Abstract
The view that religious experience is a valid ground of basic religious beliefs inevitably raises the problem of the apparently incompatible belief-systems arising from different forms of religious experience. David Basinger's and William Alston's responses to the problem present the Christian belief-system as the sole exception to the general rule that religious experience gives rise to false beliefs. A more convincing response presents it as an exemplification of the general rule that religious experience gives rise (subject to possible defeaters) to true beliefs. This requires a two-level' conception
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CITATION STYLE
Hick, J. (1993). Religious Pluralism and the Rationality of Religious Belief. Faith and Philosophy, 10(2), 242–249. https://doi.org/10.5840/faithphil199310218
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