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Faith and Philosophy is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Society of Christian Philosophers with support from Asbury Theological Seminary and the University of Arkansas. It is currently edited by Thomas D. Senor. The journal aims to foster the philosophical examination of religion and Christian faith.
European Journal of Philosophy; European Journal of Political Theory; Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics; Existenz; Faith and Philosophy; Feminist Philosophy Quarterly; Film and Philosophy; Foundations of Physics; Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal; The Harvard Review of Philosophy; Heidegger Studies; The Heythrop Journal
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Faith and Philosophy; Film and Philosophy; Filosofia, ara! ... An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy;
The Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy: 1053-699X (print) or 1477-285X (online) JJTP Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group or Brill: Leiden: Netherlands Journal of Late Antique Religion and Culture (2007–2008) 1754-517X JLARC Cardiff University, Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture: Cardiff: Wales: Journal of Markets & Morality: 1098 ...
[14] In Church Life Journal Michael Shindler in turn argued against Hägglund's notion of secular faith in favor of "the absolute sensibility" of religious faith. [15] In contrast, David Chivers in The Humanist heralded This Life as "an important work that pushes forward a secular, rational, and fulfilling view of humankind's place in the world."
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 belief in God could be justified independently of evidence.
Religious epistemology broadly covers religious approaches to epistemological questions, or attempts to understand the epistemological issues that come from religious belief.
Vogel reports that in the 1970s a new "law and religion" approach has progressively built its own contribution to religious studies. Over a dozen scholarly organizations and committees were formed by 1983, and a scholarly quarterly, the Journal of Law and Religion first published that year and the Ecclesiastical Law Journal opened in 1999. [33]