You may very well be.
Actually, I did get the chance to read some of Newbergs writings today, mostly his paper on forgiveness, but I did skim over a couple of other papers. He is studying some very cutting edge and interesting stuff. However, one thing that I noticed is that he often uses the term correlative at least in his writing on forgiveness. Could it be that belief in God could be correlative?
You ought to look into some epistemology. I've struggled with epistemology often. I listened to the cognitive science class mp3s from MIT's OpenCourseWare. I learned a ton, but most cognitive scientists don't have a clue about the philosophical epistemology Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas. I read a lot of them with some type of derivative of Kant's thinking. Most, it seems, only know very little about the problems with the theories they seem to hold. But neither here, nor there
When I get a chance to look the rest of Newberg's papers, I'll try to post here and put down my thoughts on a new thread.
I read Critique of Pure Reason, and that was interesting, but honestly, I never really cared for Epistemology. It was just never one of the problems that bothered me. Wasn't that how Socrates described philosophy, like a hornet that was harrassing him, and the only way he could make it go away quit bugging him for a while was by pursuing inquiry? Epistemology never stung me.
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