The Existence of God (Clarendon Paperbacks)

The Existence of God (Clarendon Paperbacks)

by RichardSwinburne (Author)

Synopsis

This book is based on the author's Wilde Lectures delivered in the University of Oxford in 1976-7. It forms part of a trilogy which began with The Coherence of Theism (Clarendon Press, 1977, reissued in paperback, 1986) and was completed by Faith and Reason (Clarendon Press, 1981, reissued in paperback, 1983), but it does not in any way presuppose knowledge of the earlier work. For the revised fifth impression of the paperback edition, Professor Swinburne has added a new preface, and two new appendices: one a reply to Mackie and one a discussion of the argument from 'fine tuning'.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Published: 31 Mar 1991

ISBN 10: 0198239637
ISBN 13: 9780198239635

Media Reviews
An excellent and important contribution to the philosophy of religion....No one interested in [the subject] can afford to ignore it....It is...the best and most philosophically interesting among recent defenses of theism. --The Thomist
His arguments are uniformly insightful, clear, and interesting. --Religious Studies Review


An excellent and important contribution to the philosophy of religion....No one interested in [the subject] can afford to ignore it....It is...the best and most philosophically interesting among recent defenses of theism. --The Thomist
His arguments are uniformly insightful, clear, and interesting. --Religious Studies Review

An excellent and important contribution to the philosophy of religion....No one interested in [the subject] can afford to ignore it....It is...the best and most philosophically interesting among recent defenses of theism. --The Thomist
His arguments are uniformly insightful, clear, and interesting. --Religious Studies Review


An excellent and important contribution to the philosophy of religion....No one interested in [the subject] can afford to ignore it....It is...the best and most philosophically interesting among recent defenses of theism. --The Thomist


His arguments are uniformly insightful, clear, and interesting. --Religious Studies Review