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God and Time: Essays on the Divine Nature [Kietas viršelis]

4.10/5 (19 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (, Faculty, Rivendell Institute for Christian Thought and Learning), Edited by (Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Huntington College)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 268 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 243x159x24 mm, weight: 526 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2002
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195129652
  • ISBN-13: 9780195129656
  • Formatas: Hardback, 268 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 243x159x24 mm, weight: 526 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2002
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195129652
  • ISBN-13: 9780195129656
Throughout the history of philosophical theology, scholars have reflected on the relationship between God and time. In the Western religious tradition, God has been thought to be eternal, in the sense that God is outside time. But many thinkers today hold that while God is everlasting, in that there was no beginning to God's existence nor will he ever cease existing, God exists within Time.
In God and Time, Gregory E. Ganssle and David Woodruff have brought together 12 previously unpublished essays from leading philosophers on God's relation to time. Including work from today's most prominent thinkers in this fascinating field, God and Time represents the current state of the discussion between those who believe God to be atemporal (experiencing everything in the "eternal now") and those who believe God to be temporal (experiencing events sequentially, somewhat as we do).
This collection highlights such issues as how the nature of time is relevant to the question of whether God is temporal and how God's other attributes are compatible with his mode of temporal being. By focusing on the metaphysical aspects of time and temporal existence, God and Time makes a unique contribution to the current resurgence of interest in philosophical theology in the analytic tradition.

Recenzijos

Exibits a rich spectrum of argument concerning the many-faceted issue of God's relation to time...I found no essay in this anthology that lacked intellectual rigor. Accordingly, the volume should serve as an excellent ancillary text for courses in philosophy of religion that focus on divine attributes...I recommend this collection, and must confess that I cannot begin to do justice to its rich argumentation in such a brief review. * The Journal of Religion *

Contributors xi Introduction 3(18) Gregory E. Ganssle Part I Gods Eternal Nature The Eternal Present 21(28) Brian Leftow Atemporal, Sempiternal, or Omnitemporal: Gods Temporal Mode of Being 49(16) Garrett DeWeese Part II God, Time, and Creation Divine Foreknowledge and the Arrow of Time: On the Impossibility or Retrocausation 65(10) Alan G. Padgett God inside Time and before Creation 75(20) Dean W. Zimmerman Time Was Created by a Timeless Point: An Atheist Explanation of Spacetime 95(34) Quentin Smith The Elimination of Absolute Time by the Special Theory of Relativity 129(24) William Lane Craig Part III The Nature of Divine Knowledge Timelessness out of Mind: On the Alleged Incoherence of Divine Timelessness 153(12) Edward R. Wierenga Direct Awareness and Gods Experience of a Temporal Now 165(17) Gregory E. Ganssle The Absence of a Timeless God 182(25) William Hasker Part IV Gods Relation to the World The Problem of Dialogue 207(13) Paul Helm Incarnation, Timelessness, and Leibnizs Law Problems 220(16) Thomas D. Senor On the Incarnation of a Timeless God 236(13) Douglas K. Blount Index 249