Reason and Faith; Their Claims and Conflicts / From The Edinburgh Review, October 1849, Volume 90, No. CLXXXII. (Pages 293-356)
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About This Book
An extended critical essay contends that reason and faith are coeval human faculties that must operate together, each checking and aiding the other. It distinguishes reason's domains—intuitions, necessary deductions, and empirical inference—from faith's reliance on extrinsic grounds such as credible testimony, while stressing their mutual entwinement. Drawing on moral and theological reflection, the author argues that proper belief requires proportionate evidence, rejects absolutist exclusion of either faculty, and maintains that only demonstrable contradictions should bar assent. The piece closes by urging balance in religious judgment and by addressing objections to revelation and doctrinal reception in light of probability and accumulated evidence.
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