fbpx
Wikipedia

Alvin Plantinga

Alvin Carl Plantinga[a] (born November 15, 1932) is an American analytic philosopher who works primarily in the fields of philosophy of religion, epistemology (particularly on issues involving epistemic justification), and logic.

Alvin Plantinga
Alvin Plantinga in 2004
Born
Alvin Carl Plantinga

(1932-11-15) November 15, 1932 (age 90)
Alma mater
Notable work
Spouse
Kathleen De Boer
(m. 1955)
Awards
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnalytic
Institutions
Doctoral advisorPaul Weiss
Main interests
Notable ideas

From 1963 to 1982, Plantinga taught at Calvin University before accepting an appointment as the John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame.[3] He later returned to Calvin University to become the inaugural holder of the Jellema Chair in Philosophy.[4]

A prominent Christian philosopher, Plantinga served as president of the Society of Christian Philosophers from 1983 to 1986. He has delivered the Gifford Lectures twice and was described by Time magazine as "America's leading orthodox Protestant philosopher of God".[5] In 2014, Plantinga was the 30th most-cited contemporary author in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.[6] A fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he was awarded the Templeton Prize in 2017.[7]

Some of Plantinga's most influential works include God and Other Minds (1967), The Nature of Necessity (1974), and a trilogy of books on epistemology, culminating in Warranted Christian Belief (2000) that was simplified in Knowledge and Christian Belief (2015).[8]

Biography Edit

Family Edit

Plantinga was born on November 15, 1932, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to Cornelius A. Plantinga (1908–1994) and Lettie G. Bossenbroek (1908–2007). Plantinga's father was a first-generation immigrant, born in the Netherlands.[9] His family is from the Dutch province of Friesland; they lived on a relatively low income until he secured a teaching job in Michigan in 1941.[10]

Plantinga's father earned a PhD in philosophy from Duke University and a master's degree in psychology, and taught several academic subjects at different colleges over the years.[11]

Plantinga married Kathleen De Boer in 1955.[12] They have four children: Carl, Jane, Harry, and Ann.[13][14] Both of his sons are professors at Calvin University, Carl in film studies[15] and Harry in computer science.[16] Harry is also the director of the college's Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Plantinga's older daughter, Jane Plantinga Pauw, is a pastor at Rainier Beach Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) in Seattle, Washington,[17] and his younger daughter, Ann Kapteyn, has worked for Wycliffe Bible Translators and SIL International.[18][19] One of Plantinga's brothers, Cornelius "Neal" Plantinga Jr., is a theologian and the former president of Calvin Theological Seminary. Another of his brothers, Leon, is an emeritus professor of musicology at Yale University.[11][20] His brother Terrell worked for CBS News.[21]

Education Edit

After Plantinga completed 11th grade, his father urged him to skip his last year of high school and immediately enroll in college. Plantinga reluctantly followed his father's advice and in 1949, a few months before his 17th birthday, he enrolled in Jamestown College, in Jamestown, North Dakota.[22][23] During that same year, his father accepted a teaching job at Calvin University, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. In January 1950, Plantinga moved to Grand Rapids with his family and enrolled in Calvin University. During his first semester at Calvin, Plantinga was awarded a scholarship to attend Harvard University.[24]

Beginning in the fall of 1950, Plantinga spent two semesters at Harvard. In 1951, during Harvard's spring recess, Plantinga attended a few philosophy classes at Calvin University, and was so impressed with Calvin philosophy professor William Harry Jellema that he returned in 1951 to study philosophy under him.[25] In 1954, Plantinga began his graduate studies at the University of Michigan where he studied under William Alston, William Frankena, and Richard Cartwright, among others.[26] A year later, in 1955, he transferred to Yale University where he received his PhD in 1958.[27]

Teaching career Edit

Plantinga began his career as an instructor in the philosophy department at Yale in 1957, and then in 1958, he became a professor of philosophy at Wayne State University during its heyday as a major center for analytic philosophy. In 1963, he accepted a teaching job at Calvin University, where he replaced the retiring Jellema.[28] He then spent the next 19 years at Calvin before moving to the University of Notre Dame in 1982. He retired from the University of Notre Dame in 2010 and returned to Calvin University, where he serves as the first holder of the William Harry Jellema Chair in Philosophy. He has trained many prominent philosophers working in metaphysics and epistemology including Michael Bergmann at Purdue and Michael Rea at Notre Dame, and Trenton Merricks working at University of Virginia.

Awards and honors Edit

Plantinga served as president of the American Philosophical Association, Western Division, from 1981 to 1982.[29] and as president of the Society of Christian Philosophers from 1983 to 1986.[23][30]

He has honorary degrees from Glasgow University (1982), Calvin University (1986), North Park College (1994), the Free University of Amsterdam (1995), Brigham Young University (1996), and Valparaiso University (1999).[30] He was a Guggenheim Fellow, 1971–72, and elected a Fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1975.[30]

In 2006, the University of Notre Dame's Center for Philosophy of Religion renamed its Distinguished Scholar Fellowship as the Alvin Plantinga Fellowship.[31] The fellowship includes an annual lecture by the current Plantinga Fellow.[32]

In 2012, the University of Pittsburgh's Philosophy Department, History and Philosophy of Science Department, and the Center for the History and Philosophy of Science co-awarded Plantinga the Nicholas Rescher Prize for Systematic Philosophy,[33] which he received with a talk titled, "Religion and Science: Where the Conflict Really Lies".

In 2017, Baylor University's Center for Christian Philosophy inaugurated the Alvin Plantinga Award for Excellence in Christian Philosophy. Awardees deliver a lecture at Baylor University and their name is put on a plaque with Plantinga's image in the Institute for Studies in Religion. He was named the first fellow of the center as well.[34]

He was awarded the 2017 Templeton Prize.

Philosophical views Edit

Plantinga has argued that some people can know that God exists as a basic belief, requiring no argument. He developed this argument in two different fashions: firstly, in God and Other Minds (1967), by drawing an equivalence between the teleological argument and the common sense view that people have of other minds existing by analogy with their own minds.[35][36] Plantinga has also developed a more comprehensive epistemological account of the nature of warrant which allows for the existence of God as a basic belief.[37]

Plantinga has also argued that there is no logical inconsistency between the existence of evil and the existence of an all-powerful, all-knowing, wholly good God.[38]

Problem of evil Edit

Plantinga proposed a "free-will defense" in a volume edited by Max Black in 1965,[39] which attempts to refute the logical problem of evil, the argument that the existence of evil is logically incompatible with the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient, wholly good God.[40] Plantinga's argument (in a truncated form) states that "It is possible that God, even being omnipotent, could not create a world with free creatures who never choose evil. Furthermore, it is possible that God, even being omnibenevolent, would desire to create a world which contains evil if moral goodness requires free moral creatures."[41]

However, the argument's handling of natural evil has been disputed. According to the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the argument also "conflicts with important theistic doctrines" such as the notion of a heaven where free saved souls reside without doing evil, and the idea that God has free will yet is wholly good. Critics thus maintain that, if we take such doctrines to be (as Christians usually have), God could have created free creatures that always do right, contra Plantinga's claim.[42] J. L. Mackie saw Plantinga's free-will defense as incoherent.[43]

Plantinga's well-received book God, Freedom and Evil, written in 1974, gave his response to what he saw as the incomplete and uncritical view of theism's criticism of theodicy. Plantinga's contribution stated that when the issue of a comprehensive doctrine of freedom is added to the discussion of the goodness of God and the omnipotence of God then it is not possible to exclude the presence of evil in the world after introducing freedom into the discussion. Plantinga's own summary occurs in his discussion titled "Could God Have Created a World Containing Moral Good but No Moral Evil", where he states his conclusion that, "... the price for creating a world in which they produce moral good is creating one in which they also produce moral evil."[44]

Reformed epistemology Edit

 
Plantinga giving a lecture on science and religion in 2009

Plantinga's contributions to epistemology include an argument which he dubs "Reformed epistemology". According to Reformed epistemology, belief in God can be rational and justified even without arguments or evidence for the existence of God. More specifically, Plantinga argues that belief in God is properly basic, and due to a religious externalist epistemology, he claims that it could be justified independently of evidence. His externalist epistemology, called "proper functionalism", is a form of epistemological reliabilism.

Plantinga discusses his view of Reformed epistemology and proper functionalism in a three-volume series. In the first book of the trilogy, Warrant: The Current Debate, Plantinga introduces, analyzes, and criticizes 20th-century developments in analytic epistemology, particularly the works of Chisholm, BonJour, Alston, Goldman, and others.[45] In the book, Plantinga argues specifically that the theories of what he calls "warrant"—what many others have called justification (Plantinga draws out a difference: justification is a property of a person holding a belief while warrant is a property of a belief)—put forth by these epistemologists have systematically failed to capture in full what is required for knowledge.[46]

In the second book, Warrant and Proper Function, he introduces the notion of warrant as an alternative to justification and discusses topics like self-knowledge, memories, perception, and probability.[47] Plantinga's "proper function" account argues that as a necessary condition of having warrant, one's "belief-forming and belief-maintaining apparatus of powers" are functioning properly—"working the way it ought to work".[48] Plantinga explains his argument for proper function with reference to a "design plan", as well as an environment in which one's cognitive equipment is optimal for use. Plantinga asserts that the design plan does not require a designer: "it is perhaps possible that evolution (undirected by God or anyone else) has somehow furnished us with our design plans",[49] but the paradigm case of a design plan is like a technological product designed by a human being (like a radio or a wheel). Ultimately, Plantinga argues that epistemological naturalism- i.e. epistemology that holds that warrant is dependent on natural faculties—is best supported by supernaturalist metaphysics—in this case, the belief in a creator God or designer who has laid out a design plan that includes cognitive faculties conducive to attaining knowledge.[50]

According to Plantinga, a belief, B, is warranted if:

(1) the cognitive faculties involved in the production of B are functioning properly…; (2) your cognitive environment is sufficiently similar to the one for which your cognitive faculties are designed; (3) … the design plan governing the production of the belief in question involves, as purpose or function, the production of true beliefs…; and (4) the design plan is a good one: that is, there is a high statistical or objective probability that a belief produced in accordance with the relevant segment of the design plan in that sort of environment is true.[51]

Plantinga seeks to defend this view of proper function against alternative views of proper function proposed by other philosophers which he groups together as "naturalistic", including the "functional generalization" view of John Pollock, the evolutionary/etiological account provided by Ruth Millikan, and a dispositional view held by John Bigelow and Robert Pargetter.[52] Plantinga also discusses his evolutionary argument against naturalism in the later chapters of Warrant and Proper Function.[53]

In 2000, the third book of the trilogy, Warranted Christian Belief, was published. In this volume, Plantinga's warrant theory is the basis for his theological end: providing a philosophical basis for Christian belief, an argument for why Christian theistic belief can enjoy warrant. In the book, he develops two models for such beliefs, the "A/C" (Aquinas/Calvin) model, and the "Extended A/C" model. The former attempts to show that a belief in God can be justified, warranted and rational, while the Extended model tries to show that specifically Christian theological beliefs including the Trinity, the Incarnation, the resurrection of Christ, the atonement, salvation etc. Under this model, Christians are justified in their beliefs because of the work of the Holy Spirit in bringing those beliefs about in the believer.

James Beilby has argued that the purpose of Plantinga's Warrant trilogy, and specifically of his Warranted Christian Belief, is firstly to make a form of argument against religion impossible—namely, the argument that whether or not Christianity is true, it is irrational—so "the skeptic would have to shoulder the formidable task of demonstrating the falsity of Christian belief"[54] rather than simply dismiss it as irrational. In addition, Plantinga is attempting to provide a philosophical explanation of how Christians should think about their own Christian belief.

Modal ontological argument Edit

Plantinga has expressed a modal logic version of the ontological argument in which he uses modal logic to develop, in a more rigorous and formal way, Norman Malcolm's and Charles Hartshorne's modal ontological arguments.

Plantinga criticized Malcolm's and Hartshorne's arguments, and offered an alternative.[55] He argued that, if Malcolm does prove the necessary existence of the greatest possible being, it follows that there is a being which exists in all worlds whose greatness in some worlds is not surpassed. It does not, he argued, demonstrate that such a being has unsurpassed greatness in this world.[56]

In an attempt to resolve this problem, Plantinga differentiated between "greatness" and "excellence". A being's excellence in a particular world depends only on its properties in that world; a being's greatness depends on its properties in all worlds. Therefore, the greatest possible being must have maximal excellence in every possible world. Plantinga then restated Malcolm's argument, using the concept of "maximal greatness". He argued that it is possible for a being with maximal greatness to exist, so a being with maximal greatness exists in a possible world. If this is the case, then a being with maximal greatness exists in every world, and therefore in this world.[56]

The conclusion relies on a form of modal axiom S5, which states that if something is possibly true, then its possibility is necessary (it is possibly true in all worlds). Plantinga's version of S5 suggests that "To say that p is possibly necessarily true is to say that, with regard to one world, it is true at all worlds; but in that case it is true at all worlds, and so it is simply necessary."[57] A version of his argument is as follows:[58]

  1. A being has maximal excellence in a given possible world W if and only if it is omnipotent, omniscient and wholly good in W; and
  2. A being has maximal greatness if it has maximal excellence in every possible world.
  3. It is possible that there is a being that has maximal greatness. (Premise)
  4. Therefore, possibly, it is necessarily true that an omniscient, omnipotent, and perfectly good being exists.
  5. Therefore, (by axiom S5) it is necessarily true that an omniscient, omnipotent and perfectly good being exists.
  6. Therefore, an omniscient, omnipotent and perfectly good being exists.

Plantinga argued that, although the first premise is not rationally established, it is not contrary to reason. Michael Martin argued that, if certain components of perfection are contradictory, such as omnipotence and omniscience, then the first premise is contrary to reason. Martin also proposed parodies of the argument, suggesting that the existence of anything can be demonstrated with Plantinga's argument, provided it is defined as perfect or special in every possible world.[59]

Another Christian philosopher, William Lane Craig, characterizes Plantinga's argument in a slightly different way:

  1. It is possible that a maximally great being exists.
  2. If it is possible that a maximally great being exists, then a maximally great being exists in some possible world.
  3. If a maximally great being exists in some possible world, then it exists in every possible world.
  4. If a maximally great being exists in every possible world, then it exists in the actual world.
  5. If a maximally great being exists in the actual world, then a maximally great being exists.
  6. Therefore, a maximally great being exists.

According to Craig, premises (2)–(5) are relatively uncontroversial among philosophers, but "the epistemic entertainability of premise (1) (or its denial) does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility."[60] Furthermore, Richard M. Gale argued that premise three, the "possibility premise", begs the question. He stated that one only has the epistemic right to accept the premise if one understands the nested modal operators, and that if one understands them within the system S5—without which the argument fails—then one understands that "possibly necessarily" is in essence the same as "necessarily".[61] Thus the premise begs the question because the conclusion is embedded within it. On S5 systems in general, James Garson writes that "the words 'necessarily' and 'possibly', have many different uses. So the acceptability of axioms for modal logic depends on which of these uses we have in mind."[62]

Evolutionary argument against naturalism Edit

In Plantinga's evolutionary argument against naturalism, he argues that if evolution is true, it undermines naturalism. His basic argument is that if evolution and naturalism are both true, human cognitive faculties evolved to produce beliefs that have survival value (maximizing one's success at the four Fs: "feeding, fleeing, fighting, and reproducing"), not necessarily to produce beliefs that are true. Thus, since human cognitive faculties are tuned to survival rather than truth in the naturalism-evolution model, there is reason to doubt the veracity of the products of those same faculties, including naturalism and evolution themselves. On the other hand, if God created man "in his image" by way of an evolutionary process (or any other means), then Plantinga argues our faculties would probably be reliable.

The argument does not assume any necessary correlation (or uncorrelation) between true beliefs and survival. Making the contrary assumption—that there is, in fact, a relatively strong correlation between truth and survival—if human belief-forming apparatus evolved giving a survival advantage, then it ought to yield truth since true beliefs confer a survival advantage. Plantinga counters that, while there may be overlap between true beliefs and beliefs that contribute to survival, the two kinds of beliefs are not the same, and he gives the following example with a man named Paul:

Perhaps Paul very much likes the idea of being eaten, but when he sees a tiger, always runs off looking for a better prospect, because he thinks it unlikely the tiger he sees will eat him. This will get his body parts in the right place so far as survival is concerned, without involving much by way of true belief... Or perhaps he thinks the tiger is a large, friendly, cuddly pussycat and wants to pet it; but he also believes that the best way to pet it is to run away from it... Clearly there are any number of belief-desire systems that equally fit a given bit of behaviour.[63]

The argument has received favorable notice from Thomas Nagel[64] and William Lane Craig,[65] but has also been criticized as seriously flawed, for example, by Elliott Sober.[66][67]

View on naturalism and evolution Edit

Even though Alvin Plantinga believes that God could have used Darwinian processes to create the world, he stands firm against philosophical naturalism. He said in an interview on the relationship between science and religion that:

Religion and science share more common ground than you might think, though science can't prove, it presupposes that there has been a past for example, science does not cover the whole of the knowledge enterprise.[68]

Plantinga participated of groups that support the Intelligent Design Movement, and was a member of the 'Ad Hoc Origins Committee'[69] that supported Philip E. Johnson's 1991 book Darwin on Trial, he also provided a back-cover endorsement of Johnson's book: "Shows how Darwinian evolution has become an idol."[70]

He was a Fellow of the (now defunct) pro-intelligent design International Society for Complexity, Information, and Design,[71] and has presented at a number of intelligent design conferences.[72] In a March 2010 article in The Chronicle of Higher Education, philosopher of science Michael Ruse labeled Plantinga as an "open enthusiast of intelligent design".[73] In a letter to the editor, Plantinga made the following response:

Like any Christian (and indeed any theist), I believe that the world has been created by God, and hence "intelligently designed". The hallmark of intelligent design, however, is the claim that this can be shown scientifically; I'm dubious about that.

...As far as I can see, God certainly could have used Darwinian processes to create the living world and direct it as he wanted to go; hence evolution as such does not imply that there is no direction in the history of life. What does have that implication is not evolutionary theory itself, but unguided evolution, the idea that neither God nor any other person has taken a hand in guiding, directing or orchestrating the course of evolution. But the scientific theory of evolution, sensibly enough, says nothing one way or the other about divine guidance. It doesn't say that evolution is divinely guided; it also doesn't say that it isn't. Like almost any theist, I reject unguided evolution; but the contemporary scientific theory of evolution just as such—apart from philosophical or theological add-ons—doesn't say that evolution is unguided. Like science in general, it makes no pronouncements on the existence or activity of God.[74]

The attitude that he proposes and elaborates upon in Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion and Naturalism is that there is no tension between religion and science, that the two go hand in hand, and that the actual conflict lies between naturalism and science.[75]

Selected works by Plantinga Edit

  • God and Other Minds. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 1967. rev. ed., 1990. ISBN 0-8014-9735-3
  • The Nature of Necessity. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1974. ISBN 0-19-824404-5
  • God, Freedom, and Evil. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. 1974. ISBN 0-04-100040-4
  • Does God Have A Nature? Wisconsin: Marquette University Press. 1980. ISBN 0-87462-145-3
  • Faith and Rationality: Reason and Belief in God (ed. with Nicholas Wolterstorff). Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. 1983. ISBN 0-268-00964-3
  • Warrant: The Current Debate. New York: Oxford University Press. 1993. ISBN 0-19-507861-6
  • Warrant and Proper Function. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1993. ISBN 0-19-507863-2
  • Warranted Christian Belief. New York: Oxford University Press. 2000. ISBN 0-19-513192-4 online
  • Essays in the Metaphysics of Modality. Matthew Davidson (ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. 2003. ISBN 0-19-510376-9
  • Knowledge of God (with Michael Tooley). Oxford: Blackwell. 2008. ISBN 0-631-19364-2
  • Science and Religion (with Daniel Dennett). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2010 ISBN 0-19-973842-4
  • Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2011. ISBN 0-19-981209-8
  • Knowledge and Christian Belief. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. 2015. ISBN 0802872042

See also Edit

Notes Edit

References Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Alvin Plantinga, Knowledge and Christian Belief (2015), p. 54.
  2. ^ Christian, Evolutionist, or Both? on YouTube
  3. ^ "Alvin Plantinga". veritas-ucsb.org.
  4. ^ "Plantinga Wins Prestigious Rescher Prize". calvin.edu.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-08-31.
  6. ^ "The 267 Most-Cited Contemporary Authors in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy". Retrieved 2020-06-27.
  7. ^ . templetonprize.org. Archived from the original on 2009-03-19. Retrieved 2017-07-27.
  8. ^ "Reformed Epistemology". The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  9. ^ "Self-profile", p. 3.
  10. ^ "Alvin Plantinga". The Gifford Lectures. 2014-08-18.
  11. ^ a b "Self-profile", p. 6.
  12. ^ "Self-profile", p. 14.
  13. ^ "Introduction: Alvin Plantinga, God's Philosopher" in Alvin Plantinga; Deane-Peter Baker ed., (New York: Cambridge University Press), 2007, p. 5.
  14. ^ "Alvin Plantinga" 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Machine, Well-Known Dutch-Americans at The New Netherland Institute website. Retrieved November 6, 2007.
  15. ^ . Calvin University. Archived from the original on 17 July 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-07-25.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on July 15, 2011.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-13.
  19. ^ Mwenda, Margaret (October 16, 2020). "What Is a Pastor", The Banner. Retrieved January 16, 2023.
  20. ^ "Welcome". Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  21. ^ "Self-profile", p. 7.
  22. ^ "Self-profile", pp. 7–8.
  23. ^ a b Deane-Peter Baker (2007). Alvin Plantinga. Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–8. ISBN 978-0-521-85531-0. Retrieved 16 December 2010.
  24. ^ "Self-profile", p. 8.
  25. ^ "Self-profile", pp. 9–16.
  26. ^ "Self-profile", p. 16.
  27. ^ "Self-profile", pp. 21–22.
  28. ^ "Self-profile", p. 30.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on April 26, 2012.
  30. ^ a b c . nnp.org. Archived from the original on July 4, 2008.
  31. ^ AgencyND : University of Notre Dame. "Events". Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  32. ^ Agency ND : University of Notre Dame. "Center for Philosophy of Religion". Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  33. ^ University of Pittsburgh University Marketing Communications Webteam. "Nicholas Rescher Prize for Systematic Philosophy". Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  34. ^ "Philosophy department, Baylor ISR and major granting organization cooperate in opening Baylor Center for Christian Philosophy | Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion". www.baylorisr.org. Retrieved 2017-10-16.
  35. ^ Felder, D. W. (1971). "Disanalogies in Plantinga's Argument regarding the Rationality of Theism". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 10 (3): 200–207. doi:10.2307/1384479. JSTOR 1384479.
  36. ^ Friquegnon, M. L. (1979). "God and Other Programs". Religious Studies. 15 (1): 83–89. doi:10.1017/S0034412500011100. S2CID 170439088.
  37. ^ Copan, P. (2001). "Warranted Christian Belief". The Review of Metaphysics. 54 (4): 939–941. JSTOR 20131647.
  38. ^ Quinn, Philip L. "Plantinga, Alvin" in Honderich, Ted (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Philosophy. Oxford University Press, 1995.
  39. ^ "Free Will Defense", in Max Black (ed), Philosophy in America. Ithaca: Cornell UP / London: Allen & Unwin, 1965
  40. ^ Beebe 2005
  41. ^ Meister 2009, p. 133
  42. ^ "Logical Problem of Evil". Retrieved July 16, 2012.
  43. ^ J. L. Mackie wrote: "[H]ow could there be logically contingent states of affairs, prior to the creation and existence of any created beings with free will, which an omnipotent god would have to accept and put up with? This suggestion is simply incoherent. Indeed, by bringing in the notion of individual essences which determine—presumably non-causally—how Curly Smith, Satan, and the rest of us would choose freely or would act in each hypothetical situation, Plantinga has not rescued the free will defence but made its weaknesses all too clear". Mackie 1982, p. 174.
  44. ^ Plantinga, Alvin (1974). God, Freedom and Evil, p. 49.
  45. ^ Alvin Plantinga, Warrant: The Current Debate, New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
  46. ^ Plantinga, Warrant: The Current Debate, 1993. 3.
  47. ^ Alvin Plantinga, Warrant and Proper Function, New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
  48. ^ WPF, p. 4
  49. ^ WPF, p. 21
  50. ^ WPF, 237.
  51. ^ Plantinga, Warrant and Proper Function, 1993. 194.
  52. ^ WPF, p. 199-211.
  53. ^ Fales, E. (1996). "Plantinga's Case against Naturalistic Epistemology". Philosophy of Science. 63 (3): 432–451. doi:10.1086/289920. S2CID 170510977.
  54. ^ Beilby, James (2007). "Plantinga's Model of Warranted Christian Belief". In Baker, Deane-Peter (ed.). Alvin Plantinga. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 125–165. ISBN 978-0-521-67143-9.
  55. ^ "Evolution, Shibboleths, and Philosophers". The Chronicle of Higher Education. April 11, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-28. Like any Christian (and indeed any theist), I believe that the world has been created by God, and hence "intelligently designed"
  56. ^ a b Plantinga, Alvin (1998). Sennett, James F. (ed.). The Analytic Theist: An Alvin Plantinga Reader. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 65–71. ISBN 978-0-8028-4229-9.
  57. ^ Marenbon, John (October 2, 2006). Medieval Philosophy: An Historical and Philosophical Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-46183-7 – via Google Books.
  58. ^ Oppy, Graham (8 February 1996). "Ontological Arguments". substantive revision 15 July 2011. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  59. ^ Martin, Michael (2003). Philosophy of religion: an anthology. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 282–293. ISBN 978-0-631-21471-7.
  60. ^ Craig, William Lane (2008). Reasonable faith. Crossway. p. 185. ISBN 978-1-4335-0115-9. Premises (2)–(5) of this argument are relatively uncontroversial. Most philosophers would agree that if God's existence is even possible, then he must exist. ... the epistemic entertainability of premise (1) (or its denial) does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility.
  61. ^ Gale, Richard (1993). On the Nature and Existence of God. Cambridge University Press. p. 227. ISBN 0-521-45723-8.
  62. ^ Garson, James (February 29, 2000). Modal Logic. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University – via plato.stanford.edu.
  63. ^ Plantinga, Alvin Warrant and Proper Function, (New York: Oxford University Press), 1993. pp. 225–226 (ISBN 978-0-19-507864-0).
  64. ^ Nagel, Thomas (27 September 2012). "A Philosopher Defends Religion". The New York Review of Books.
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-08-04.
  66. ^ Oppy, Graham; Trakakis, N. N. (2014-09-11). Twentieth-Century Philosophy of Religion: The History of Western Philosophy of Religion. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-54638-2.
  67. ^ Fitelson, Branden; Sober, Elliott (1998). "Plantinga's Probability Arguments Against Evolutionary Naturalism". Pacific Philosophical Quarterly. 79 (2): 115–129. doi:10.1111/1468-0114.00053.
  68. ^ "Exploring The Real 'Conflict': Science Vs. Naturalism". NPR.
  69. ^ "Notre Dame philosopher Alvin Plantinga has also signed this letter" – We're Not in Kansas Anymore, Nancy Pearcey, Christianity Today, May 22, 2000, cited in Forrest & Gross 2004, p. 18 "Alvin Plantinga was also a signatory to this letter, early evidence of his continuing support of the intelligent design movement" – Intelligent design creationism and its critics, Robert T. Pennock (ed), 2001, p44
  70. ^ Darwin on Trial back cover
  71. ^ ICSD list of Fellows 2013-01-16 at the Wayback Machine but note that this site appears not to have been updated since 2005
  72. ^ Forrest & Gross 2004, pp. 156, 191, 212, 269
  73. ^ "Philosophers Rip Darwin". The Chronicle of Higher Education. March 7, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-28.
  74. ^ "Evolution, Shibboleths, and Philosophers". The Chronicle of Higher Education. April 11, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-28.
  75. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Where the Conflict Really Lies" – via YouTube.

Bibliography Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Schönecker, Dieter (ed.), Essays on "Warranted Christian Belief". With Replies by Alvin Plantinga. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 2015.
  • Baker, Deane-Peter (ed), Alvin Plantinga (Contemporary Philosophy in Focus Series). New York: Cambridge University Press. 2007.
  • Mascrod, Keith, Alvin Plantinga and Christian Apologetics. Wipf & Stock. 2007.
  • Crisp, Thomas, Matthew Davidson, David Vander Laan (eds), Knowledge and Reality: Essays in Honor of Alvin Plantinga. Dordrecht: Springer. 2006.
  • Beilby, James, Epistemology as Theology: An Evaluation of Alvin Plantinga's Religious Epistemology. Aldershot: Ashgate. 2005
  • Beilby, James (ed), Naturalism Defeated? Essays on Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 2002.
  • Sennet, James (ed), The Analytic Theist: An Alvin Plantinga Reader. Grand Rapids: Eeardman. 1998. ISBN 0-8028-4229-1
  • Kvanvig, Jonathan (ed), Warrant in Contemporary Epistemology: Essays in Honor of Plantinga's Theory of Knowledge. Savage, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. 1996.
  • McLeod, Mark S. Rationality and Theistic Belief: An Essay on Reformed Epistemology (Cornell Studies in the Philosophy of Religion). Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 1993.
  • Zagzebski, Linda (ed), Rational Faith. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. 1993.
  • Sennett, James, Modality, Probability, and Rationality: A Critical Examination of Alvin Plantinga's Philosophy. New York: P. Lang. 1992.
  • Hoitenga, Dewey, From Plato to Plantinga: An Introduction to Reformed Epistemology. Albany: State University of New York Press. 1991.
  • Parsons, Keith, God and the Burden of Proof: Plantinga, Swinburne, and the Analytic Defense of Theism. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books. 1989.
  • Tomberlin, James and Peter van Inwagen (eds), Alvin Plantinga (Profiles V.5). Dordrecht: D. Reidel. 1985.

External links Edit

  • at the University of Notre Dame
  • Plantinga's Curriculum Vitae
  • a collection of some of Plantinga's papers
  • Papers by Plantinga Extensive collection of online papers.
  • Interviews from the PBS program Closer to Truth
  • "The Dawkins Confusion", Plantinga's review of Richard Dawkins's The God Delusion from Books and Culture magazine
  • Alvin Plantinga's spiritual autobiography from Philosophers Who Believe. Clark, Kelly James (InterVarsity Press,1993)
  • Warrant: The Current Debate Plantinga's Gifford Lecture, and volume 1 of his Warrant trilogy.
  • Warrant and Proper Function Plantinga's Gifford Lecture, and volume 2 of his Warrant trilogy.
  • Warranted Christian Belief, full electronic text of volume 3 of his Warrant trilogy.
  • Daniel C. Dennett and Alvin Plantinga, Science and Religion: Are They Compatible? (Oxford University Press, 2011)
  • "Proper Functionalism". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by President of the American
Philosophical Association
, Western Division

1981–1982
Succeeded by
Manley H. Thompson Jr.
Preceded by President of the
Society of Christian Philosophers

1983–1986
Succeeded by
Awards
Preceded by Nicholas Rescher Prize
for Systematic Philosophy

2012
With: Jürgen Mittelstraß
Succeeded by
Preceded by Templeton Prize
2017
Succeeded by

alvin, plantinga, alvin, carl, plantinga, born, november, 1932, american, analytic, philosopher, works, primarily, fields, philosophy, religion, epistemology, particularly, issues, involving, epistemic, justification, logic, 2004bornalvin, carl, plantinga, 193. Alvin Carl Plantinga a born November 15 1932 is an American analytic philosopher who works primarily in the fields of philosophy of religion epistemology particularly on issues involving epistemic justification and logic Alvin PlantingaAlvin Plantinga in 2004BornAlvin Carl Plantinga 1932 11 15 November 15 1932 age 90 Ann Arbor Michigan U S Alma materCalvin UniversityUniversity of MichiganYale UniversityNotable workGod and Other Minds 1967 Warranted Christian Belief 2000 SpouseKathleen De Boer m 1955 wbr AwardsRescher Prize 2012 Templeton Prize 2017 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalyticInstitutionsWayne State UniversityCalvin UniversityUniversity of Notre DameDoctoral advisorPaul WeissMain interestsEpistemologymetaphysicsphilosophy of religionlogicmodal logicphilosophy of sciencenatural theologyNotable ideasReformed epistemologyFree will defenseModal ontological argumentProper functionalismEvolutionary argument against naturalismWarrantModal metaphysicsDivine nature and attributesTwo Dozen or so Arguments for GodInternalism and externalismFrom 1963 to 1982 Plantinga taught at Calvin University before accepting an appointment as the John A O Brien Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame 3 He later returned to Calvin University to become the inaugural holder of the Jellema Chair in Philosophy 4 A prominent Christian philosopher Plantinga served as president of the Society of Christian Philosophers from 1983 to 1986 He has delivered the Gifford Lectures twice and was described by Time magazine as America s leading orthodox Protestant philosopher of God 5 In 2014 Plantinga was the 30th most cited contemporary author in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 6 A fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences he was awarded the Templeton Prize in 2017 7 Some of Plantinga s most influential works include God and Other Minds 1967 The Nature of Necessity 1974 and a trilogy of books on epistemology culminating in Warranted Christian Belief 2000 that was simplified in Knowledge and Christian Belief 2015 8 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family 1 2 Education 1 3 Teaching career 1 4 Awards and honors 2 Philosophical views 2 1 Problem of evil 2 2 Reformed epistemology 2 3 Modal ontological argument 2 4 Evolutionary argument against naturalism 2 5 View on naturalism and evolution 3 Selected works by Plantinga 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditFamily Edit Plantinga was born on November 15 1932 in Ann Arbor Michigan to Cornelius A Plantinga 1908 1994 and Lettie G Bossenbroek 1908 2007 Plantinga s father was a first generation immigrant born in the Netherlands 9 His family is from the Dutch province of Friesland they lived on a relatively low income until he secured a teaching job in Michigan in 1941 10 Plantinga s father earned a PhD in philosophy from Duke University and a master s degree in psychology and taught several academic subjects at different colleges over the years 11 Plantinga married Kathleen De Boer in 1955 12 They have four children Carl Jane Harry and Ann 13 14 Both of his sons are professors at Calvin University Carl in film studies 15 and Harry in computer science 16 Harry is also the director of the college s Christian Classics Ethereal Library Plantinga s older daughter Jane Plantinga Pauw is a pastor at Rainier Beach Presbyterian Church PCUSA in Seattle Washington 17 and his younger daughter Ann Kapteyn has worked for Wycliffe Bible Translators and SIL International 18 19 One of Plantinga s brothers Cornelius Neal Plantinga Jr is a theologian and the former president of Calvin Theological Seminary Another of his brothers Leon is an emeritus professor of musicology at Yale University 11 20 His brother Terrell worked for CBS News 21 Education Edit After Plantinga completed 11th grade his father urged him to skip his last year of high school and immediately enroll in college Plantinga reluctantly followed his father s advice and in 1949 a few months before his 17th birthday he enrolled in Jamestown College in Jamestown North Dakota 22 23 During that same year his father accepted a teaching job at Calvin University in Grand Rapids Michigan In January 1950 Plantinga moved to Grand Rapids with his family and enrolled in Calvin University During his first semester at Calvin Plantinga was awarded a scholarship to attend Harvard University 24 Beginning in the fall of 1950 Plantinga spent two semesters at Harvard In 1951 during Harvard s spring recess Plantinga attended a few philosophy classes at Calvin University and was so impressed with Calvin philosophy professor William Harry Jellema that he returned in 1951 to study philosophy under him 25 In 1954 Plantinga began his graduate studies at the University of Michigan where he studied under William Alston William Frankena and Richard Cartwright among others 26 A year later in 1955 he transferred to Yale University where he received his PhD in 1958 27 Teaching career Edit Plantinga began his career as an instructor in the philosophy department at Yale in 1957 and then in 1958 he became a professor of philosophy at Wayne State University during its heyday as a major center for analytic philosophy In 1963 he accepted a teaching job at Calvin University where he replaced the retiring Jellema 28 He then spent the next 19 years at Calvin before moving to the University of Notre Dame in 1982 He retired from the University of Notre Dame in 2010 and returned to Calvin University where he serves as the first holder of the William Harry Jellema Chair in Philosophy He has trained many prominent philosophers working in metaphysics and epistemology including Michael Bergmann at Purdue and Michael Rea at Notre Dame and Trenton Merricks working at University of Virginia Awards and honors Edit Plantinga served as president of the American Philosophical Association Western Division from 1981 to 1982 29 and as president of the Society of Christian Philosophers from 1983 to 1986 23 30 He has honorary degrees from Glasgow University 1982 Calvin University 1986 North Park College 1994 the Free University of Amsterdam 1995 Brigham Young University 1996 and Valparaiso University 1999 30 He was a Guggenheim Fellow 1971 72 and elected a Fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1975 30 In 2006 the University of Notre Dame s Center for Philosophy of Religion renamed its Distinguished Scholar Fellowship as the Alvin Plantinga Fellowship 31 The fellowship includes an annual lecture by the current Plantinga Fellow 32 In 2012 the University of Pittsburgh s Philosophy Department History and Philosophy of Science Department and the Center for the History and Philosophy of Science co awarded Plantinga the Nicholas Rescher Prize for Systematic Philosophy 33 which he received with a talk titled Religion and Science Where the Conflict Really Lies In 2017 Baylor University s Center for Christian Philosophy inaugurated the Alvin Plantinga Award for Excellence in Christian Philosophy Awardees deliver a lecture at Baylor University and their name is put on a plaque with Plantinga s image in the Institute for Studies in Religion He was named the first fellow of the center as well 34 He was awarded the 2017 Templeton Prize Philosophical views EditPlantinga has argued that some people can know that God exists as a basic belief requiring no argument He developed this argument in two different fashions firstly in God and Other Minds 1967 by drawing an equivalence between the teleological argument and the common sense view that people have of other minds existing by analogy with their own minds 35 36 Plantinga has also developed a more comprehensive epistemological account of the nature of warrant which allows for the existence of God as a basic belief 37 Plantinga has also argued that there is no logical inconsistency between the existence of evil and the existence of an all powerful all knowing wholly good God 38 Problem of evil Edit Main article Alvin Plantinga s free will defense Plantinga proposed a free will defense in a volume edited by Max Black in 1965 39 which attempts to refute the logical problem of evil the argument that the existence of evil is logically incompatible with the existence of an omnipotent omniscient wholly good God 40 Plantinga s argument in a truncated form states that It is possible that God even being omnipotent could not create a world with free creatures who never choose evil Furthermore it is possible that God even being omnibenevolent would desire to create a world which contains evil if moral goodness requires free moral creatures 41 However the argument s handling of natural evil has been disputed According to the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy the argument also conflicts with important theistic doctrines such as the notion of a heaven where free saved souls reside without doing evil and the idea that God has free will yet is wholly good Critics thus maintain that if we take such doctrines to be as Christians usually have God could have created free creatures that always do right contra Plantinga s claim 42 J L Mackie saw Plantinga s free will defense as incoherent 43 Plantinga s well received book God Freedom and Evil written in 1974 gave his response to what he saw as the incomplete and uncritical view of theism s criticism of theodicy Plantinga s contribution stated that when the issue of a comprehensive doctrine of freedom is added to the discussion of the goodness of God and the omnipotence of God then it is not possible to exclude the presence of evil in the world after introducing freedom into the discussion Plantinga s own summary occurs in his discussion titled Could God Have Created a World Containing Moral Good but No Moral Evil where he states his conclusion that the price for creating a world in which they produce moral good is creating one in which they also produce moral evil 44 Reformed epistemology Edit Main article Reformed epistemology nbsp Plantinga giving a lecture on science and religion in 2009Plantinga s contributions to epistemology include an argument which he dubs Reformed epistemology According to Reformed epistemology belief in God can be rational and justified even without arguments or evidence for the existence of God More specifically Plantinga argues that belief in God is properly basic and due to a religious externalist epistemology he claims that it could be justified independently of evidence His externalist epistemology called proper functionalism is a form of epistemological reliabilism Plantinga discusses his view of Reformed epistemology and proper functionalism in a three volume series In the first book of the trilogy Warrant The Current Debate Plantinga introduces analyzes and criticizes 20th century developments in analytic epistemology particularly the works of Chisholm BonJour Alston Goldman and others 45 In the book Plantinga argues specifically that the theories of what he calls warrant what many others have called justification Plantinga draws out a difference justification is a property of a person holding a belief while warrant is a property of a belief put forth by these epistemologists have systematically failed to capture in full what is required for knowledge 46 In the second book Warrant and Proper Function he introduces the notion of warrant as an alternative to justification and discusses topics like self knowledge memories perception and probability 47 Plantinga s proper function account argues that as a necessary condition of having warrant one s belief forming and belief maintaining apparatus of powers are functioning properly working the way it ought to work 48 Plantinga explains his argument for proper function with reference to a design plan as well as an environment in which one s cognitive equipment is optimal for use Plantinga asserts that the design plan does not require a designer it is perhaps possible that evolution undirected by God or anyone else has somehow furnished us with our design plans 49 but the paradigm case of a design plan is like a technological product designed by a human being like a radio or a wheel Ultimately Plantinga argues that epistemological naturalism i e epistemology that holds that warrant is dependent on natural faculties is best supported by supernaturalist metaphysics in this case the belief in a creator God or designer who has laid out a design plan that includes cognitive faculties conducive to attaining knowledge 50 According to Plantinga a belief B is warranted if 1 the cognitive faculties involved in the production of B are functioning properly 2 your cognitive environment is sufficiently similar to the one for which your cognitive faculties are designed 3 the design plan governing the production of the belief in question involves as purpose or function the production of true beliefs and 4 the design plan is a good one that is there is a high statistical or objective probability that a belief produced in accordance with the relevant segment of the design plan in that sort of environment is true 51 Plantinga seeks to defend this view of proper function against alternative views of proper function proposed by other philosophers which he groups together as naturalistic including the functional generalization view of John Pollock the evolutionary etiological account provided by Ruth Millikan and a dispositional view held by John Bigelow and Robert Pargetter 52 Plantinga also discusses his evolutionary argument against naturalism in the later chapters of Warrant and Proper Function 53 In 2000 the third book of the trilogy Warranted Christian Belief was published In this volume Plantinga s warrant theory is the basis for his theological end providing a philosophical basis for Christian belief an argument for why Christian theistic belief can enjoy warrant In the book he develops two models for such beliefs the A C Aquinas Calvin model and the Extended A C model The former attempts to show that a belief in God can be justified warranted and rational while the Extended model tries to show that specifically Christian theological beliefs including the Trinity the Incarnation the resurrection of Christ the atonement salvation etc Under this model Christians are justified in their beliefs because of the work of the Holy Spirit in bringing those beliefs about in the believer James Beilby has argued that the purpose of Plantinga s Warrant trilogy and specifically of his Warranted Christian Belief is firstly to make a form of argument against religion impossible namely the argument that whether or not Christianity is true it is irrational so the skeptic would have to shoulder the formidable task of demonstrating the falsity of Christian belief 54 rather than simply dismiss it as irrational In addition Plantinga is attempting to provide a philosophical explanation of how Christians should think about their own Christian belief Modal ontological argument Edit Plantinga has expressed a modal logic version of the ontological argument in which he uses modal logic to develop in a more rigorous and formal way Norman Malcolm s and Charles Hartshorne s modal ontological arguments Plantinga criticized Malcolm s and Hartshorne s arguments and offered an alternative 55 He argued that if Malcolm does prove the necessary existence of the greatest possible being it follows that there is a being which exists in all worlds whose greatness in some worlds is not surpassed It does not he argued demonstrate that such a being has unsurpassed greatness in this world 56 In an attempt to resolve this problem Plantinga differentiated between greatness and excellence A being s excellence in a particular world depends only on its properties in that world a being s greatness depends on its properties in all worlds Therefore the greatest possible being must have maximal excellence in every possible world Plantinga then restated Malcolm s argument using the concept of maximal greatness He argued that it is possible for a being with maximal greatness to exist so a being with maximal greatness exists in a possible world If this is the case then a being with maximal greatness exists in every world and therefore in this world 56 The conclusion relies on a form of modal axiom S5 which states that if something is possibly true then its possibility is necessary it is possibly true in all worlds Plantinga s version of S5 suggests that To say that p is possibly necessarily true is to say that with regard to one world it is true at all worlds but in that case it is true at all worlds and so it is simply necessary 57 A version of his argument is as follows 58 A being has maximal excellence in a given possible world W if and only if it is omnipotent omniscient and wholly good in W and A being has maximal greatness if it has maximal excellence in every possible world It is possible that there is a being that has maximal greatness Premise Therefore possibly it is necessarily true that an omniscient omnipotent and perfectly good being exists Therefore by axiom S5 it is necessarily true that an omniscient omnipotent and perfectly good being exists Therefore an omniscient omnipotent and perfectly good being exists Plantinga argued that although the first premise is not rationally established it is not contrary to reason Michael Martin argued that if certain components of perfection are contradictory such as omnipotence and omniscience then the first premise is contrary to reason Martin also proposed parodies of the argument suggesting that the existence of anything can be demonstrated with Plantinga s argument provided it is defined as perfect or special in every possible world 59 Another Christian philosopher William Lane Craig characterizes Plantinga s argument in a slightly different way It is possible that a maximally great being exists If it is possible that a maximally great being exists then a maximally great being exists in some possible world If a maximally great being exists in some possible world then it exists in every possible world If a maximally great being exists in every possible world then it exists in the actual world If a maximally great being exists in the actual world then a maximally great being exists Therefore a maximally great being exists According to Craig premises 2 5 are relatively uncontroversial among philosophers but the epistemic entertainability of premise 1 or its denial does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility 60 Furthermore Richard M Gale argued that premise three the possibility premise begs the question He stated that one only has the epistemic right to accept the premise if one understands the nested modal operators and that if one understands them within the system S5 without which the argument fails then one understands that possibly necessarily is in essence the same as necessarily 61 Thus the premise begs the question because the conclusion is embedded within it On S5 systems in general James Garson writes that the words necessarily and possibly have many different uses So the acceptability of axioms for modal logic depends on which of these uses we have in mind 62 Evolutionary argument against naturalism Edit Main article Evolutionary argument against naturalism In Plantinga s evolutionary argument against naturalism he argues that if evolution is true it undermines naturalism His basic argument is that if evolution and naturalism are both true human cognitive faculties evolved to produce beliefs that have survival value maximizing one s success at the four Fs feeding fleeing fighting and reproducing not necessarily to produce beliefs that are true Thus since human cognitive faculties are tuned to survival rather than truth in the naturalism evolution model there is reason to doubt the veracity of the products of those same faculties including naturalism and evolution themselves On the other hand if God created man in his image by way of an evolutionary process or any other means then Plantinga argues our faculties would probably be reliable The argument does not assume any necessary correlation or uncorrelation between true beliefs and survival Making the contrary assumption that there is in fact a relatively strong correlation between truth and survival if human belief forming apparatus evolved giving a survival advantage then it ought to yield truth since true beliefs confer a survival advantage Plantinga counters that while there may be overlap between true beliefs and beliefs that contribute to survival the two kinds of beliefs are not the same and he gives the following example with a man named Paul Perhaps Paul very much likes the idea of being eaten but when he sees a tiger always runs off looking for a better prospect because he thinks it unlikely the tiger he sees will eat him This will get his body parts in the right place so far as survival is concerned without involving much by way of true belief Or perhaps he thinks the tiger is a large friendly cuddly pussycat and wants to pet it but he also believes that the best way to pet it is to run away from it Clearly there are any number of belief desire systems that equally fit a given bit of behaviour 63 The argument has received favorable notice from Thomas Nagel 64 and William Lane Craig 65 but has also been criticized as seriously flawed for example by Elliott Sober 66 67 View on naturalism and evolution Edit Even though Alvin Plantinga believes that God could have used Darwinian processes to create the world he stands firm against philosophical naturalism He said in an interview on the relationship between science and religion that Religion and science share more common ground than you might think though science can t prove it presupposes that there has been a past for example science does not cover the whole of the knowledge enterprise 68 Plantinga participated of groups that support the Intelligent Design Movement and was a member of the Ad Hoc Origins Committee 69 that supported Philip E Johnson s 1991 book Darwin on Trial he also provided a back cover endorsement of Johnson s book Shows how Darwinian evolution has become an idol 70 He was a Fellow of the now defunct pro intelligent design International Society for Complexity Information and Design 71 and has presented at a number of intelligent design conferences 72 In a March 2010 article in The Chronicle of Higher Education philosopher of science Michael Ruse labeled Plantinga as an open enthusiast of intelligent design 73 In a letter to the editor Plantinga made the following response Like any Christian and indeed any theist I believe that the world has been created by God and hence intelligently designed The hallmark of intelligent design however is the claim that this can be shown scientifically I m dubious about that As far as I can see God certainly could have used Darwinian processes to create the living world and direct it as he wanted to go hence evolution as such does not imply that there is no direction in the history of life What does have that implication is not evolutionary theory itself but unguided evolution the idea that neither God nor any other person has taken a hand in guiding directing or orchestrating the course of evolution But the scientific theory of evolution sensibly enough says nothing one way or the other about divine guidance It doesn t say that evolution is divinely guided it also doesn t say that it isn t Like almost any theist I reject unguided evolution but the contemporary scientific theory of evolution just as such apart from philosophical or theological add ons doesn t say that evolution is unguided Like science in general it makes no pronouncements on the existence or activity of God 74 The attitude that he proposes and elaborates upon in Where the Conflict Really Lies Science Religion and Naturalism is that there is no tension between religion and science that the two go hand in hand and that the actual conflict lies between naturalism and science 75 Selected works by Plantinga EditGod and Other Minds Ithaca Cornell University Press 1967 rev ed 1990 ISBN 0 8014 9735 3 The Nature of Necessity Oxford Clarendon Press 1974 ISBN 0 19 824404 5 God Freedom and Evil Grand Rapids Eerdmans 1974 ISBN 0 04 100040 4 Does God Have A Nature Wisconsin Marquette University Press 1980 ISBN 0 87462 145 3 Faith and Rationality Reason and Belief in God ed with Nicholas Wolterstorff Notre Dame University of Notre Dame Press 1983 ISBN 0 268 00964 3 Warrant The Current Debate New York Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 507861 6 Warrant and Proper Function Oxford Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 507863 2 Warranted Christian Belief New York Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 0 19 513192 4 online Essays in the Metaphysics of Modality Matthew Davidson ed New York Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 0 19 510376 9 Knowledge of God with Michael Tooley Oxford Blackwell 2008 ISBN 0 631 19364 2 Science and Religion with Daniel Dennett Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 ISBN 0 19 973842 4 Where the Conflict Really Lies Science Religion and Naturalism Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 0 19 981209 8 Knowledge and Christian Belief Grand Rapids Eerdmans 2015 ISBN 0802872042See also Edit nbsp Philosophy portalAmerican philosophy List of American philosophersNotes Edit Pronounced ˈ p l ae n t ɪ ŋ ɡ e 2 References EditFootnotes Edit Alvin Plantinga Knowledge and Christian Belief 2015 p 54 Christian Evolutionist or Both on YouTube Alvin Plantinga veritas ucsb org Plantinga Wins Prestigious Rescher Prize calvin edu Emeritae and Emeriti Department of Philosophy University of Notre Dame Archived from the original on 2013 08 31 The 267 Most Cited Contemporary Authors in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2020 06 27 Templeton Prize Current Winner templetonprize org Archived from the original on 2009 03 19 Retrieved 2017 07 27 Reformed Epistemology The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Self profile p 3 Alvin Plantinga The Gifford Lectures 2014 08 18 a b Self profile p 6 Self profile p 14 Introduction Alvin Plantinga God s Philosopher in Alvin Plantinga Deane Peter Baker ed New York Cambridge University Press 2007 p 5 Alvin Plantinga Archived 2008 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Well Known Dutch Americans at The New Netherland Institute website Retrieved November 6 2007 Faculty amp Staff Calvin University Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2016 CCEL Questions and Answers Archived from the original on 2008 07 25 Jane Plantinga Pauw Archived from the original on July 15 2011 REACHING OUT Missions Archived from the original on 2011 07 13 Mwenda Margaret October 16 2020 What Is a Pastor The Banner Retrieved January 16 2023 Welcome Retrieved April 7 2016 Self profile p 7 Self profile pp 7 8 a b Deane Peter Baker 2007 Alvin Plantinga Cambridge University Press pp 2 8 ISBN 978 0 521 85531 0 Retrieved 16 December 2010 Self profile p 8 Self profile pp 9 16 Self profile p 16 Self profile pp 21 22 Self profile p 30 APA Presidents Archived from the original on April 26 2012 a b c NNP The Casino News Network nnp org Archived from the original on July 4 2008 AgencyND University of Notre Dame Events Retrieved April 7 2016 Agency ND University of Notre Dame Center for Philosophy of Religion Retrieved April 7 2016 University of Pittsburgh University Marketing Communications Webteam Nicholas Rescher Prize for Systematic Philosophy Retrieved April 7 2016 Philosophy department Baylor ISR and major granting organization cooperate in opening Baylor Center for Christian Philosophy Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion www baylorisr org Retrieved 2017 10 16 Felder D W 1971 Disanalogies in Plantinga s Argument regarding the Rationality of Theism Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 10 3 200 207 doi 10 2307 1384479 JSTOR 1384479 Friquegnon M L 1979 God and Other Programs Religious Studies 15 1 83 89 doi 10 1017 S0034412500011100 S2CID 170439088 Copan P 2001 Warranted Christian Belief The Review of Metaphysics 54 4 939 941 JSTOR 20131647 Quinn Philip L Plantinga Alvin in Honderich Ted ed The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford University Press 1995 Free Will Defense in Max Black ed Philosophy in America Ithaca Cornell UP London Allen amp Unwin 1965 Beebe 2005 Meister 2009 p 133 Logical Problem of Evil Retrieved July 16 2012 J L Mackie wrote H ow could there be logically contingent states of affairs prior to the creation and existence of any created beings with free will which an omnipotent god would have to accept and put up with This suggestion is simply incoherent Indeed by bringing in the notion of individual essences which determine presumably non causally how Curly Smith Satan and the rest of us would choose freely or would act in each hypothetical situation Plantinga has not rescued the free will defence but made its weaknesses all too clear Mackie 1982 p 174 Plantinga Alvin 1974 God Freedom and Evil p 49 Alvin Plantinga Warrant The Current Debate New York Oxford University Press 1993 Plantinga Warrant The Current Debate 1993 3 Alvin Plantinga Warrant and Proper Function New York Oxford University Press 1993 WPF p 4 WPF p 21 WPF 237 Plantinga Warrant and Proper Function 1993 194 WPF p 199 211 Fales E 1996 Plantinga s Case against Naturalistic Epistemology Philosophy of Science 63 3 432 451 doi 10 1086 289920 S2CID 170510977 Beilby James 2007 Plantinga s Model of Warranted Christian Belief In Baker Deane Peter ed Alvin Plantinga Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 125 165 ISBN 978 0 521 67143 9 Evolution Shibboleths and Philosophers The Chronicle of Higher Education April 11 2010 Retrieved 2010 04 28 Like any Christian and indeed any theist I believe that the world has been created by God and hence intelligently designed a b Plantinga Alvin 1998 Sennett James F ed The Analytic Theist An Alvin Plantinga Reader Wm B Eerdmans Publishing pp 65 71 ISBN 978 0 8028 4229 9 Marenbon John October 2 2006 Medieval Philosophy An Historical and Philosophical Introduction Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 46183 7 via Google Books Oppy Graham 8 February 1996 Ontological Arguments substantive revision 15 July 2011 Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Martin Michael 2003 Philosophy of religion an anthology Wiley Blackwell pp 282 293 ISBN 978 0 631 21471 7 Craig William Lane 2008 Reasonable faith Crossway p 185 ISBN 978 1 4335 0115 9 Premises 2 5 of this argument are relatively uncontroversial Most philosophers would agree that if God s existence is even possible then he must exist the epistemic entertainability of premise 1 or its denial does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility Gale Richard 1993 On the Nature and Existence of God Cambridge University Press p 227 ISBN 0 521 45723 8 Garson James February 29 2000 Modal Logic Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via plato stanford edu Plantinga Alvin Warrant and Proper Function New York Oxford University Press 1993 pp 225 226 ISBN 978 0 19 507864 0 Nagel Thomas 27 September 2012 A Philosopher Defends Religion The New York Review of Books Plantinga s Evolutionary Argument against Naturalism Reasonable Faith Archived from the original on 2017 08 04 Oppy Graham Trakakis N N 2014 09 11 Twentieth Century Philosophy of Religion The History of Western Philosophy of Religion Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 54638 2 Fitelson Branden Sober Elliott 1998 Plantinga s Probability Arguments Against Evolutionary Naturalism Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 79 2 115 129 doi 10 1111 1468 0114 00053 Exploring The Real Conflict Science Vs Naturalism NPR Notre Dame philosopher Alvin Plantinga has also signed this letter We re Not in Kansas Anymore Nancy Pearcey Christianity Today May 22 2000 cited in Forrest amp Gross 2004 p 18 Alvin Plantinga was also a signatory to this letter early evidence of his continuing support of the intelligent design movement Intelligent design creationism and its critics Robert T Pennock ed 2001 p44 Darwin on Trial back cover ICSD list of Fellows Archived 2013 01 16 at the Wayback Machine but note that this site appears not to have been updated since 2005 Forrest amp Gross 2004 pp 156 191 212 269 Philosophers Rip Darwin The Chronicle of Higher Education March 7 2010 Retrieved 2010 04 28 Evolution Shibboleths and Philosophers The Chronicle of Higher Education April 11 2010 Retrieved 2010 04 28 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Where the Conflict Really Lies via YouTube Bibliography Edit Self profile in Alvin Plantinga James Tomberlin and Peter van Inwagen ed Dordrecht D Riedle Pub Co 1985 Beebe James R July 12 2005 Logical Problem of Evil Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved September 21 2009 Forrest Barbara Gross Paul R 8 January 2004 Creationism s Trojan Horse Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515742 7 Mackie J L 1982 The Miracle of Theism Arguments for and Against the Existence of God Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 824682 X Meister Chad 2009 Introducing Philosophy of Religion Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 40327 6 Peterson Michael Hasker William Reichenbach Bruce Basinger David 1991 Reason and Religious Belief Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 506155 1 Further reading EditSchonecker Dieter ed Essays on Warranted Christian Belief With Replies by Alvin Plantinga Walter de Gruyter Berlin 2015 Baker Deane Peter ed Alvin Plantinga Contemporary Philosophy in Focus Series New York Cambridge University Press 2007 Mascrod Keith Alvin Plantinga and Christian Apologetics Wipf amp Stock 2007 Crisp Thomas Matthew Davidson David Vander Laan eds Knowledge and Reality Essays in Honor of Alvin Plantinga Dordrecht Springer 2006 Beilby James Epistemology as Theology An Evaluation of Alvin Plantinga s Religious Epistemology Aldershot Ashgate 2005 Beilby James ed Naturalism Defeated Essays on Plantinga s Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism Ithaca Cornell University Press 2002 Sennet James ed The Analytic Theist An Alvin Plantinga Reader Grand Rapids Eeardman 1998 ISBN 0 8028 4229 1 Kvanvig Jonathan ed Warrant in Contemporary Epistemology Essays in Honor of Plantinga s Theory of Knowledge Savage Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield 1996 McLeod Mark S Rationality and Theistic Belief An Essay on Reformed Epistemology Cornell Studies in the Philosophy of Religion Ithaca Cornell University Press 1993 Zagzebski Linda ed Rational Faith Notre Dame University of Notre Dame Press 1993 Sennett James Modality Probability and Rationality A Critical Examination of Alvin Plantinga s Philosophy New York P Lang 1992 Hoitenga Dewey From Plato to Plantinga An Introduction to Reformed Epistemology Albany State University of New York Press 1991 Parsons Keith God and the Burden of Proof Plantinga Swinburne and the Analytic Defense of Theism Buffalo New York Prometheus Books 1989 Tomberlin James and Peter van Inwagen eds Alvin Plantinga Profiles V 5 Dordrecht D Reidel 1985 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alvin Plantinga nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Alvin Plantinga Alvin Plantinga s faculty page at the University of Notre Dame Plantinga s Curriculum Vitae Virtual Library of Christian Philosophy a collection of some of Plantinga s papers Papers by Plantinga Extensive collection of online papers Interviews from the PBS program Closer to Truth The Dawkins Confusion Plantinga s review of Richard Dawkins s The God Delusion from Books and Culture magazine Alvin Plantinga s spiritual autobiography from Philosophers Who Believe Clark Kelly James InterVarsity Press 1993 Warrant The Current Debate Plantinga s Gifford Lecture and volume 1 of his Warrant trilogy Warrant and Proper Function Plantinga s Gifford Lecture and volume 2 of his Warrant trilogy Warranted Christian Belief full electronic text of volume 3 of his Warrant trilogy Daniel C Dennett and Alvin Plantinga Science and Religion Are They Compatible Oxford University Press 2011 Proper Functionalism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Professional and academic associationsPreceded byAlan Donagan President of the AmericanPhilosophical Association Western Division1981 1982 Succeeded byManley H Thompson Jr Preceded byRobert Merrihew Adams President of theSociety of Christian Philosophers1983 1986 Succeeded byMarilyn McCord AdamsAwardsPreceded byErnest Sosa Nicholas Rescher Prizefor Systematic Philosophy2012 With Jurgen Mittelstrass Succeeded byHilary PutnamPreceded byJonathan Sacks Templeton Prize2017 Succeeded byAbdullah II of Jordan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alvin Plantinga amp oldid 1175301060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.