Lexington Books
Pages: 290
Trim: 7 x 9
978-1-4985-5017-8 • Hardback • December 2018 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-5019-2 • Paperback • July 2020 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-5018-5 • eBook • July 2020 • $42.50 • (£30.00)
Guy Axtell is professor of philosophy at Radford University.
Part I
Religious Cognition and Philosophy of Luck
1 Types of Religious Luck: A Working Taxonomy
2 The New Problem of Religious Luck
Part II
Applications and Implications of Inductive Risk
3 Enemy in the Mirror: The Need for Comparative Fundamentalism
4 We Are All of the Common Herd: Montaigne and the Psychology of our ‘Importunate Presumptions’
5 Scaling the ‘Brick Wall’: Measuring and Censuring Strongly Fideistic Religious Orientation
6 The Pattern Stops Here? Counter-Inductive Thinking, Counter-Intuitive Ideas, and Cognitive Science of Religion
Guy Axtell’s new book, as the title suggests, is an attempt to assess the limits of reasonable religious disagreement. In trying to delineate those limits Axtell thinks that it is useful to employ the notions of luck and risk in examining how reasonable a particular religious (or atheistic) stance is. A central concern of the book is with religious groups which exclude others in some way and which ascribe traits to those other groups that are very unlike the traits the group ascribes to themselves.... Problems of Religious Luck takes a fresh look at the kinds of problems raised by the contingency of people’s beliefs on their location (the time they live in, the place they live in, the family they grow up in, the groups they happen to be exposed to, and so on).... His book is intelligent, thought provoking, and it does valuable work in promoting a more open-minded and empathetic approach to religious disagreement.²⁶
— Wittgenstein-Studien
In this book, Guy Axtell joins this important conversation about lucky belief, with an eye toward the religious case. He focuses on the epistemic justification of religious belief: the "de jure question" (p. 6). Axtell's main target is religious exclusivism -- a doctrinal or soteriological uniqueness that sets a particular religion apart from other religions. . . . Overall, the contingency of belief is a fascinating issue that deserves serious consideration. I'm hopeful that Axtell's book draws more attention to the intriguing problems raised by religious luck.— Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
A thought-provoking, historically-informed, and highly distinctive take on the important questions raised by religious luck, this is a welcome addition to the literature.— Duncan Pritchard, University of Edinburgh