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Acknowledgments | ||
Preface | ||
Ch. 1 | Introduction | 3 |
Ch. 2 | Kant's Defense of Rational Faith | 7 |
Kant's Moral Proof of the Existence of God | 8 | |
Examination | 9 | |
Assessment of Kant's Phenomenology of Faith | 20 | |
Conclusion | 25 | |
Ch. 3 | The Conflict between the Interests of Reason | 29 |
Kant's Statement of the Problem of Unity | 29 | |
Clarification of the Problem | 30 | |
Evaluation of the Problem | 35 | |
Ch. 4 | The Unity of Reason | 51 |
The Quest for Unity in the Introduction to the Critique of Judgment | 51 | |
The Argument from Taste | 69 | |
The Argument from the Unity of the Laws of Nature | 98 | |
The Argument from Organic Nature | 104 | |
The Argument from Humanity as an End | 109 | |
The Argument from the Highest Good | 115 | |
Ch. 5 | Religion beyond the Limits of Practical Reason | 123 |
The Gradual Unfolding of Kant's Argument | 123 | |
The Highest Good as a Reflective Principle | 128 | |
The Kantian Foundation of Modern Religious Thought | 130 | |
Contemplative Hope | 132 | |
Concluding Remarks | 133 | |
Ch. 6 | The Noeticity of Religious Feeling: Rudolf Otto's Theory of the Religious A Priori | 149 |
In Search of a Method | 164 | |
The A Priori Status of the Nonrational | 171 | |
The Argument of The Idea of the Holy | 185 | |
Conclusion | 215 | |
Ch. 7 | Tillich's Theory of the Theonomous Consciousness | 221 |
The Search for Unity in The System of the Sciences | 236 | |
The Quest for Meaning in the Human Sciences | 246 | |
Concluding Reflections | 284 | |
Ch. 8 | Religion and Contemplative Reflection | 305 |
Select Bibliography | 319 | |
Index | 329 |
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Add Religion as a province of meaning, The thought of Immanuel Kant has had incalculable - and, many would say, negative - impact on the modern estimation of religion, religious belief, and religious knowledge. Yet, Davidovich argues in the strikingly original interpretation, the chief lines a, Religion as a province of meaning to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Religion as a province of meaning, The thought of Immanuel Kant has had incalculable - and, many would say, negative - impact on the modern estimation of religion, religious belief, and religious knowledge. Yet, Davidovich argues in the strikingly original interpretation, the chief lines a, Religion as a province of meaning to your collection on WonderClub |