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The Reasonableness of Agnosticism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

Alan Brinton
Affiliation:
Buise State University, Idaho

Extract

Agnostics often hold that, since there is not a clear preponderance of evidence either in favour of theistic belief or against it, their position of suspended belief is more rational than either theism or atheism. I would like to examine an objection raised recently by Clement Dore against the agnostic's reasoning on this matter.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984

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References

page 627 note 1 Agnosticism’, Religious Studies, 18 (1983), 503–7.Google Scholar

page 627 note 2 In ‘The Will to Believe’ and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy (1897; rpt. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979).Google Scholar His other general defence of this doctrine is to be found in ‘The sentiment of rationality’ in the same volume.

page 629 note 1 Both also in ‘The Will to Believe’ and Other Essays.