2017
DOI: 10.5840/eps201753354
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Theism, naturalism, and scientific realism

Abstract: Scientific knowledge is not merely a matter of reconciling theories and laws with data and observations. Science presupposes a number of metatheoretic shaping principles in order to judge good methods and theories from bad. Some of these principles are metaphysical (e.g., the uniformity of nature) and some are methodological (e.g., the need for repeatable experiments). While many shaping principles have endured since the scientific revolution, others have changed in response to conceptual pressures both from w… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1

Citation Types

0
4
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
4

Relationship

0
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 1 publication
0
4
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The most famous of these is surely the one put forward by Alvin Plantinga (1993, 2011), who argued that the reliability of our cognitive faculties is to be expected given traditional theism, but not given metaphysical naturalism (understood as the view that there is no God, or anything like God) 1 . Robert Koons (2000), Tyler McNabb (2015), Jeffrey Koperski (2017), and others have produced similar arguments. Such arguments typically contend that reliance on some faculty or mode of inference is justified only if theism is true, or if those who rely on it are theists.…”
Section: Introduction: Epistemological Arguments For Theismmentioning
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The most famous of these is surely the one put forward by Alvin Plantinga (1993, 2011), who argued that the reliability of our cognitive faculties is to be expected given traditional theism, but not given metaphysical naturalism (understood as the view that there is no God, or anything like God) 1 . Robert Koons (2000), Tyler McNabb (2015), Jeffrey Koperski (2017), and others have produced similar arguments. Such arguments typically contend that reliance on some faculty or mode of inference is justified only if theism is true, or if those who rely on it are theists.…”
Section: Introduction: Epistemological Arguments For Theismmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Although he intends this argument to apply to our cognitive faculties in general and doesn't single out any particular faculty or belief-forming method for debunking, others have tried to revise his argument in such a way as to restrict its scope. Of all such attempted revisions, most interesting for our purposes is Jeffrey Koperski's (2017). Koperski proposes that we reformulate Plantinga's basic argument into an argument targeting what he calls ‘metatheoretic shaping principles’ (MSPs), which are principles that ‘help determine what good theories look like, as well as how one should proceed in their development’.…”
Section: Comparisons With Other Argumentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 I do not have the space to discuss in detail the other, less recent arguments mentioned above with reference to my argument. I will only say that the arguments of Koperski (2017) and Severini and Sterpetti (2017) are largely tentative and promissory, and that those in Clark (1984) and Ruse (1995Ruse ( , 1998) rely on epistemological principles subtly different to the one my argument will rely on. Cf.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Even so, the idea of an evolutionary sceptical challenge to scientific realism is by no means unheard of in contemporary analytic philosophy. Clark (1984), Ruse (1995Ruse ( , 1998 and, in more recent times, Talbott (2016), Severini and Sterpetti (2017), Koperski (2017) have put forward or at least gestured towards arguments of this sort. 2 The arguments differ in the details, but share a common main thrust: standard evolutionary theory implies that it would have taken an epistemically problematic 'lucky accident' for the evolutionary process to have given us a cognitive apparatus with the capacity to acquire a scientific understanding of the world.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%