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Faith, Reason, and Beyond Reason

Essays on Epistemology and Theology

Mark J Boone

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English
Pickwick Publications
16 July 2024
The relationship between faith and reason is multifaceted. Faith transcends reason in that it is more than reason alone can contain or fully guarantee, yet it is neither unreasonable nor something to which reason is irrelevant--and reason says some pretty fine things about it! This volume updates nine previously published articles on faith and reason by a Christian philosopher who has been studying these matters for two decades, alongside one new essay and a philosophical dialogue. These articles explain and integrate key ideas on faith and reason, including Alvin Plantinga's account of how Christian belief can be knowledge even without evidence; defenses of faith from Augustine and William James; accounts of empirical evidence for faith from different world religions; the distinction between faith and sight in the New Testament; the structure of the evidence for the authority of the Bible; the idea that faith transcends reason because some articles of faith are beyond human comprehension, even if we have evidence that they are true; and the nature of faith as a total commitment beyond what the evidence alone can guarantee.
By:  
Imprint:   Pickwick Publications
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   367g
ISBN:   9781666788297
ISBN 10:   1666788295
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Mark J. Boone is assistant professor in the Department of Religion and Philosophy at Hong Kong Baptist University.

Reviews for Faith, Reason, and Beyond Reason: Essays on Epistemology and Theology

""In this readable collection of essays, Mark Boone brings together a remarkably diverse cast of thinkers, including Alvin Plantinga, St. Augustine, William James, Søren Kierkegaard, Immanuel Kant, Jean-Luc Marion, and Allama Iqbal, to mention only some of the major players. One might think these thinkers have little in common, and they are certainly different, but Boone succeeds in his goal of creating a kind of dialogue between them. In the course of doing so, he provides important insights about the nature of Christian faith and its relation to reason."" --C. Stephen Evans, emeritus university professor of philosophy, Baylor University ""Rejecting the modernist war of faith versus reason, Mark Boone argues in this fine collection of essays that faith transcends reason by exploring the personal element of trust built on the empirical foundation on which reason rests. With Kant, Augustine, Kierkegaard, William James, Alvin Plantinga, and Islamic philosopher Allama Iqbal as his interlocutors, Boone helps rescue the traditional Christian worldview from the artificial facts/values split propagated by the Enlightenment."" --Louis Markos, professor of English, Houston Baptist University ""Drawing on an interesting variety of sources, Mark Boone develops a readable account of religious epistemology. He covers the usual suspects--Alvin Plantinga, Augustine, and William James--but also draws insights from Søren Kierkegaard, Jean-Luc Marion, and Islamic philosopher Allama Iqbal. The reader will benefit from the juxtaposition of these disparate voices. Also important is Boone's attention to questions beyond assessing knowledge claims: How do these claims apply to the reliability of Scripture and what does it look like to act on knowledge claims? The net result is a degree of cohesion and narrative unity that is rare among collections of essays. A valuable resource!"" --James K. Beilby, professor of biblical and theological studies, Bethel University ""Religious epistemology is a notoriously thorny topic. However, Mark Boone masterfully helps us navigate the topic, drawing in important voices such as James, Kierkegaard, Kant, Augustine, Plantinga, and others. Perhaps the most important feature of this book is that it shatters the myth that religious knowledge must either be grounded in faith or reason. Instead, Boone offers a lucid vision of how both play a vital role in a robust understanding of religious truth."" --Steven Wilkens, professor of philosophy and ethics, Azusa Pacific University


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