PHIL 281 Philosophy of Religion (Same as Religion 281) (Not offered 2006-2007; to be offered 2007-2008)
Our goal in this course will be to try to determine how far reason can justify
belief in God. We will spend roughly half of the semester examining well-
known philosophical arguments for and against the existence of God (including
the ontological argument, the cosmological argument, the teleological argument,
the argument from religious experience, the argument from evil, and the argument from religious disagreement). In each case, we will consider both historically important formulations and contemporary reformulations in an effort to
identify, and then assess, the strongest version of the argument.
After working through these arguments, we will reflect in a more general way
on the proper roles of reason and faith in religious belief, asking when it is appropriate to rely on faith and why. In the final section of the course we'll examine the relationship between God, morality, and politics. Here we'll consider
whether God could be the foundation of morality and what role people's
religious beliefs should play in political decision making. Our tools in this course
will be logic and reason, even when we are trying to determine what the limits of
reason might be. Authors will include Plato, Anselm, Aquinas, Pascal, Paley,
Hume, Kant, Kierkegaard, Freud, Marx, and several contemporary philosophers.
Format: lecture/discussion. Requirements: two take-home exams, and several
shorter assignments; attendance and active participation in class discussion.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 25. (expected: 20-25). Preference to first
years and sophomores interested in majoring in Philosophy.