John Hick was one of the twentieth century's most influential and
creative philosophers of religion. In this book, Sinkinson charts
the development of Hick's thinking over his life and how this
shaped his engagement with world religions. Attention is paid to
Hick's epistemology and how this was key in his interpretation of
both his own religion and the phenomena of religious pluralism. It
can be shown that the development of Hick's thought is the legacy
of the liberal theology of the Enlightenment. The project, begun by
Immanuel Kant and Friedrich Schleiermacher, is shown to find clear
expression in the developed theology of religions proposed by Hick.
The book includes a survey of his important books and a transcript
of the last recorded radio dialogue that Hick had with an
evangelical theologian.
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