Reformed epistemology

E195110

Reformed epistemology is a school of thought in religious epistemology that argues belief in God can be rational and properly basic without requiring inferential evidence or arguments.

All labels observed (2)

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Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf epistemological theory
position in religious epistemology
theory of justified belief
view in philosophy of religion
addresses justification of theistic belief
rationality of religious belief
warrant for belief in God
allows natural theology as a possible but not necessary support for theistic belief
associatedWith Alvin Plantinga
George Mavrodes
Kelly James Clark
Michael C. Rea
Nicholas Wolterstorff
William Alston
claims belief in God can be grounded in a sensus divinitatis
belief in God can be properly basic in the absence of defeaters
theistic belief can be warranted if formed by properly functioning cognitive faculties
compatibleWith Christian theism
contrastsWith classical natural theology as a necessary basis for theistic belief
evidentialism about religious belief
coreClaim belief in God can be properly basic
belief in God can be rational without inferential evidence
belief in God can have warrant apart from propositional evidence
theistic belief need not be based on arguments to be justified
there are non‑inferential grounds for belief in God
criticizedBy evidentialist philosophers
criticizedFor allegedly lowering standards for rational belief
allegedly permitting fideism
denies evidentialist requirement that all rational belief in God must be based on evidence or argument
developedIn late 20th century
field analytic philosophy
philosophy of religion
religious epistemology
influenced contemporary debates on religious belief and rationality
influencedBy Dutch Reformed Church
surface form: Dutch Reformed tradition

John Calvin
Calvinism
surface form: Reformed theology
keyConcept basic beliefs
defeater
non‑inferential justification
properly basic belief
sensus divinitatis
warrant
opposes classical foundationalism about religious belief
relatedWork Alvin Plantinga’s book "Warrant and Proper Function"
Warranted Christian Belief
surface form: Alvin Plantinga’s book "Warranted Christian Belief"

Nicholas Wolterstorff’s book "Reason within the Bounds of Religion"
respondsTo objections that theistic belief is irrational without evidence
usesFramework Plantinga’s proper functionalist account of warrant

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (7)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Alvin Plantinga philosophicalSchool Reformed epistemology
Warrant and Proper Function philosophicalSchool Reformed epistemology
Warrant and Proper Function influenced Reformed epistemology
Nicholas Wolterstorff fieldOfWork Reformed epistemology
Nicholas Wolterstorff movement Reformed epistemology
Neo-Calvinism influenced Reformed epistemology
The New Modernism philosophicalApproach Reformed epistemology
this entity surface form: Reformed epistemology (presuppositional)