New Insights and Directions in Religious Epistemology, a series of workshops held in Oxford University on 13th-14th March and 12th-13th June 2013. The aim of this project is to make a bold and lasting impact on religious epistemology. This project aims to bring recent developments in epistemology to bear on topics in the philosophy of religion in a way that will open up new channels of research in religious epistemology. The project is centered around, but not limited to, interesting and novel applications developing out of six main topics: (i) contextualism and pragmatic encroachment, (ii) safety and knowledge, (iii) epistemic defeat, (iv) testimony, (v) formal epistemology, and (vi) etiology of belief. The project will be led by John Hawthorne and will involve 3 postdoctoral researchers, 3 PhD students, 22 visiting research fellowships, 9 public lectures, 4 roundtable discussions, 6 workshops, and 1 major international conference. This project, valued at 1.3 million GBP, has been made possible by the generous support of the John Templeton Foundation.
Latest episodes of the podcast Religious Epistemology, Contextualism, and Pragmatic Encroachment
- Reasoning with Plenitude
- Testimony, Error, and Reasonable Belief in Medieval Religious Epistemology
- Fine-Tuning Fine-Tuning
- What is Justified Group Belief
- Foundations of the Fine-Tuning Argument
- How to Appear to Know that God Exists
- Show and Tell
- The Rev’d Mr Bayes and the Life Everlasting
- Phenomenal Conservatism and Religious Belief
- The inevitable implausibility of physical determinism
- The inevitable implausibility of physical determinism (Other Resource)