Is It Natural to Believe In God?

Faith and Philosophy 6 (2):155-171 (1989)
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Abstract

Believing that traditional Christian theism implies there is something epistemically wrong with religious unbelief, I examine John Calvin’s claim that everybody would believe in God if it weren’t for sin. I show why this claim ought to be more common than it is; develop it in terms of our naturally having certain reliable epistemic sets; utilize that development to specify exactly what is wrong with unbelief; and then argue that even unbelievers have some reason to think it is true.

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Mark Talbot
Wheaton College, Illinois

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