What is God like? What can God do? What can God know? How does God communicate? Philosopher Gregory E. Ganssle appeals to philosophy for some answers to these questions in this introduction to thinking clearly and carefully about God.
What is God like? What can God do? What can God know? How does God communicate? Philosopher Gregory E. Ganssle appeals to philosophy for some answers to these questions in this introduction to thinking clearly and carefully about God.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Greg Ganssle (PhD, Syracuse) is professor of philosophy at Talbot School of Theology at Biola University. He is the author of several books, including A Reasonable God: Engaging the New Face of Atheism and Thinking About God, and he is the editor of God and Time.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Part One: Introduction 1. Why Bother Thinking About God? 2. What Is Philosophy? 3. You Cannot Prove God's Existence 4. What About Faith? 5. Can We Be Neutral? 6. Where Do We Begin? Part Two: Reasons to Believe in God 7. Starting at the Beginning: Why Is There Anything at All? 8. Starting at the Beginning: Must the Universe Have a Cause? 9. Starting at the Beginning: Must the First Cause Be God? 10. Looking at the Details: Design and Designers 11. Looking at the Details: Darwin and Design 12. Looking at the Details: Fine-Tuning and Design 13. Looking at the Details: Many Worlds and Small Changes 14. Looking in the Mirror: Moral Reality 15. Looking in the Mirror: Moral Facts Point to God 16. Reasons to Believe: The Cumulative Case Part Three: God and Evil 17. The Square Circle Objection 18. God and Evil Reconciled 19. Reasons God Could Have to Allow Evil 20. Freedom and Determinism: A Chapter You Might Want to Skip 21. The Unicorn Objection 22. Is There an Elephant in the Room? Part Four: What Is God Like? 23. Beginning to Think About What God Is Like 24. What Can God Do? 25. What Can God Know? 26. Can God Know the Future? 27. Does God Communicate? Suggestions for Further Reading Index
Acknowledgments Part One: Introduction 1. Why Bother Thinking About God? 2. What Is Philosophy? 3. You Cannot Prove God's Existence 4. What About Faith? 5. Can We Be Neutral? 6. Where Do We Begin? Part Two: Reasons to Believe in God 7. Starting at the Beginning: Why Is There Anything at All? 8. Starting at the Beginning: Must the Universe Have a Cause? 9. Starting at the Beginning: Must the First Cause Be God? 10. Looking at the Details: Design and Designers 11. Looking at the Details: Darwin and Design 12. Looking at the Details: Fine-Tuning and Design 13. Looking at the Details: Many Worlds and Small Changes 14. Looking in the Mirror: Moral Reality 15. Looking in the Mirror: Moral Facts Point to God 16. Reasons to Believe: The Cumulative Case Part Three: God and Evil 17. The Square Circle Objection 18. God and Evil Reconciled 19. Reasons God Could Have to Allow Evil 20. Freedom and Determinism: A Chapter You Might Want to Skip 21. The Unicorn Objection 22. Is There an Elephant in the Room? Part Four: What Is God Like? 23. Beginning to Think About What God Is Like 24. What Can God Do? 25. What Can God Know? 26. Can God Know the Future? 27. Does God Communicate? Suggestions for Further Reading Index
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