Martin graduated from
Arizona State University with a
Bachelor of Science in
business administration in 1956. He earned a
Master of Arts in philosophy from the
University of Arizona in 1958, then earned his
Ph.D. in philosophy from
Harvard University in 1962. He was appointed assistant professor at
University of Colorado in 1962 and in 1965 he moved to
Boston University. He was appointed Professor of Philosophy Emeritus after a lifelong career at Boston University. Martin died on 27 May 2015, aged 83.
Debates Martin took part in a number of written and internet debates with Christian philosophers. • In 1991 Martin and Keith Parsons (founder of Georgia Skeptics and teacher of philosophy at Berry College (Rome, Georgia)) provided atheistic critiques to Douglas Jones' propositions on The Futility of Non Christian Thought in a written debate,
Is Non-Christian Thought Justifiable?, originally published in
Antithesis magazine. • On November 26, 1994 Martin withdrew from a debate with Christian apologist
Greg Bahnsen at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee. The sponsor of the debate Marty Fields, the director of College Ministries at Second Presbyterian Church, explained to a school reporter that "Martin refused to debate upon learning that Bahnsen would tape the event and sell copies through his Christian ministry. ...Martin was reluctant to participate in anything that would raise money for a religious organization." Bahnsen framed the withdraw as Martin lacking "confidence in the public defense of atheism." And that "sightings of Elvis are more common than sightings of my opponent." He set up an empty chair for Martin, and went on to record a lecture entitled the "Debate that Never Was". • He conducted a debate with
John M. Frame over the internet in a series of articles and responses around Martin's 1996 article, "The Transcendental Argument for the Nonexistence of God". • An internet debate with Christian philosopher Phil Fernandes in 1997 over the existence of God was published as a book in 2000 titled:
Theism vs. Atheism: The Internet Debate. ==Views==