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Books > Religion & Spirituality > General > Philosophy of religion
"It is a grandiose claim to have banished God. With such a lot at
stake we surely need to ask Hawking to produce evidence to
establish his claim. Do his arguments really stand up to close
scrutiny? I think we have a right to know." The Grand Design and
Brief Answers to Big Questions by eminent scientist the late
Stephen Hawking were blockbusting contributions to the science
religion debate. They claimed it was the laws of physics themselves
which brought the universe into being, rather than any God. In this
forthright response, John Lennox, Oxford University mathematician
and internationally-known apologist, takes a closer look at
Hawking's logic and questions his conclusions. In lively, layman's
terms, Lennox guides us through the key points in Hawking's
arguments - with clear explanations of the latest scientific and
philosophical methods and theories - and demonstrates that far from
disproving a Creator God, they make his existence seem all the more
probable.
Designed as a textbook for use in courses on natural theology and
used by Immanuel Kant as the basis for his Lectures on The
Philosophical Doctrine of Religion, Johan August Eberhard's
Preparation for Natural Theology (1781) is now available in English
for the first time. With a strong focus on the various intellectual
debates and historically significant texts in late renaissance and
early modern theology, Preparation for Natural Theology influenced
the way Kant thought about practical cognition as well as moral and
religious concepts. Access to Eberhard's complete text makes it
possible to distinguish where in the lectures Kant is making
changes to what Eberhard has written and where he is articulating
his own ideas. Identifying new unexplored lines of research, this
translation provides a deeper understanding of Kant's explicitly
religious doctrines and his central moral writings, such as the
Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals and the Critique of
Practical Reason. Accompanied by Kant's previously untranslated
handwritten notes on Eberhard's text as well as the Danzig
transcripts of Kant's course on rational theology, Preparation for
Natural Theology features a dual English-German / German-English
glossary, a concordance and an introduction situating the book in
relation to 18th-century theology and philosophy. This is a
significant contribution to twenty-first century Kantian studies.
Experimental philosophy has blossomed into a variety of
philosophical fields including ethics, epistemology, metaphysics
and philosophy of language. But there has been very little
experimental philosophical research in the domain of philosophy of
religion. Advances in Religion, Cognitive Science, and Experimental
Philosophy demonstrates how cognitive science of religion has the
methodological and conceptual resources to become a form of
experimental philosophy of religion. Addressing a wide variety of
empirical claims that are of interest to philosophers and
psychologists of religion, a team of psychologists and philosophers
apply data from the psychology of religion to important problems in
the philosophy of religion including the psychology of religious
diversity; the psychology of substance dualism; the problem of evil
and the relation between religious belief and empathy; and the
cognitive science explaining the formation of intuitions that
unwittingly guide philosophers of religion when formulating
arguments. Bringing together authors and researchers who have made
important contributions to interdisciplinary research on religion
in the last decade, Advances in Religion, Cognitive Science, and
Experimental Philosophy provides new ways of approaching core
philosophical and psychological problems.
First comprehensive book on comparative religion. Born in Hanover,
New Hampshire, James Freeman Clarke attended the Boston Latin
School, graduated from Harvard College in 1829, and Harvard
Divinity School in 1833. Ordained into the Unitarian church he
first became an active minister at Louisville, Kentucky, then a
slave state and soon threw himself into the national movement for
the abolition of slavery.
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Insanity!
(Hardcover)
Kerry D. McRoberts
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Colby Dickinson proposes a new political theology rooted in the
intersections between continental philosophy, heterodox theology,
and orthodox theology. Moving beyond the idea that there is an
irresolvable tension at the heart of theological discourse, the
conflict between the two poles of theology is made intelligible.
Dickinson discusses the opposing poles simply as manifestations of
reform and revolution, characteristics intrinsic to the nature of
theological discourse itself. Outlining the illuminating space of
theology, Theological Poverty in Continental Philosophy breaks new
ground for critical theology and continental philosophy. Within the
theology of poverty, the believer renounces the worldly for the
divine. Through this focus on the poverty intrinsic to religious
calling, the potential for cross-pollination between the
theological and the secular is highlighted. Ultimately situating
the virtue of theological poverty within a poststructuralist,
postmodern world, Dickinson is not content to position Christian
philosophy as the superior theological position, moving away from
the absolute values of one tradition over another. This
universalising of theological poverty through core and uniting
concepts like grace, negation, violence and paradox reveal the
theory’s transmutable strength. By joining up critical theology
and the philosophy of religion in this way, the book broadens the
possibility of a critical dialogue both between and within
disciplines.
The book re-examines the religious thought and receptions of the
Syrian poet Abu l-'Ala' al-Ma'arri (d.1057) and one of his best
known works - Luzum ma la yalzam (The Self-Imposed Unnecessity), a
collection of poems, which, although widely studied, needs a
thorough re-evaluation regarding matters of (un)belief. Given the
contradictory nature of al-Ma'arri's oeuvre and Luzum in
particular, there have been two major trends in assessing
al-Ma'arri's religious thought in modern scholarship. One presented
al-Ma'arri as an unbeliever and a freethinker arguing that through
contradictions, he practiced taqiya, i.e., dissimulation in order
to avoid persecution. The other, often apologetically, presented
al-Ma'arri as a sincere Muslim. This study proposes that the notion
of ambivalence is a more appropriate analytical tool to apply to
the reading of Luzum, specifically in matters of belief. This
ambivalence is directly conditioned by the historical and
intellectual circumstances al-Ma'arri lived in and he intentionally
left it unsolved and intense as a robust stance against claims of
certainty. Going beyond reductive interpretations, the notion of
ambivalence allows for an integrative paradigm in dealing with
contradictions and dissonance.
For centuries, philosophers have addressed the ontological question
of whether God exists. Most recently, philosophers have begun to
explore the axiological question of what value impact, if any,
God's existence has (or would have) on our world. This book brings
together four prestigious philosophers, Michael Almeida, Travis
Dumsday, Perry Hendricks and Graham Oppy, to present different
views on the axiological question about God. Each contributor
expresses a position on axiology, which is then met with responses
from the remaining contributors. This structure makes for genuine
discussion and developed exploration of the key issues at stake,
and shows that the axiological question is more complicated than it
first appears. Chapters explore a range of relevant issues,
including the relationship between Judeo-Christian theism and
non-naturalist alternatives such as pantheism, polytheism, and
animism/panpsychism. Further chapters consider the attitudes and
emotions of atheists within the theism conversation, and develop
and evaluate the best arguments for doxastic pro-theism and
doxastic anti-theism. Of interest to those working on philosophy of
religion, theism and ethics, this book presents lively accounts of
an important topic in an exciting and collaborative way, offered by
renowned experts in this area.
This is a bilingual edition of the selected peer-reviewed papers
that were submitted for the International Symposium on Jesuit
Studies on the thought of the Jesuit Francisco Suarez (1548-1617).
The symposium was co-organized in Seville in 2018 by the
Departamento de Humanidades y Filosofia at Universidad Loyola
Andalucia and the Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies at Boston
College.
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