Saturday, December 17, 2011

Academics: Christian Philosophy: The Enlightenment - scrutinized and evaluated by two Christian philosophers

-
-
Rodopi's New Titles 
includes a new book by
Leonard Sweet (Catholic, analytic philosophy) and
Hendrik Hart (Reformed, neo-calvinian, reformational philosophy)
-

Bookcover    






 Responses 


 to the Enlightenment.




 An Exchange 


 on Foundations, Faith, 

 and Community.


     by William Sweet 
     & Hendrik Hart

  Amsterdam/New York, NY, 2012, XIV, 294 pp.
  Pb: 978-90-420-3447-1
  € 60 / US$ 81




Series:
Value Inquiry Book Series
 241 
Philosophy and Religion



Since the time of the Enlightenment in Western Europe, discussions of faith and reason have often pitted the believer against the skeptic, the theist against the atheist, and the person of one faith against the person of no professed faith. But the relation of reason to faith has been a matter of debate among believers as well. There are those who hold that religious faith can be proven or supported by rational argument. Others say that to try to give reasons and arguments does violence to religious faith, or opens it to misunderstanding and doubt, or trivializes it.

Responses to the Enlightenment: An Exchange on Foundations, Faith, and Community is a dialogue between Hendrik Hart and William Sweet, two philosophers who identify themselves as Christians, and who seek to respond to the challenges of the Enlightenment and its legacy. The authors approach the relation of faith to reason, however, in very different ways: Hart from the perspective of the Calvinian tradition and postmodern philosophy, Sweet from the Catholic tradition and analytic philosophy. Among the topics discussed are the nature of religious faith and of reason, liberalism and orthodoxy in religion, the relation of religious experience and rationality, and building community in a religiously and culturally pluralistic world. This exchange presents two distinctive perspectives to some of the major challenges of the reason to religious belief, but seeks to find common ground between them.





Contents

Kenneth A. Bryson: Editorial Foreword

Preface

Hendrik Hart: Reason and Religion

Hendrik Hart: Liberalism, Pluralism, and Lived Faith

William Sweet: Anti-Foundationalism and the Nature of Religious Belief

Hendrik Hart: Faith as Trust and Belief as Intellectual Credulity

William Sweet: Faith, Belief, and Religious Truth

William Sweet: Discourse and Religious Truth

William Sweet: Religious Belief, Meaning, and Argument

William Sweet: Final Vocabularies and Building Communities

William Sweet: Religious Belief and Community

Hendrik Hart: Sorting Out Reason

Hendrik Hart: Focused in Faith: The Epistemology of Faith as a Way of Knowing

Hendrik Hart: The Give-and-Take of Cross-Traditional Discourse

William Sweet: Distinguishing to Unite: Reason, Religion, and the Legacy of the Enlightenment

Works Cited
Appendix
About the Authors
Index

0 comments: