Timothy A. Robinson is Professor of Philosophy, College of St. Benedict.
Summary
God brings together philosophical and literary works representing the many ways - metaphysical, scientific,
analytic, phenomenological - in which philosophers and others have attempted to address the question of the existence
of God.
Table of Contents
1. The Ontological Argument
2. The Five Ways
3. The Argument from Morality
4. Critique of the Traditional Arguments
5. Anthropomorphism
6. The Existence of God
7. Philosophical and Scientific Pointers to Creatio ex Nihilo
8. The 'Scientific' Argument
9. God and Evil
10. Divine Omnipotence
11. Evil and a Finite God
12. Theology and Falsification
13. Is Belief in God Properly Basic?
14. The Wager
15. The Reality of the Unseen
16. The Will to Believe
17. The Idea of the Holy
18. The Phenomenology of Religion
19. Religion and Power
20. The Psychological Origins of Religion
21. Atheistic Existentialism
22. Absurd
23. Signals of Transcendence
24. I and Thou