Faith with reason /
Paul Helm.
- Oxford : Clarendon Press, 2000.
- 185 p.; 23 cm.
Includes bibliographical references
Contents: Can faith be discussed Five reasons for not discussing faith Concepts of faith Conclusion Faith and foundationalism Strong foundationalism and its weaknesses Kenny's response Foundationalism and beyond The Web of belief Strategic order The Web Coherence Objections The Web of belief and the nature of faith Accumulated evidence Resolving disputes by rational means The person-relativity of religious belief The nature of religion Conclusion Belief and believing Accounting for unbelief The fact of bias Facts and values: their connectedness Objections The believer Thin and thick belief and believing The instability of thick believing What is it to trust God Conceptual preconditions Interests Interpersonal relations God and evidence Bare particularity Conclusion Faith and virtue Faith and belief A paradox trust The evidential proportion view of faith Faith and self-reflection Faith and assurance The conditions of assurance Faith and self-reflection Faith and conditionality The faith and conditions argument The grounds substitution argument