Cover; Half-title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgements; 1 Clarifications and issues; 2 Negative theology and natural theology; 3 The darkness of God and the light of Christ; 4 Intellect; 5 Reason and rhetoric; 6 The 'shape' of reason; 7 Univocity and inference: Duns Scotus; 8 God, grammar and difference; 9 Existence and God; 10 Analogy and inference; 11 Why anything?; 12 Refusing the question; 13 The God of reason and the God of Christ; List of works cited; PRIMARY SOURCES (LATIN TEXTS AND TRANSLATIONS OTHER THAN MY OWN); SECONDARY SOURCES; Index.
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Denys Turner challenges the prevailing orthodoxy amongst philosophers that God's existence cannot be demonstrated by rational argument, and the view of most Christian theologians that rational proof is incompatible with Christian faith. He argues, addressing both believers and non-believers, that the God of Christian faith can be proved to exist.