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In God as Reason: Essays in Philosophical Theology, Vittorio Hösle
presents a systematic exploration of the relation between theology
and philosophy. In examining the problems and historical precursors
of rational theology, he calls on philosophy, theology, history of
science, and the history of ideas to find an interpretation of
Christianity that is compatible with a genuine commitment to
reason. The essays in the first part of God as Reason deal with
issues of philosophical theology. Hösle sketches the challenges
that a rationalist theology must face and discusses some of the
central ones, such as the possibility of a teleological
interpretation of nature after Darwin, the theodicy issue, freedom
versus determinism, the mindbody problem, and the relation in
general between religion, theology, and philosophy. In the essays
of the second part, Hösle studies the historical development of
philosophical approaches to the Bible, the continuity between the
New Testament concept of pneuma and the concept of Geist (spirit)
in German idealism, and the rationalist theologies of Anselm,
Abelard, Llull, and Nicholas of Cusa, whose innovative philosophy
of mathematics is the topic of one of the chapters. The book
concludes with a thorough evaluation of Charles Taylor’s theory
of secularization. This ambitious work will interest students and
scholars of philosophical theology and philosophy of religion as
well as historians of ideas and science.
No overall history of the philosophical dialogue has appeared since
Rudolf Hirzel's two-volume study was published in 1895. In The
Philosophical Dialogue: A Poetics and a Hermeneutics, Vittorio
Hösle covers the development of the genre from its beginning with
Plato to the late twentieth-century work of Iris Murdoch and Paul
Feyerabend. Hösle presents a taxonomy and a doctrine of categories
for the complex literary genre of the philosophical dialogue,
focusing on the poetical laws that structure the genre, and
develops hermeneutical rules for its correct interpretation.
Following an introduction that employs the categories of
subjectivity and intersubjectivity to classify philosophy's modes
of expression, Hösle's book is structured by the classical triad
of the production, inner structure, and reception of the literary
dialogue. To explain what is meant by "philosophical dialogue,"
Hösle first deals with the specific traits of philosophical
dialogue in contrast to other literary forms of philosophy and its
special status among them. Second, he distinguishes the
philosophical dialogue as a literary genre from actual
philosophical conversation, and as a philosophical literary genre
from nonphilosophical literary dialogues. Finally, he takes up the
connection between literary form and philosophical content in the
philosophical dialogue. Numerous authors of dialogues are
discussed, with a special focus on Plato, Cicero, Augustine, Hume,
and Diderot. Originally published in Germany as Der philosophische
Dialog: Eine Poetik und Hermeneutik (2006), this book not only
contributes to the philosophical discussion of dialogue but to a
great extent defines it. This fine translation will prove useful to
both philosophers and literary critics in the English-speaking
world.
The philosophically most challenging science today, arguably, is no
longer physics but biology. It is hardly an exaggeration to state
that Charles Darwin has shaped modern evolutionary biology more
significantly than anyone else. Moreover, since Darwin's day,
philosophers and scientists have realized the enormous
philosophical potential of Darwinism and have tried to expand his
insights well beyond the limits of biology. However, no consensus
has been achieved. The aim of this collection of essays is to
revive a comprehensive discussion of the meaning and the
philosophical implications of "Darwinism." The contributors to
Darwinism and Philosophy are international scholars from the fields
of philosophy, science, and history of ideas. A strength of this
collection is that it brings together sustained reflection from
American and Continental philosophical traditions. The conclusions
of the contributors vary, but taken together their essays
successfully map the problems of interpreting "Darwinism."
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