
Department of Religion and Classics
Philosophy of Religion
REL 111 | PHL 111
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Prof.
Edward Wierenga
Office: Rush Rhees Library 430
Hours: Monday 1:00-2:00, or by appointment
Phone: x59370 (office), x55378 (department)
e-mail: edward.wierenga@rochester.edu
Topics include the existence of God, the nature of God, and the relation of God to the world. We will examine traditional arguments for and against God's existence, we will consider divine attributes such as omnipotence and omniscience, and we will discuss such topics as miracles and evidence for theistic belief. Three lectures per week with opportunity for discussion.
I expect that you will attend class regularly and that you will prepare for each class session by doing the required reading.
There will be three essay tests according to the following schedule:
In addition, you will be required to write a short paper (5-6 pages) due on November 26. The tests and the paper will each determine 25% of your final grade. Your grade may be be rounded up if you show serious effort or make dramatic improvement after the first test, but in no case will that happen if your attendance is poor.
Don't plagiarize: Remember to quote all words that are not your own and to indicate by citation the source of any ideas that are not your own. The University's Academic Honesty Policy may be found at http://www.rochester.edu/College/CCAS/AdviserHandbook/AcadHonesty.html. Violations of academic honesty will be taken very seriously and dealt with according to the terms of this Policy.
Course Web Pages
The web pages for this course may be found at http://www.courses.rochester.edu/wierenga/REL111/.
This syllabus is available there, as are a list of important dates
for the semester, suggested paper topics and directions for writing the
course paper, and lecture outlines. I encourage you to print out a copy
of the relevant lecture outline in advance of our class meetings--that way you
can spend more of class time thinking and less of it writing.
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0. Introduction: Sept. 5, 7, 10: Arguments and Proving God's Existence |
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| I. Arguments for God's Existence | ||
| Sept. 12, 14, 17: The Cosmological Argument | ||
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| Sept. 19, 21, 24: The Teleological Argument (Argument from Design) | ||
recommended:
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| Sept. 26, 28, Oct. 1, 3, 5: The Ontological Argument | ||
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| II. An Argument Against God's Existence | ||
| Oct. 12, 15, 17, 19, 22, 24: The Problem of Evil | ||
recommended:
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| III. Some Divine Attributes | ||
| Oct. 26, 29, 31: Omnipotence | ||
recommended:
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| Nov. 2, 5, 7: Omniscience | ||
recommended:
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| IV. Miracles | ||
| Nov. 12, 14, 16, 26: Miracles and Evidence | ||
recommended
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| Quodlibetal Questions Nov. 28 V. Faith and Reason |
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| Nov. 30, Dec. 3, 5, 7, 10: Religion and Rationality | ||
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Last updated 5 September 2007 by Edward Wierenga
© Edward Wierenga 2007