Natural Theology: With African Annotations |
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Acknowledgement | 5 |
The Human Person and the Oblivion of God | 14 |
Natural Theology Philosophy of God Theodicy | 20 |
The Problem of Natural Theology in the AngloSaxon World | 26 |
CHAPTER THREE | 32 |
Ontologism and the Immediacy of Gods Existence | 38 |
CHAPTER THREE | 44 |
The Cosmological | 52 |
CHAPTER | 119 |
The Human Analogical Approach to Knowledge of God | 125 |
The Divine Names | 131 |
CHAPTER SEVEN | 159 |
The Will of God | 168 |
Creation | 177 |
The Preservation and Sustenance of Creation | 189 |
Creation in Africa Thought | 204 |
Other Demonstrations of the Existence of God | 67 |
CHAPTER FIVE | 76 |
A New Form of Atheism | 105 |
Conclusion | 210 |
Common terms and phrases
according action active actually affirmation African Aquinas argument atheism attempt attributes become beginning belief called causality cause Christian comes communities concept considered consists created creation creatures criticism death demonstration deny dependence desire distinction divine effects essence eternity everything evil example existence experience express fact faith finite follows freedom future give God’s hand human person identical immediate individual infinite intellect intelligence kind knowledge latter leads limited living maintain Marxism means metaphysical mind moved natural theology necessary Nietzsche notion object ontological operation perfect philosophy physical position possesses possible potency present principle problem proper providence pure question reality realization reason reference relation religion religious result seen sense society Spirit St Thomas substance Summa Contra Gentiles Summa Theologiæ term things thought tion traditional transcendence true truth understanding understood universe Whereas