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Inquiring about God

Volume 1. Selected Essays

£53.99

  • Date Published: February 2010
  • availability: Available
  • format: Hardback
  • isbn: 9780521514651

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About the Authors
  • Inquiring about God is the first of two volumes of Nicholas Wolterstorff's collected papers. This volume collects Wolterstorff's essays on the philosophy of religion written over the last thirty-five years. The essays, which span a range of topics including Kant's philosophy of religion, the medieval (or classical) conception of God, and the problem of evil, are unified by the conviction that some of the central claims made by the classical theistic tradition, such as the claims that God is timeless, simple, and impassible, should be rejected. Still, Wolterstorff contends, rejecting the classical conception of God does not imply that theists should accept the Kantian view according to which God cannot be known. Of interest to both philosophers and theologians, Inquiring about God should give the reader a lively sense of the creative and powerful work done in contemporary philosophical theology by one of its foremost practitioners.

    • Provides a powerful critique of the classical concept of God
    • Wolterstorff engages extensively with historical figures such as Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Barth and so on
    • Will have a broad appeal to philosophers and theologians
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    Reviews & endorsements

    'Nicholas Wolterstorff is well known as one of the founders of Reformed Epistemology, along with William Alston and Alvin Plantinga. I suspect, however, that his papers on epistemology and on philosophy of religion have not been as widely read as they should have been. I hope these volumes will rectify that. Analysis Reviews

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    Product details

    • Date Published: February 2010
    • format: Hardback
    • isbn: 9780521514651
    • length: 322 pages
    • dimensions: 235 x 159 x 23 mm
    • weight: 0.67kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Introduction
    1. Analytic philosophy of religion: retrospect and prospect
    2. Is it possible and desirable for theologians to recover from Kant?
    3. Conundrums in Kant's rational religion
    4. In defense of Gaunilo's defense of the fool
    5. Divine simplicity
    6. Alston on Aquinas on theological predication
    7. God everlasting
    8. Unqualified divine temporality
    9. Suffering love
    10. Is God disturbed by what transpires in human affairs?
    11. The silence of the God who speaks
    12. Barth on evil
    13. Tertullian's enduring question.

  • Author

    Nicholas Wolterstorff, Yale University, Connecticut
    Nicholas Wolterstorff is Noah Porter Professor Emeritus of Philosophical Theology, Yale University, and Senior Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, University of Virginia. His many publications include Divine Discourse: Philosophical Reflections on the Claim that God Speaks (1995), John Locke and the Ethics of Belief (1996) and Thomas Reid and the Story of Epistemology (2001, 2004).

    Editor

    Terence Cuneo, University of Vermont
    Terence Cuneo is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Vermont. He is author of The Normative Web: An Argument for Moral Realism (2007) and editor of six books including The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Reid co-edited with René van Woudenberg (2004).

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