Friday, March 23, 2018
EPS Blog
This is the blog area for the Evangelical Philosophical Society and its journal, Philosophia Christi.
Thursday, March 15, 2018
Get the Current Issue of Philosophia Christi if You Renew/Subscribe by March 19th!
For as low as $25, become an Annual Member of the Evangelical Philosophical Society or a Journal-only subscriber of Philosophia Christi and you will receive the Winter 2017 as your first issue!
The Winter 2017 issue feature a wide-array of articles, philosophical notes and book reviews that address issues of theodicy, cosmology, philosophical theology and concerns of meta-ethics.
Contributors include C. Stephen Evans, William Lane Craig, R. Scott Smith, Matthew Flannagan, Stephan T. Davis. Robert Larmer, John DePoe, Paul Gould, Donald T. Williams, John Warwick Montgomery and many others!
Various discussions emerge in the Winter 2017 issue, including:
The Winter 2017 issue feature a wide-array of articles, philosophical notes and book reviews that address issues of theodicy, cosmology, philosophical theology and concerns of meta-ethics.
Contributors include C. Stephen Evans, William Lane Craig, R. Scott Smith, Matthew Flannagan, Stephan T. Davis. Robert Larmer, John DePoe, Paul Gould, Donald T. Williams, John Warwick Montgomery and many others!
Various discussions emerge in the Winter 2017 issue, including:
- Discussions about Theodicy and the Problem of Evil
- Debates about Platonism, Absolute Creationism, and Divine Aseity
- Assessments of Erik Wielenberg's "Autonomy Thesis."
- Critiques of Nicholas Wolterstorff's argument for same-sex marriage
Labels: donald t. williams, john depoe, john warwick montgomery, matthew flannagan, paul gould, philosophia christi, r. scott smith, robert larmer, scott smith, stephen davis, stephen evans, william lane craig
John Milbank on "Philosophy: A Theological Critique"
In 2018, Wiley-Blackwell will publish Philosophy: A Theological Critique by John Milbank. Milbank is Professor of Religion, Politics and Ethics at the University of Nottingham and Director of the Centre of Theology and Philosophy.
From the publisher's description of Philosophy:
From the publisher's description of Philosophy:
This proposed book is an attempt to place theology and philosophy in an entirely new sort of relationship. Instead of regarding philosophy as a prolegomenon to theology, I suggest that the enterprises should rather run in interlinked parallel and that if a philosophical critique of theology is possible, then so is the reverse. This is what this book seeks to carry out. It builds upon the new historiography of philosophy in recent years which shows that the turn to a recognisable ‘modern’ philosophy occurred around the year 1300 and not with Kant. One implication of this is that this turn was itself highly theological and therefore that modern philosophy is grounded in a certain kind of theology. If that theology can be called into question on theological grounds, then so, also, in certain respects, can almost the entirety of modern philosophy in its dominant currents.
The book also builds upon a related new non-Kantian return to metaphysics in early 21st century philosophy, which often takes the form of a quest for a pure immanence. While upholding the return to metaphysics I criticise this quest, and reveal its inherent problems, especially the way it tends to re-engender virulent forms of dualism. Instead I contend that, perhaps surprisingly, only philosophies of transcendence linked with a Christian theology can overcome these dualities and in particular sustain a mediating balance between ‘life’ and ‘truth’.
Labels: a Theological Critique (book), featured books, john milbank, kant, kantianism, philosophy