List of Figures List of Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction, Colin P. Ruloff and Peter Horban Part I: Revisiting the Classical Arguments for the Existence of God 1. The Argument from Contingency, Joshua Rasmussen 2. The Kalam Cosmological Argument, Andrew Loke 3. The Ontological Argument, Jason Megill 4. The Fine-tuning Argument, Michael Rota 5. The Argument from Biological Complexity, Michael Behe 6. The Argument from Information, Stephen Meyer 7. The Moral Argument, CS Evans and Trinity O’Neill Part II: Further Directions in Natural Theology 8. The Argument from Phenomenal Consciousness, JP Moreland 9. The Argument from Beauty, Brian Ribeiro 10. The Argument from Certainty, Katherin Rogers 11. The Argument from Mathematics, William Lane Craig 12. The Conceptualist Argument, Greg Welty 13. The Argument from Desire, William A. Lauringer 14. The Argument from Religious Experience, Kai-man Kwan 15. The Wager Argument, Joshua Golding 16. The Argument from the Meaning of Life, Stewart Goetz 17. The Argument from Common Consent, Jonathan Matheson 18. The Argument from Ramified Natural Theology, Sandra Menssen and Thomas D. Sullivan Index
Tackles natural theology from a wide range of perspectives, showing how it is relevant to atheists as well as theists.
Colin Ruloff is Instructor of Philosophy at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Canada. Peter Horban is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Philosophy at Simon Fraser University, Canada.
The scope of these essays helps to articulate the exceptional
breadth of Contemporary Argument in Natural Theology as a whole.
The variety of arguments throughout the book provide a point of
contact no matter the interest of the reader, and sprawling
bibliographies at the end of each essay open up significant inroads
to further study ... Contemporary Arguments in Natural Theology is
a worthwhile read for anybody interested in the topic.
*Modern Reformation*
Graduate students who wish to keep up with the latest work in
natural theology will find this a useful resource.
*Heythrop Journal*
This excellent book is proof of the continuing interest in and
relevance of natural theology. The essays are creative, clear, and
rigorous. They provide both new arguments and creative,
cutting-edge slants on old arguments. Contemporary Arguments in
Natural Theology will be helpful to advanced undergraduate
students, seminary and graduate students, as well as philosophical
scholars.
*Stephen T. Davis, Russell K. Pitzer Professor of Philosophy,
Emeritus, Claremont McKenna College, USA*
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