Religious Belief and the Will
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:31st Oct '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Can we ever achieve belief by a direct act of will? If it will help us to be happier, should we make ourselves believe propositions which the evidence alone does not warrant? These are the sort of questions which Professor Pojman examines in Religious Belief and the Will (originally published in 1986). He deals with a constellation of problems related to believing and willing to believe; his main concern is with religious faith and belief, though his analysis is also of interest to epistemology and ethics.
Pojman asks what is so important about believing propositions in the first place, and why religious creeds have made propositional belief a necessary condition for salvation. He considers whether one can be rational and still use the will to believe what the evidence alone does not warrant. He also discusses whether faith and belief are generically related or distinct attitudes.
This is the first full-length treatise on religious belief that approaches the subject from the viewpoint of volitional activity (i.e., related to the will). It presents a rethinking of the way the will interacts with belief, a relationship often misconstrued in works of philosophy and theology. Pojman believes that the will is central to religious commitment, and that by understanding the relationship between the attitude of belief and the activity of willing, we are enabled to get fresh insight into the classical problem of religious belief and the will.
Review of the first publication:
“In this first-rate study, Pojman has many interesting things to say about volitionalism, the ethics of belief, Plantinga’s foundationalism, the role of reason in religious belief, the logic of non-rule bound intuitive judgements, etc.”
— John Donnelly, University of San Diego
ISBN: 9781032868431
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 670g
270 pages