Results for 'Grammar of Assent'

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  1. La Grammar of assent di John Henry Newman come modello gnoseologico del sensus fidelium.Antonio Olmi - 2003 - Divus Thomas 106 (2):57-72.
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  2.  46
    Education and the grammar of assent.Suzy Harris - 2015 - Ethics and Education 10 (2):241-251.
    John Henry Newman is probably known best for The Idea of a University. In his most philosophical work, An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent, however, he undertakes a detailed investigation of different ways of knowing and understanding in a manner that is of clear pertinence for philosophical enquiry into education. He offers many examples and descriptions of particular experiences, from religious and secular life, and on the strength of these he argues that before enquiry can (...)
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  3.  29
    Antecedent Probability and A Grammar of Assent.Marvin R. O’Connell - 1987 - New Scholasticism 61 (2):218-229.
  4.  44
    Warranting Christian Belief in Afterlife: Testing Newman’s Grammar of Assent.Edward Jeremy Miller - 2006 - Newman Studies Journal 3 (1):12-22.
    Most people believe in an afterlife, but is such a belief warranted? While Newman did not specifically treat the doctrine of afterlife, his Grammar of Assent furnishes a trajectory that shows that Christians can believe in this doctrine with a warranted assent, precisely because the Church is a warranted belief.
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  5.  57
    (2 other versions)An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.John Henry Newman & Nicholas Lash - 1870 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press. Edited by Charles Frederick Harrold.
    This classic of Christian apologetics seeks to persuade the skeptic that there are good reasons to believe in God even though it si impossible to understand the Deity fully. First written over a century ago, the _Grammar of Assent _speaks as powerfully to us today as it did to its first readers. Because of the informal, non-technical character of Newman's work, it still retains its immediacy as an invaluable guide to the nature of religious belief. An introduction by Nicholas (...)
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  6.  42
    “Notions” and “Things” in John Henry Newman’s Grammar of Assent.Brendan Case - 2013 - Newman Studies Journal 10 (1):15-27.
    In discussing apprehension, assent, and inference in his Grammar of Assent, Newman contrasted “notions” and “things”—terms that distinguish knowledge of the abstract and “unreal” from knowledge of the singular and concrete. This essay proposes that Newman’s contrast between “notions” and “things” is an adverbial distinction, qualifying a person’s mode of engagement with the world, rather than an adjectival distinction, qualifying the metaphysical status of particular terms.
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  7. Newman and the Grammar of Assent.Pascal Engel - unknown
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  8.  35
    Cardinal Newman's grammar of assent on conscience as a way to God.Edward A. Sillem - 1964 - Heythrop Journal 5 (4):377–401.
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  9.  27
    Newman’s Romantic Meta-Rhetoric in An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.Dwight A. Lindley - 2008 - Renascence 61 (1):39-50.
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  10.  19
    From rationality to credibility: The proposal to epistemological faith in the “Grammar of assent” by John Henry Newman.Luis Mauricio Albornoz Olivares - 2018 - Veritas: Revista de Filosofía y Teología 40:95-120.
    Resumen A partir de la Ilustración, la ciencia y la fe ―otrora caminos comunes para alcanzar conocimiento―, se han visto divorciadas y constituidas como realidades divergentes que se oponen cada vez más. La modernidad trajo consigo la insistencia en estas ideas y el divorcio entre ciencia y fe parece no detenerse. El presente artículo propone en un dialogo con John Henry Newman reconocer el lugar propio de la ciencia positiva respecto de la fe religiosa, presentando la distinción epistemológica, o el (...)
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  11.  43
    Religion and Imagination ‘in aid of a grammar of assent’.Alan P. F. Sell - 1982 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 29:300-303.
  12.  21
    Conflicting Images of God in John Henry Newman’s Grammar of Assent.Stephanie Terril - 2022 - Heythrop Journal 63 (1):111-127.
    The Heythrop Journal, Volume 63, Issue 1, Page 111-127, January 2022.
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  13.  10
    An indexed synopsis of the "Grammar of assent,".John Joseph Toohey - 1906 - London [etc.]: Longmans, Green, and co..
    An Indexed Synopsis of the Grammar of Assent by John J. Toohey. This book is a reproduction of the original book published in 1906 and may have some imperfections such as marks or hand-written notes.
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  14.  38
    Real Apprehension in Newman’s An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.R. Michael Olson - 2005 - International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (4):499-516.
    In An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent, John Henry Newman articulates his fundamental philosophical orientation by giving priority to real apprehension over notional apprehension. He distinguishes between the two by saying that notional apprehension hasto do with things internal to the mind and admits of exactness and clarity whereas real apprehension has to do with things external to the mind and does not admit of the same degree of clarity and exactness. I argue that the (...)
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  15.  42
    Newman’s Romantic Meta-Rhetoric in An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.Christian Humanism, Cold Grace & Christian Faith - 2008 - Renascence 61 (1):39-50.
  16.  24
    Newman on the Relationship between Natural and Revealed Religion: His University Sermons and the Grammar of Assent.Randall Rosenberg - 2007 - Newman Studies Journal 4 (1):55-68.
    This essay discusses Newman’s view of the relationship between Natural and Revealed Religion in his second University Sermon and in his Grammar of Assent. To what extent did Newman’s view change during the four decades between this early Anglican sermon and his major treatment of the nature of faith as a Roman Catholic?
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  17.  46
    The way to faith: an examination of Newman's 'Grammar of assent' as a response to the search for certainty in faith.David A. Pailin - 1969 - London,: Epworth P..
    Contemporary uncertainty about faith finds its roots in the nineteenth century. The first chapter of this book indicates how philosophical, ethical, scientific, literary, historical, and democratic developments during that century brought about a fundamental crisis for faith. This crisis was reflected in Newman's attempts, both as an Anglican and as a Roman Catholic, to understand the nature of faith and of its certainty. A survey of Newman's intellectual background and of his discussions of the problem of faith, in unpublished as (...)
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  18. Die Assensus-Lehre des Antonio Rosmini-Serbati. Dargestellt in ihrem Verhältnis zu Newmans Grammar of Assent.K. -H. Menke - 1987 - Theologie Und Philosophie 62 (1):43-58.
     
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  19.  76
    Newman’s Romantic Meta-Rhetoric in An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.Denise Levertov as Teacher - 2008 - Renascence 61 (1):39-50.
  20.  89
    The Clerk's Tale and the grammar of assent.Linda Georgianna - 1995 - Speculum 70 (4):793-821.
    The Clerk's Tale is the most elusive and least reassuring of Chaucer's religious tales. Though bad things happen to good people in the other religious narratives in the Canterbury collection, repeated assurances in those tales confirm that the world is governed by a powerful God intent on rewarding his faithful followers. By comparison, the Clerk and his tale are disturbingly silent on the subject of God's plan until the very end, leading many readers to categorize the tale as secular, developing (...)
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  21.  23
    An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent[REVIEW]M. Jamie Ferreira - 1986 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 31:474-475.
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  22. An essay in aid of a grammar of assent.John Henry Newman - 1973 - Westminster, Md.,: Christian Classics.
     
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  23.  18
    Literature and Theology as a Grammar of Assent by David Jasper.Anthony Rosselli - 2018 - Newman Studies Journal 15 (1):95-97.
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  24. The stoics on the grammar of action.Brad Inwood - 1984 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 23 (S1):75-86.
    This article reconstructs key features of the early stoic analysis of human action from surviving fragmentary reports. Special attention is paid to how the concepts of assent and command (understood as real mental events) and the more general concept of meaning ("lekta") are used to enrich an analysis of action as a response to a stimulative presentation.
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  25.  34
    Newman’s Skeptical Paradox.Joe Milburn - 2020 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 94 (1):105-123.
    John Henry Newman starts the second half of the Grammar of Assent by laying out a “paradox,” and he announces that the purpose of the following chapters of the book is to resolve it. Surprisingly, recent scholarship has tended not to question the nature of this paradox. In this paper, I argue that we should understand Newman’s paradox to be a kind of skeptical paradox that arises when we accept “Lockean rationalism.” I then show how Newman deals with (...)
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  26.  47
    Lonergan’s Retrieval of Thomas Aquinas’s Conception of the Imago Dei.Fred Lawrence - 2009 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 83 (3):363-388.
    This paper sets forth and advocates Bernard Lonergan’s understanding of Aquinas’s use of “intelligible emanations” as an analogy for processions in the Trinity. It argues that some of Lonergan’s views on consciousness, understanding, phronesis, and judgement are similar to views expressed in Hans-Georg Gadamer’s Truth and Method and John Henry Newman’s An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.
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  27.  53
    (1 other version)Synthesizing Aquinas and Newman on Religion.Matthew Walz - 2019 - International Journal of the Philosophy of Religion:1-26.
    In this paper I carry out a philosophical inquiry that yields an account of religion as a personal disposition. This exercise is expository, since I take my bearings from two thinkers, Thomas Aquinas and John Henry Newman. Regarding Aquinas, this means delineating his treatment of the virtue of 'religio' in the 'Summa theologiae'; regarding Newman, it means attending to his description of the experience of being religious in 'Grammar of Assent'. The resulting account captures both the “objective” face (...)
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  28.  57
    Cardinal Newman's Phenomenology of Religious Belief.Jay Newman - 1974 - Religious Studies 10 (2):129 - 140.
    While one of John Henry Newman's principal aims in the Grammar of Assent is to explain how men can give a ‘real assent’ to the existence of God, the major part of the actual phenomenology of religious belief in the work is concentrated in the fifth of its ten chapters. Unfortunately, this section of the essay has been overshadowed by the preliminary distinction between real and notional apprehension and by the later invocation of the illative sense; but (...)
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  29.  30
    The Personal Conquest of Truth according to J. H. Newman. [REVIEW]C. Stephen Dessain - 1956 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 6:213-215.
    The Grammar of Assent is at first sight a baffling book. It has no preface, and its opening sentences are dry and forbidding. Yet once Newman’s purpose is grasped, its whole drift becomes clear. Aldous Huxley remarked long ago that “Newman’s analysis of the psychology of thought remains one of the most acute, as it is certainly the most elegant, which has ever been made”. One opens Father Boekraad’s study hoping that at last this want of an introduction (...)
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  30.  92
    Two Views of Religious Certitude.Stephen Maitzen - 1992 - Religious Studies 28 (1):65 - 74.
    At least since Cardinal Newman's Grammar of Assent , Anglo-American philosophers have been concerned with the role of certitude, or subjective epistemic certainty, in theistic belief. Newman is himself famous for holding that certitude is an essential feature of any sort of genuine belief, including in particular religious belief. As one recent commentator, Michael Banner, notes, for Newman.
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  31.  7
    The Later Wittgenstein: The Emergence of a New Philosophical Method by S. Stephen Hilmy. [REVIEW]John Churchill - 1989 - The Thomist 53 (3):533-538.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 533 Grammar of Assent. Yet whereas Reid had urged a fundamental agree· ment on first principles on the intuitive basis of common sense, Newman thought such principles were discovered inductively and that there might he much disagreement. It was the disagreement itself that led to the need for a better understanding of the reasoning process. In place of common sense, Newman appealed to the illative (...)
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  32.  6
    An Integrative Habit of Mind: John Henry Newman on the Path to Wisdom by Frederick D. Aquino.David Fleischacker - 2016 - The Thomist 80 (3):481-485.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:An Integrative Habit of Mind: John Henry Newman on the Path to Wisdom by Frederick D. AquinoDavid FleischackerAn Integrative Habit of Mind: John Henry Newman on the Path to Wisdom. By Frederick D. Aquino. DeKalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 2012. Pp. x + 129. $29.00 (cloth). ISBN: 978-0-87580-452-1.Frederick Aquino has spent a number of years digesting Newman’s thought and interfacing it with a number of facets of (...)
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  33.  66
    An Implicit Model of “Conception” in the Theological Papers of John Henry Newman on Faith and Certainty.Stephanie Terril - 2004 - Newman Studies Journal 1 (2):62-89.
    In attempting to describe the relationship between reason and faith, Newman repeatedly wrestled with questions concerning the human way of knowing. This article explores Newman’s reflections on the process of “conception” in his theological papers that were unpublished during his lifetime, yet in retrospect can be seen as preparatory steps in his eventual writing of the Grammar of Assent.
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  34.  34
    Newman: Certain Knowledge and “The Problem of the Criterion”.Marty Miller Maddox - 2007 - Newman Studies Journal 4 (1):69-86.
    This essay examines Newman’s approach to the age-old skeptical “problem of the criterion” in his An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent. By examining Newman’s accent on the illative sense as right judgment in rationation, especially in the justification of first principles of knowledge, this essay depicts Newman as offering a proceduralist approach to answering “the problem of the criterion.”.
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  35.  60
    The relationship of religion and ethics: A comparison of Newman and contemporary philosophy of religion.Mark Wynn - 2005 - Heythrop Journal 46 (4):435–449.
    John Henry Newman's An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent is a commonly cited source for the idea that religion and ethics are in some fashion mutually implicated, and specifically the idea that religious belief can be grounded in our moral experience.1 In this paper I aim to do two things. First of all, I shall try to show that Newman's account of the relationship between religious and ethical understanding, as expounded in the Grammar, is (...)
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  36.  34
    John Henry Newman and Bernard Lonergan: A Note on the Development of Christian Doctrine.Philip A. Egan - 2007 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 63 (4):1103 - 1123.
    The affinities between John Henry Newman and Bernard Lonergan have often been remarked, particularly the seminal influence of Newman's Grammar on the early Lonergan. Although Newman was only one tributary flowing into the mainstream, and so the 'chain of dependence' should not be over-estimated, Lonergan did remain in a two-fold debt to Newman: for his doctrine of assent and for his commitment to history. The manner in which Newman and Lonergan respectively tackle the vexed issue of the development (...)
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  37.  12
    Knowledge and Belief.Floyd C. Medford - 1980 - Philosophy Research Archives 6:384-392.
    The paper assumes the usefulness of juxtaposing the major philosophical, religious, and literary components of the milieu of Newman's notion of knowledge. Rooted in classical philosophies of mind, his view draws both upon the idealisms of Kant and others and upon the variety of romanticisms of Coleridge and of the Oxford Movement. His Apologia Pro Vita Sua holds in uneasy reconciliation his insistence at once upon the necessity of rational grounds for belief and upon the psyche's need for transcendence of (...)
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  38.  33
    “Real” and “Notional” in Newman’s Thought.Keith Beaumont - 2020 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 94 (1):27-56.
    Newman’s constant preoccupation with “connectedness” leads him to explore and to insist upon the importance of the relationship between the “notional” and the “real,” and therefore of that between theology and philosophy, on the one hand, and spirituality and morality or ethics, on the other. This paper explores Newman’s expression of these ideas, firstly in his sermons and theological writings, and finally in the more philosophical context of the Grammar of Assent.
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  39.  21
    Newman in Twentieth-Century American Literature: Fitzgerald, Lewis, and O’Connor.James M. Pribek - 2009 - Newman Studies Journal 6 (1):5-19.
    This essay traces Newman’s rich legacy in modern American literature in the writings of three prominent American writers of the last century: F. Scott Fitzgerald, who plays off of Newman’s definition of a gentleman in his The Beautiful and Damned ; Sinclair Lewis, who connects the figure of Carlyle Vesper to Newman in Gideon Planish ; and Flannery O’Connor, who mentioned Newman in four published letters, and whose artistic vision was shaped appreciably by Newman’s Apologia and his Grammar of (...)
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  40.  31
    Evidentialism, Fideism, and John Henry Newman.William Sweet - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 7:75-80.
    Many studies in the philosophy of religion have focussed on the character of religious faith and whether there is place for a rational demonstration of religious belief. These studies frequently pit ‘evidentialists’ against ‘non-evidentialists’. Interestingly, these issues were of central concern to the 19th century philosopher John Henry Newman - principally in his Grammar of Assent and his Oxford Sermons - where Newman attempts a ‘via media’ between these two extremes. In this paper, my focus is not so (...)
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  41.  21
    John Henry Newman: Analogy, Image and Reality.Ian Ker - 2015 - Newman Studies Journal 12 (2):15-32.
    By apologetics one generally means the kind of intellectual apologetics that we find in Newman’s Development of Christian Doctrine, Apologia, and Grammar of Assent. But Newman was also the persuasive apologist of the imagination, particularly in his two novels and Difficulties of Anglicans and Present Position of Catholics. In Loss and Gain Newman takes his readers into a Catholic church to experience the reality of Catholic worship, an imaginative experience designed to impress upon their imagination the difference between (...)
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  42.  10
    Henry Longueville Mansel: Victorian theology, philosophy, and politics.Francesca Norman - 2023 - Boston: Brill.
    Henry Longueville Mansel (1820-1871), Anglican theologian and philosopher, has wrongly been remembered as a Kantian agnostic whose ideas led to those of Herbert Spencer. Francesca Norman's book provides a thorough revisioning of Mansel's theology in context and reveals the personal basis of Spencer's animus towards Mansel. Mansel is revealed as an orthodox Anglican theistic personalist whose ideas inspired Newman to write his Grammar of Assent. Located in context, Mansel's personal connections with leading Tory figures such as Lord Carnarvon (...)
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  43.  66
    Newman on Conscience.Walter E. Conn - 2009 - Newman Studies Journal 6 (2):15-26.
    After reviewing Newman’s famous defense of conscience in his Letter to the Duke of Norfolk (1875), this essay assembles Newman’s lifelong reflections on conscience—from his Anglican sermons to his Grammar of Assent (1870)—in a threefold structure: desire, discernment, and demand.
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  44.  71
    Newman's Psychological Discovery: The Illative Sense.O. F. M. Dr Zeno - 1950 - Franciscan Studies 10 (4):418-440.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:NEWMAN'S PSYCHOLOGICAL DISCOVERY: THE ILLATIVE SENSE (V. Continued) 15. The Universals. A long and vehement dispute once raged about the reality of universals. Are they only mental creations, forged by the human brain, without any reality outside them, or have they some independent existence apart from their mental reality? Anyhow, there was an apparent contradiction between die universal character of our ideas and the individual character of concrete things. (...)
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  45. Faith and Reason.Duncan Pritchard - 2017 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 81:101-118.
    A novel account of the rationality of religious belief is offered, called quasi-fideism. According to this proposal, we are neither to think of religious belief as completely immune to rational evaluation nor are we to deny that it involves fundamental commitments which are arational. Moreover, a parity argument is presented to the effect that religious belief is no different from ordinary rational belief in presupposing such fundamental arational commitments. This proposal is shown to be rooted in Wittgenstein's remarks on hinge (...)
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  46. Cardinal Newman, Reformed Epistemologist?Stephen R. Grimm - 2001 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 75 (4):497-522.
    Despite the recent claims of some prominent Catholic philosophers, I argue that Cardinal Newman's writings are in fact largely compatible with the contemporary movement in the philosophy of religion known as Reformed Epistemology, and in particular with the work of Alvin Plantinga. I first show how the thought of both Newman and Plantinga was molded in response to the "evidentialist" claims of John Locke. I then examine the details of Newman's response, especially as seen in his Essay in Aid of (...)
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  47.  51
    What Newman Can Give Catholic Philosophers Today.John F. Crosby - 2020 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 94 (1):5-26.
    In this article I explain various points of contact between Newman and the Catholic philosophical tradition. I begin with Newman’s personalism as it is found in the Grammar of Assent, especially in the distinction between notional and real assent, and in the distinction between formal and informal inference. Then I proceed to Newman’s personalism as it is found in his teaching on conscience and on doctrinal development. I then consider Newman as proto-phenomenologist and also as an Augustinian (...)
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  48.  40
    Newman on Natural and Revealed Religion.Cyril O’Regan - 2020 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 94 (1):159-186.
    This essay reflects on Newman’s famous analyses of natural and revealed religion and their relation in the tenth and final chapter of the Grammar of Assent. There are two lines of reflection, the first internalist, the second externalist. On the first front, the essay draws attention to how conscience plays a foundational role in Newman’s discussion of natural religion and how it helps to distinguish it from the “religion of civilization,” which Newman considers to be a rationalist substitute (...)
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  49. Wittgenstein and John Henry Newman on certainty.Wolfgang Kienzler - 2006 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 71 (1):117-138.
    Wittgenstein read and admired the work of John Henry Newman. Evidence suggests that from 1946 until 1951 Newman's Grammar of Assent was probably the single most important external stimulus for Wittgenstein's thought. In important respects Wittgenstein's reactions to G. E. Moore follow hints already given by Newman.
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  50. Newman the Fallibilist.Logan Paul Gage & Frederick D. Aquino - 2023 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 97 (1):29-47.
    The role of certitude in our mental lives is, to put it mildly, controversial. Many current epistemologists (including epistemologists of religion) eschew certitude altogether. Given his emphasis on certitude, some have maintained that John Henry Newman was an infallibilist about knowledge. In this paper, we argue that a careful examination of his thought (especially as seen in the Grammar of Assent) reveals that he was an epistemic fallibilist. We first clarify what we mean by fallibilism and infallibilism. Second, (...)
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