In epistemology and in its modern sense, rationalism is "any view appealing to reason as a source of knowledge or justification" (Lacey 286). In more technical terms it is a method or a theory "in which the criterion of the truth is not sensory but intellectual and deductive" (Bourke 263). Different degrees of emphasis on this method or theory lead to a range of rationalist standpoints, from the moderate position "that reason has precedence over ...
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Rationalism
Literature Subject
Works Written About This Topic
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God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
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Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder
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Breaking the Spell
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Why I Am Not a Christian
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The Retreat to Commitment
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The New Atheist Crusaders and Their Unholy Grail
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Treatise on the gods
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God And My Neighbour
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The secularization of the European mind in the nineteenth century
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The New Inquisition
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