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    Practical reason can ground belief where theoretical reas... — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→The practical argument for God's existence is decisive

    Practical reason can ground belief where theoretical reason cannot

    Natural TheologyTruth & Knowledge
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    Natural TheologyTruth & Knowledge

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    Belief in God is required as a postulate of practical reason to make rational se...The practical argument for God's existence is decisiveThe theoretical arguments for God's existence fail

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    Practical reason can decide what to believe when theoretical reason ca...87%Practical grounds are sufficient for belief even when theoretical grou...87%Circular inference cannot ground justified belief.83%To establish that intuitions fail to justify belief, an argument must ...83%

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    Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) is the most important figure of the Enlightenment in Germany, but his project is different in many ways from those of his French contemporaries. He was brought up in a pietist Lutheran family, and his system retains many features from, for example, Crusius. But he was also indebted through Wolff to Leibniz. Moreover, he was ‘awoken from his dogmatic slumbers’ by reading Hume, though Kant is referring here to Hume's attack on causation, not his ethical theory (Prolegomen

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