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Abstract
This chapter begins by explaining the notion of revealed religion and goes on to address the tension between revealed religions and modern science. Scientific truth is independent of the sort of truth claimed by revealed texts, it is argued, and can therefore neither support nor undermine them. Inter alia, modern, scientifically-informed biblical criticism can tell us little about the meaning or truth of the Bible. A different notion of truth is then introduced—one connected more closely with trustworthiness than with accuracy. The two kinds of truth track a distinction between experts and authorities. Experts help us on factual matters and we want them to be accurate. Authorities help us on ethical matters and we want them to be trustworthy. Our religious commitments are part of our ethical commitments, so we need authorities there rather than experts.
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