| ... |
... |
@@ -1,0
+1,19 @@ |
|
1 |
+God Exists, three warrants. |
|
2 |
+Keller, Timothy J. The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism. New York: Dutton, 2008. Print. |
|
3 |
+The Mysterious Bang ... it is helpful. |
|
4 |
+ |
|
5 |
+And if God exists it implies absolute obligations to future generations. It would still be rational to conform to God’s intentions given his present ability to affect our rational self-interest (e.g. Hell). |
|
6 |
+Adams, Robert. “Must God Create the Best?” The Philosophical Review. Vol. 81 No. 3 (Jul. 1972) Jstor. |
|
7 |
+Even if the ... the best possible. |
|
8 |
+ |
|
9 |
+The cosmological argument proves God exists. |
|
10 |
+Kreeft, Peter (Professor of philosophy at Boston College). Handbook of Christian Apologetics. 1994. |
|
11 |
+Everything that is ... is not explained. |
|
12 |
+ |
|
13 |
+God’s existence makes them the source of morality. |
|
14 |
+Craig William L. Craig (PhD in philosophy at University of Birmingham and Research Professor at Biola University) “The Indispensability of Theological Meta-ethical Foundations for Morality” (1996) |
|
15 |
+Consider, then, the ... foundation for morality. |
|
16 |
+ |
|
17 |
+Any risk of God outweighs framework defense. |
|
18 |
+Kreeft 2, Peter (Professor of philosophy at Boston College). Handbook of Christian Apologetics. 1994. |
|
19 |
+But the only chance of doing infinite justice is if God exists and we believe, while the only chance of doing infinite injustice is if God exists and we do not believe. If God does not exist, there is no one there to do infinite justice or infinite injustice to. |