1. Hume
Then, digging deeper, we shall try our hand at a critique of his critique of religion, of resurrecting a natural belief in God. ... It is an argument against any inductive proof for God's existence. ... You allow that this is an argument drawn from effects to causes. ... If you cannot make out this point you allow that your conclusion fails; and you pretend not to establish the conclusion in a greater latitude than the phenomena of nature will justify. ... The first is embarrassing to those who wield natural proofs of God: we still have no idea or knowledge from these proofs what this God...
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