Reader Ch. 12 (Ruge-Jones, Faith Asking Questions)
To guide your reading: (note that the chapter continues all the way to p. 139)
Throughout this series, the recurring question will be, how do the questions, evidence, “rules”, etc. in this discipline compare to rules in other disciplines? What differences are there between, for example, the chapter by a theologian and the chapter by a mathematician?
Ruge-Jones’ argument in this chapter can be characterized as one of definition. He is trying to persuade you to adopt his definitions or understandings of several terms: theology, faith, God. In doing this, he brings up other definitions or understandings of these terms in order to reject them. What are the competing definitions of these terms in the chapter?
The way Ruge-Jones argues is especially interesting. Consider that the target audience he is trying to persuade is not people uninterested in God, but people who believe the very definitions he is rejecting. How does Ruge-Jones shape his evidence or reasoning to appeal to that audience? In class, we will try to do several evidence-warrant-claim chains to see how they work.
The chapter ends with a “case study” about the example of how theology and science relate as disciplines. What relationships does he describe?