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  • Evidential Arguments from Ignorance and Knowledge Meierding, Loren 2013 Philo , Vol. 16 , Issue 2 , S. 117 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1098-3570 | 2154-1639 10.5840/Philo20131628 Abstract

    In his Dialogues and Natural Religion, David Hume offered an inductive argument claiming that the observed mixture of good and evil in the world inductively justifies belief in indifferent first causes. The existence of a benevolent, omniscient God is rejected because it is much less probable. I show that a more comprehensive analysis of Hume’s argument applying Bayes’s Theorem indicates that if the good in our world greatly outweighs the evil, theists can then claim the inductive evidence actually provides confirmation for classical theism. I provide some reasons for believing that good greatly exceeds evil. Views that good modestly exceeds evil or is balanced by evil are also considered.

    Schlagwörter

    Philosophy and Religion

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