1st Edition

Value and Reality The Philosophical Case for Theism

By Alfred Cyril Ewing Copyright 1973
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    286 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is a major work by one of the best-known philosophical writers, representing the culmination of some twenty-five years’ work on the possibility of giving a rational defence of the claims of the religious man, and specifically the theist, in the face of modern criticisms. Dr Ewing’s object has been to fulfil what seem to him the two most important tasks for the philosopher in at least the present age, namely, to see if it is still possible to give a rational defence of a genuinely religious point of view, and to do the same thing for an objective ethics, a task he has attempted in other works, and continues here.

    The conclusions are that while there can be no question of strict, logical proof, an ethical theism can be defended rationally as an explanatory, metaphysical hypothesis and there are no grounds to reject as illusory the most fundamental intuitive convictions of religion. The book, originally published in 1973, included a new theory of the ultimate criterion of truth for hypotheses, a restatement of the case for a substantial self and for indeterminism, a fresh treatment of the moral and certain other arguments for God, some points in the discussion of the problem of evil and some speculations on time.

    Preface  1. Philosophy and Religion  2. The Possibility of Metaphysics  3. Criteria of Truth  4. Mind and Body  5. Moral Judgements  6. Intuitive Conviction as Evidence in Religion  7. Metaphysical Arguments for the Existence of God  8. Moral Arguments for God  9. The Problem of Evil  10. The Problem of Freedom  11. God and Man: Further Points