Religious language and the problem of religious knowledge / edited woth an introd. by Ronald E. Santoni. - Bloomington : Indiana University Press, 1968. - 382 p.; 22 cm.

Contents: Is religious language so idiosyncratic that we can hope for no philosophical account of it? / Alasdair Macintyre -- Positivism and religion / Thomas McPherson -- Truth-claims in religion / William A. Christian -- The possibility of theological statements / I.M. Crombie -- The structure of religious discourse / Joseph M. Bochenski -- On the literal significance of religious sentences / Alfred J. Ayer -- Symbols of faith / Paul Tillich -- Being-itself and irreducible metaphors / Paul Edwards -- The doctrine of analogy / Eric L. Mascall -- Meaning and encounter / Martin Buber -- What sense is there to speak of God? / Rudolf Bultmann -- Ontology and the possibility of religious knowledge / Calvin Schrag -- Factual knowledge and religious claims / Paul F. Schmidt -- On the "knowledge of God" / S�ren Kierkegaard -- The nature of religious propositions / Paul Holmer. The cognitive factor in religious experience / H.D. Lewis & C.H. Whiteley -- Are religious dogmas cognitive and meaningful? / Ralphael Demos & C.J. Ducasse -- Gods / John Wisdom -- Theology and falsification / Antony Flew, R.M. Hare, Basil Mitchell, & I.M. Crombie -- An empiricist's view of the nature of religious belief / R.B. Braithwaite -- Motives, rationales, and religious beliefs / Diogenes Allen -- Theology and verification / John Hick.


Religion and language
knowledge,Theory of (Religion)

BL 65.L2 / R45