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El. knyga: Philosophy of Religion: Towards a More Humane Approach

4.07/5 (44 ratings by Goodreads)
(University of Reading)
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John Cottingham's Philosophy of Religion shows how fruitful discussion of the philosophy of religion is not just about abstract intellectual argument; it also impinges on many aspects of ordinary human experience. Cottingham covers the main topics of the subject, including the meaning of religious claims, the existence of God and the relation between religion and morality, while also exploring the nature of spirituality and asking how religious belief affects questions about the meaning of life, human suffering and mortality.

Religious belief is not just about abstract intellectual argument; it also impinges on all aspects of human life. John Cottingham's Philosophy of Religion opens up fresh perspectives on the philosophy of religion, arguing that the detached neutrality of much of contemporary philosophizing may be counterproductive – hardening us against the receptivity required for certain kinds of important evidence to become salient. This book covers all the traditional areas of the subject, including the meaning of religious claims, the existence of God and the relation between religion and morality, as well as the role of spiritual praxis and how religious belief affects questions about the meaning of life, human suffering and mortality. While preserving the clarity and rigor that are rightly prized in the analytic tradition, the book also draws on insights from literary and other sources, and aims to engage a wide readership.

Recenzijos

'This insightful and beautifully clear book shows us how to think philosophically about religion - not just religious beliefs but also the habits, practices and transformations that constitute religious life. Cottingham combines careful, rigorous analysis and exemplary scholarship with rare sensitivity to the spiritual questions which animate the philosophy of religion but are too often obscured by it. Everyone interested in the philosophy of religion needs to read this elegant, compelling book.' Clare Carlisle, King's College London ' intellectually brilliant, historically well informed, and engaged with contemporary thought. Cottingham is keenly aware of how the practice of philosophy should inform our search for meaning in our lives; this text is perfect for a class or for individual enrichment.' Charles Taliaferro, St Olaf College, Minnesota 'A lovely work: passionately engaged and intellectually serious it shows how philosophy of religion really can be more humane, engaging with our deepest faculties of need and desire, while remaining thoroughly rigorous ' Christopher Hamilton, King's College London 'Rigorous, elegant, and yet passionate, it is hard to think of a better introduction to this area Cottingham's nuanced and capacious survey of the philosophy of religion sheds fresh light on familiar topics and points to fertile new directions.' Douglas Hedley, Clare College, Cambridge 'A wide-ranging and compelling philosophical argument for recognizing a spiritually focused and morally oriented approach to the philosophy of religion.' Keith Ward, Regius Professor Emeritus of Divinity, University of Oxford 'In this lively and accessible study, John Cottingham shows how religious beliefs are best regarded not as abstract speculations but as reflections integrally connected to the question of what it is for a human being to live well. If religion, so conceived, is to be properly understood, then we require a kind of reflection that is philosophically rigorous and, at the same time, rich in an appreciation of the disciplines of thought that we associate with the humanities. Here is a fine and, indeed, inspiring example of such an inquiry.' Mark Wynn, University of Leeds 'Cottingham provides a refreshing perspective on the relationship between the philosophy of religion, as a field of academic study, and the religious life, as a field of personal experience. Trained as a philosopher, Cottingham is well aware of the contributions analytic and metaphysical methods can bring to the task of clarifying and understanding ideas. But he also knows, as many analytic philosophers apparently do not, that religious life needs more than the clarity of philosophical analysis. He calls his approach to the philosophy of religion 'more humane' than the ideas that presently prevail in his discipline. He makes a persuasive case against those who think that either defending or refuting 'proofs' for the existence of God constitutes the core of the religious life. In fact, what Cottingham develops with scholarly cogency are the various 'modes of access' one has to the divine, especially the heart dimension in religious life and thought (drawing heavily on Pascal). In the course of this short book, he also takes up the issues of morality and theodicy in ways that are faithful to their nuances and complexities.' Choice ' clear, thoughtful and gently passionate style. a wonderful book; creative, harmonious, evocative, reasonable. I cannot recommend it enough ' Maximilian De Gaynesford, Tablet

Daugiau informacijos

In this book, abstract intellectual argument meets ordinary human experience on matters such as the existence of God and the relation between religion and morality.
Preface and Acknowledgements xi
1 Method
1(24)
1 The Nature of the Subject
1(4)
2 Detachment and Rationality
5(4)
3 Ways of Philosophizing about Religious Belief
9(2)
4 The Heart Has Its Reasons
11(6)
5 The Question of Evidence
17(5)
6 Some Conclusions about Method
22(3)
2 Metaphysics
25(23)
1 Arguing for God
25(3)
2 How Important Are the Arguments?
28(7)
3 The Enlightenment Critique of Metaphysics
35(5)
4 Mysticism and the Apophatic Route
40(3)
5 A Possible Way Forward?
43(5)
3 Meaning and Modes of Access
48(24)
1 Speaking of God
48(4)
2 Thomistic Analogy and Anselmian Perfection
52(4)
3 Experience of the Divine?
56(4)
4 Intimations of the Transcendent
60(5)
5 Assessment and Critique
65(7)
4 Morality
72(26)
1 The Source of Goodness
72(4)
2 Divine Commands and the Euthyphro Dilemma
76(4)
3 Theism and the Force of Obligation
80(6)
4 Love, Justice, and Mere Preference
86(3)
5 Secular Accounts of Moral Objectivity
89(5)
6 The Limits of Argument
94(4)
5 Misfortune and Misery
98(22)
1 The Demise of Teleology?
98(5)
2 Evil and Theodicy
103(4)
3 Suffering and the Religious Perspective
107(5)
4 The Dynamics of Transformation
112(5)
5 The Fearful Residue
117(3)
6 Mortality and Meaningfulness
120(28)
1 The Theistic Outlook and the Human Condition
120(4)
2 The Next World
124(6)
3 God, the Afterlife, and Meaningfulness
130(2)
4 Alienation, Obedience, and Autonomy
132(5)
5 What Difference Does Eternity Make?
137(4)
6 Personal Immortality and Averroean Concerns
141(4)
7 Mortality, Meaning, and Hope
145(3)
7 Mathesis
148(29)
1 Religion as a Way of Life and the Nature of Philosophy
148(3)
2 Spiritual Praxis
151(4)
3 Conversion
155(4)
4 Deconversion
159(3)
5 Spirituality, Moral Growth, and the Psychotherapeutic Framework
162(7)
8 Conclusion: Humane Philosophizing about Religion
169(8)
Bibliography 177(12)
Index 189
John Cottingham is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Reading; Professorial Research Fellow at Heythrop College, University of London; and an honorary fellow of St John's College, Oxford. He has served as chairman of the British Society for the History of Philosophy, president of the Mind Association, president of the Aristotelian Society and president of the British Society for the Philosophy of Religion. He was also editor of Ratio, the international journal of analytic philosophy, from 1993 to 2012. Professor Cottingham's books include Descartes (1986), The Rationalists (1988), Reason, Will and Sensation (1994), Western Philosophy: An Anthology, 2nd edition (2007), Philosophy and the Good Life: Reason and the Passions in Greek, Cartesian and Psychoanalytic Ethics (Cambridge, 1998), On the Meaning of Life (2003), The Spiritual Dimension (Cambridge, 2005), Cartesian Reflections (2008) and Why Believe? (2009). He is co-translator of the standard three-volume Cambridge edition of The Philosophical Writings of Descartes (198591). The Moral Life, a collection of essays honoring his work on moral philosophy and philosophy of religion, was published in 2008.