100 entries most recently downloaded from the set: "Subject = B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion: BL Religion" in "Enlighten"

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  1. Homo Orans : Von Balthasar's Christocentric Philosophical Anthropology.Victoria S. Harrison - 1999 - Heythrop Journal 40 (3):280-300.
    Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Christocentric philosophical anthropology is the premise not only of his religious epistemology, but also of his whole theological enterprise. The importance of his anthropology to the rest of his theology is often overlooked, because its fundamentals are set out in an early work to which little critical attention has been given: Das Betrachtende Gebet—a work which emphasises the ‘necessity of prayer’. According to von Balthasar, in praying, one encounters God, and it is through this encounter that (...)
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  2. Human holiness as religious apologia.Victoria S. Harrison - 1999 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 46 (2):63-82.
    The article critically examines Hans Urs von Balthasar’s core intuition that human holiness has apologetic value for Christianity. It argues that von Balthasar’s claim relies on two notions of ‘proof’, and, in distinguishing between the two notions, it clarifies his position. This clarification is followed by a defense of von Balthasar’s view that it can be rational to accept Christian faith on the grounds of human holiness. However, by way of conclusion, the article proposes that von Balthasar’s intuition could, in (...)
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  3. Robert Baron on the Assent of Faith.Alexander Broadie - 2014 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 12 (2):231-242.
    Are faith and knowledge mutually incompatible in the sense that it is not possible for someone both to know something to be the case and also, and at the same time, to accept as a matter of faith that it is the case? Robert Baron, one of the group of early seventeenth-century episcopalians known as the ‘Aberdeen doctors’, examines this question and provides an answer full of philosophical interest. This article discusses his answer, focusing in particular on his account of (...)
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  4. Feminist philosophy of religion and the problem of epistemic privilege.Victoria S. Harrison - 2007 - Heythrop Journal 48 (5):685-696.
    There have been a number of developments within religious epistemology in recent years. Currently, the dominant view within mainstream philosophy of religion is, arguably, reformed epistemology. What is less well known is that feminist epistemologists have also been active recently within the philosophy of religion, advancing new perspectives from which to view the link between knowledge and religious experience. In this article I examine the claim by certain feminist religious epistemologists that women are both epistemically oppressed and epistemically privileged, and (...)
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