    30:34
  • 4680-26 - Groundless Faith is Irrelevant to Life.mp4
    30:17
  • 4680-27 - God is Beyond Human Grasp, But Thats O.K..mp4
    30:23
  • 4680-28 - Transcendental Talk is Sound and Fury.mp4
    30:32
  • 4680-29 - Discourse in an Intentionalist Paradigm.mp4
    30:15
  • 4680-30 - Evaluating Paradigms.mp4
    30:17
  • 4680-31 - Choosing and Changing Paradigms.mp4
    30:23
  • 4680-32 - Language Games and Theistic Discourse.mp4
    30:22
  • 4680-33 - FabulationTheism as Story.mp4
    30:38
  • 4680-34 - Theistic Stories, Morality, and Culture.mp4
    30:15
  • 4680-35 - Stories, Moral Progress, and Culture Reform.mp4
    30:18
  • 4680-36 - Conclusions and Signposts.mp4
    30:39
  • Description


    Can humans know whether the claim "God exists" is true or not? If so, how? If not, why not? Questions such as these have perplexed humans since the first moment we were capable of asking them. Now in Philosophy of Religion you can explore the questions of divine existence with the tools of epistemology, the branch of philosophy that concerns itself with what we can know.

    In Professor James Hall, Chair of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Richmond, you have an unusually qualified teacher. The son of a Baptist minister (who himself later became a university professor), Professor Hall first trained at a seminary before taking his doctorate in philosophy and embarking on a teaching career nearly 40 years ago.

    He announces early in the series where he stands on these issues; this is not a course with a hidden agenda, or an exercise in polemic. (And, no, we won't let the cat out of the bag here. The story of Professor Hall's own background and philosophical journey, which he shares with you in Lecture 3, is far too interesting for us to divulge.)

    AudioFile magazine's review of this course reports that "[Professor Hall] is amiable, humorous, clear, and interesting, and, thankfully, never pedantic."

    Make no mistake about it: This is a rigorous course in the most positive sense of the word. One of the great joys of intellect is using it, and you do so in every lecture.

    At the same time, philosophy can sometimes be needlessly abstract, and Professor Hall's ability to avoid this hazard makes this course consistently engaging. For example, he uses a memorable antacid commercial to illustrate the loss of relevance in a non sequitur argument and a classic Garry Trudeau cartoon to illustrate equivocation in language.

    Clarity about Tools and Terms

    The first eight lectures of the course are foundational. You establish a clear understanding of the terms "philosophy," "religion," "God," and "knowledge."

    What Do We Mean When We Say "God"?

    Professor Hall narrows the definition of "God" as used in this course to the God of ethical monotheism: the God of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. This is a single God deserving of worship. One by one, each characteristic of the God of ethical monotheism is put into place:

    Omnipotence: There are no limits on God's powers.

    Omniscience: There are no limits on God's knowledge.

    Omnipresence: There are no limits of distance or separation that affect God.

    Omniperfection: God must be totally without moral flaw.

    Aseity: God is not limited by anything external to itself—being, itself, the limit of everything else.

    Arguments for God's Existence: Ontology, Cosmology, Teleology, and Divine Encounters

    The course then explores the major arguments for the existence of God, testing each with the techniques of philosophical thought.

    The Ontological Argument. For this argument, famously advanced by St. Anselm and René Descartes, divine existence is entailed by the very concept of Godhood.

    The Cosmological Argument. This argument, famously advanced by St. Thomas Aquinas, holds that the very existence of the world proves the existence of God, without whom there could be no first cause for all of being.

    The Teleological Argument. This argument, articulated variously by the psalmist, St. Paul, and William Paley, claims that the magnificent design of the world necessarily implies the existence of a designer. Paley argued that if we walk along a beach and find a clock, we assume that a clockmaker created it.

    Divine Encounter. This argument points to individuals who are said to have had direct communication with God. If their reports are true, then the other arguments are a sinful waste of time because we would have direct evidence of God.

    The review and testing of these four arguments yields a "Scottish verdict": not proved.

    Arguments against God's Existence: The Problem of Evil

    After testing the arguments for God's existence, Professor Hall reverses the burden of proof and asks: "Can humans know that God does not exist?"

    You study the argument that God cannot exist because nature or wicked humans cause innocents to suffer.

    And you learn the replies (theodicies) that the major religious traditions have marshaled:

    • There is no problem of evil because the world is perfect.
    • Evil is simply the absence of good.
    • Apparent evil exists to serve a larger good: God's purposes are inscrutable to us, and evil is only an apparition caused by our ignorance.
    • Evil done by humans is a necessary consequence of free will, and autonomy given us by God. Without the opportunity for evil, there could also be no opportunity for virtue. An associated argument is that demonic forces cause evil (and this, too, may be a consequence of their freedom). In either case, God is not the cause of evil.
    • Those who suffer do so because they are being punished or elevated by suffering.

    This portion of the course also invites a hung jury. Atheism is no more an obvious candidate for knowledge than theism is.

    Tipping over the Chessboard: Faith and Transcendence

    You also study approaches that dispense with logical or empirical "proof" of God.

    • Two lectures explore religious agnosticism: faith without (or against) evidence. You examine the arguments that proof is irrelevant to faith (and the argument that the demand for proof is a barrier to faith) and their consequences.
    • You also explore transcendentalist claims that God transcends the world and everything in it, and the consequences of this argument.

    Playing a Different Game: Causes versus Intentions

    Logical and empirical explanations, in general, search for causes and effects. A "caused effect" is not "free" to happen and, therefore, does not have "motives" or "intentions."

    But religious discourse is profoundly concerned with intentions as an explanation of life and the world.

    You examine two other approaches to understanding religious claims:

    • Paradigms. Three lectures examine religious claims and stories as part of a form of life operating under an alternative paradigm that includes intentionality as one of its basic categories of description and explanation.
    • Language Games. Four lectures examine religious claims and stories as moves in one or another, possibly nondescriptive, language games, especially a game that consists of stories-told-for-a-purpose. These are stories that are not to be assessed as true or false, but as functional or dysfunctional, in terms of their life impact.

    In the last lecture, you retrace the conceptual problems in ethical monotheism that urged its philosophical examination in the first place and the discoveries along the way that have led to characterizing it as we have. But, given that philosophy is an ongoing reflective enterprise, the very last point is an invitation to all who have worked through this series to carry on the reflection themselves.

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    Dr. James Hall is the James Thomas Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, at the University of Richmond, where he taught for 40 years. He earned his B.A. from Johns Hopkins University, his Master of Theology from Southeastern Theological Seminary, and his Ph.D. from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. At the University of Richmond, Professor Hall was named Omicron Delta Kappa Faculty Member of the Year (2005) and Student Government Association Faculty Member of the Year (2005), and he received the University Distinguished Educator Award (2001). He has written many articles and essays and is the author of three books: Knowledge, Belief and Transcendence; Logic Problems; and Practically Profound: Putting Philosophy to Work in Everyday Life. Professor Hall specializes in 20th-century analytic philosophy, epistemology, logical empiricism, and the philosophy of religion. At Richmond, he was noted for developing cross-disciplinary courses combining physics, chemistry, economics, psychology, and literature with his own field of philosophy.
    The Teaching Company, doing business as Wondrium, is a media production company that produces educational, video and audio content in the form of courses, documentaries, series under two content brands - Wondrium and The Great Courses
    • language english
    • Training sessions 36
    • duration 18:17:15
    • English subtitles has
    • Release Date 2023/06/06

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