![]() ![]() Nor are they accepted as the conclusion of an argument from religious experience. Specific Christian beliefs may, indeed, constitute excellent explanations of one or another phenomenon (the Christian teaching of sin leaps to mind here), but they aren’t accepted because they provide such an explanation. ![]() or accepted on the evidential basis of other beliefs, or accepted just because it constitutes a good explanation of phenomena of one kind or another. Proper Basicality and the Role of ScriptureĪccording to the model, Christian belief in the typical case is not the conclusion of an argument (which is not to say arguments cannot play an important role in its acceptance), 324 324 For example, in rebutting defeaters: see below, chapter 11. ![]()
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