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Inquiring about God is the first of two volumes of Nicholas Wolterstorff’s collected papers. This volume collects Wolterstorff’s essays on the philosophy of religion written over the last thirty-five years. The essays, which span a range of topics including Kant’s philosophy of religion, the medieval (or classical) conception of God, and the problem of evil, are unified by the conviction that some of the central claims made by the classical theistic tradition, such as the claims that God is timeless, simple, and impassible, should be rejected. Still, Wolterstorff contends, rejecting the classical conception of God does not imply that theists should accept the Kantian view according to which God cannot be known. Of interest to both philosophers and theologians, Inquiring about God should give the reader a lively sense of the creative and powerful work done in contemporary philosophical theology by one of its foremost practitioners.
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Inquiring about God is the first of two volumes of Nicholas Wolterstorff’s collected papers. This volume collects Wolterstorff’s essays on the philosophy of religion written over the last thirty-five years. The essays, which span a range of topics including Kant’s philosophy of religion, the medieval (or classical) conception of God, and the problem of evil, are unified by the conviction that some of the central claims made by the classical theistic tradition, such as the claims that God is timeless, simple, and impassible, should be rejected. Still, Wolterstorff contends, rejecting the classical conception of God does not imply that theists should accept the Kantian view according to which God cannot be known. Of interest to both philosophers and theologians, Inquiring about God should give the reader a lively sense of the creative and powerful work done in contemporary philosophical theology by one of its foremost practitioners.