Unicorns and Great Pumpkins
Protestants and atheists (with a smattering of Thomists) do this thing called analytic philosophy of religion in which I have very little interest. It is rigorously discursive, highly formalized and, as far as I can tell, utterly a-historical. As a historicist, then, it does not get to first base philosophically, at least where I am concerned. There are those with a taste for such things but I, alas, am not one of them. Nor will I EVER be one of them. That said, I do recall one bit of discussion generated by Plantinga et.al. and that concerned the Great Pumpkin from the Peanuts cartoon strip. Plantinga held that certain beliefs could be ‘properly basic’. A properly basic belief might be a belief in something like the principle of induction: i.e. that we can generalize from experience. Notoriously, post-Hume, there is no agreed on ‘proof’ of the principle of induction which does not presuppose the principle of induction. Induction cannot be induced from experience be