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Library: Modern Documents: Nontheism: Atheism: Arguments for Atheism

Arguments for Atheism

In this section, "arguments for atheism" means "arguments for the nonexistence of God." (Worried about the logic of "proving a negative"? Click here.) In the jargon of the philosophy of religion, such arguments are known as "atheological arguments." The argument from evil (sometimes referred to as 'the problem of evil') is by far the most famous of such arguments, but it is by no means the only such argument. Indeed, in the 1990s philosophers developed a flurry of atheological arguments; arguably the most famous of such arguments is the argument from reasonable nonbelief (also known as the argument from divine hiddenness).

There are two types of atheological arguments:

Note: these definitions were taken from Paul Draper, "Evolution and the Problem of Evil," in Philosophy of Religion (3rd ed., ed. Louis P. Pojman, Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1998), p. 220.



Common Arguments (1997) by mathew

Some common arguments for and against the atheist position, which crop up time and time again--each with one or more of the standard responses, and which don't fit neatly into either of the above two categories. A "must read" if you think you have a good argument and you want to know if it has already been discussed.




Jeffery Jay Lowder maintains this page.


 
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Last updated: Friday, 21-Mar-2008 14:43:07 CDT