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Michael Martin (1932-2015) was a professor at Boston University and author of several books including Atheism, Morality, and Meaning (2002) and Atheism: A Philosophical Justification (1990). He also edited several collections, most notably The Cambridge Companion to Atheism (2006). Martin critiques Alvin Plantinga's argument that it is acceptable for persons to believe that God exists even if they cannot produce evidence or argument to justify that belief. Plantinga begins with the traditional philosophical view that all our beliefs are based ultimately on beliefs that are "properly basic"-they are either self-evident (such as "two plus two equals four") or evident to the senses (as when our looking at or remembering a tree shows immediately that there is or was a tree). To be counted as genuine knowledge our beliefs must be either properly basic or justified by beliefs that ultimately rest on those that are properly basic. Plantinga contends that belief in God can be a properly basic belief and thus require no supporting evidence. Martin argues, however, that because Plantinga's approach allows people to formulate their own properly basic criteria from their own unique experience and perspective, almost any belief-no matter how bizarre-could be considered properly basic.
-Martin agrees with Plantinga that there is a consensus in the Christian community about what beliefs are basic and what conditions justify these beliefs.
Truth Values
The valuation in logic that determines the truthfulness of a statement, typically classified as either True or False.
Truth Table
A tabular representation used in logic to determine the validity of statements by listing all possible scenarios and their corresponding truth values.
Atomic Sentences
Sentences that represent the most basic form of propositions, without any complex or compound elements.
Truth Values
The valuation in logic that indicates whether a statement is true or false.
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