Series Editor's Preface.
Acknowledgments.
Authors' Note.
Introduction to Rational Theology.
1. The Idea of God.
Historical Conceptions of the Divine.
God as a Maximally Great Being.
2. Substantiality.
Substance Among Other Categories.
Substance and Independence.
Spinoza's Divine Substance.
3. Incorporeality.
Spirituality and Omnipresence.
Are Souls Unintelligible?.
Is Body-Soul Interaction Unintelligible?.
Divine Simplicity.
4. Necessary Existence.
Necessity and Contingency.
Necessary Beings and Contingent Beings.
Modalities and Possible Worlds.
Necessary Beings versus Self-Existent Beings.
5. Eternality.
Temporal versus Atemporal Eternality.
A Defense of Temporal Eternality.
Incorruptibility versus Immutability.
6. Omniscience.
Omniscience as Maximal Knowledge.
The Analysis of Omniscience.
Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom.
7. Perfect Goodness, Perfect Virtue, and Moral Admirability.
God and the Nature of Morality.
Perfect Goodness and Consequences.
Perfect Virtue and Moral Rules.
Maximal Greatness and Moral Admirability.
8. Omnipotence.
Maximal Power and the Uniqueness of God.
What an Omnipotent Agent Can Do.
The Analysis of Omnipotence.
Divine Omnibenevolence, Omnipotence, and Freedom.
Concluding Remarks and Prolegomena to Future Rational Theology.
Glossary.
Index.
Joshua Hoffman is Professor of Philosophy at the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Gary S. Rosenkrantz is Professor of Philosophy and Head of Department at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. They are co-authors of Substance Among Other Categories (1994) and Substance: Its Nature and Existence (1997).
"Intellectually rigorous, yet written with great clarity, this book
enables the reader to understand the attributes; omnipotence,
omniscience, perfect goodness, eternality, etc. – that make up the
dominant idea of God in Western civilization. Highly recommended!"
William L. Rowe, Purdue University
"This is a masterly exercise in rational theology by two leading
metaphysicians. Their rigorous approach and skilful application of
recent developments in analytical metaphysics make this book at
once authoritative, lucid, and compelling. As well as being an
extremely valuable resource for students and teachers of philosophy
and theology, it advances contemporary debate about the proper
understanding of God's nature in important and interesting new
ways." E. J. Lowe, University of Durham
"This book is excellent: thoughtful, rigorous, and systematic. In
addition to being a penetrating and sophisticated work, it is also
highly readable." John Fischer, University of California at
Riverside
Ask a Question About this Product More... |