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The Existence of God is a sequel to The Coherence of Theism, originally published in 1977. The Coherence of Theism was concerned with what it means to say that there is a God and whether the claim that there is a God is internally coherent. The Existence of God is concerned with whether the claim is true; it is concerned to assess the weight of arguments from experience for and against this claim, and to reach a conclusion about whether on balance the arguments indicate that there is a God or that there is not. The present book assumes that the claim that there is a God is not demonstrably incoherent (i.e. logically impossible), and hence that it is proper to look around us for evidence of its truth or falsity. For argument in justification of this assumption I must refer to the earlier work. However, it is in no way necessary for a reader to have read the earlier work in order to understand this one; nor, with the exception just described, does this work in any way presuppose the results of the earlier one. The issues discussed in The Existence of God are ones of more general concern than those discussed in The Coherence of Theism. Most people have usually supposed that they understood in some very vague way what it meant to say that there was a God; and, so long as they supposed that human words were only a rough guide to what was claimed, that the claim was not demonstrably incoherent. Intense concern about the exact meaning of the claim and whether it is coherent has been primarily the concern of professional theologians and philosophers. But what has worried ordinary people down the centuries is whether the evidence of human experience shows that the claim is true or that it is false. That issue is the topic of this book. The book aims to discuss the topic in depth and with rigour.
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