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Search Results:
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Displaying records 311 through 320 of 321 |
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Price: $21.95
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Sale: $9.86
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Manufacturer: State University of New York Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Daniel A. Dombrowski
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Publisher: State University of New York Press
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Dewey Decimal Number: 211.092
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Publication Date: 1996-10
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Reading Level: 247
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Price: $161.50
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Sale: $134.04
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Manufacturer: Springer
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Publisher: Springer
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Edition: 1
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Dewey Decimal Number: 211.3
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Publication Date: 1999-07-31
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Reading Level: 288
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Description: In May 1998, a distinguished group of philosophers met in Munich to discuss the rationality of theism. This volume is a collection of the papers read at that conference. While in recent years the rationality of theistic belief has been widely discussed, the Munich conference was an event of some moment in the history of philosophical dialogue: for the first time German- and English-speaking philosophers of religion, representatives of both the Continental and the Anglo-Saxon traditions, joined together to grapple with a common philosophical theme. This multiplicity of perspectives brought a unique richness to the analysis of rationality that no one tradition by itself could provide. Readers will find that richness displayed in the pages of this book. Professional philosophers will find here a great deal to stimulate and challenge them; but graduate students, capable undergraduates, and all others with a serious interest in the philosophy of religion will be well rewarded for their efforts to come to grips with these thought-provoking papers.
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Manufacturer: Case, Lockwood and Company
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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Author: Isaac Harrington
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Publisher: Case, Lockwood and Company
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Publication Date: 1860
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Reading Level: 95
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Manufacturer: Philosophical Library and Alliance Book Corp
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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Author: John Laird
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Publisher: Philosophical Library and Alliance Book Corp
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Publication Date: 1942
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Reading Level: 325
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Manufacturer: [Angelica Schuyler Patterson]
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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Author: Eliza Thayer Clapp
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Publisher: [Angelica Schuyler Patterson]
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Publication Date: 1888
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Reading Level: 273
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Manufacturer: Houghton, Mifflin
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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Author: John Fiske
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Publisher: Houghton, Mifflin
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Edition: [Standard library ed.]
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Publication Date: 1902
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Price: $39.50
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Sale: $37.53
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Manufacturer: Eisenbrauns
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Lowell K. Handy
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Publisher: Eisenbrauns
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Dewey Decimal Number: 299.2
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Publication Date: 1994-09-01
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Reading Level: 218
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Manufacturer: Joseph Thornton & Son
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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Author: Ernest William H. Hartley Parker
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Publisher: Joseph Thornton & Son
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Publication Date: 1899
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Reading Level: 40
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Manufacturer: John P. Des Forges
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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Author: Theodore Parker
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Publisher: John P. Des Forges
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Publication Date: 1871
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Reading Level: 16
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Price: $25.00
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Sale: $5.74
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Manufacturer: Carleton House
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Paul Dehn Carleton
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Publisher: Carleton House
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Publication Date: 2004-03-10
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Reading Level: 424
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Description: Why is belief in God so common? This book is a search for the source of such beliefs, for the roots of theism, termed prototheism. Prototheism is a science of religion, not a religion. Its notion is that theistic belief is an age-old misconception of an Urge to Life which emerges naturally from deep in humans. This Life Urge is innate in all Life. But in us humans it emerges into consciousness where, rather than being owned as inherent in human nature, it is more often experienced as ‘faith’ and projected out onto gods/God. The book first looks at how belief in gods may have originated in early humans and evolved into the Greco-Roman religion which dominated the Mediterranean world when Christianity began. The book then suggests how Christianity itself came to dominate the western world. Next it examines the Concepts Christians used back then to explain their world, versus the Concepts that have gained acceptance in just the past few centuries to explain our world today. The book does this by going back to beginnings — of the Universe, of Earth, of Life, of animals and of humans — to trace evolution’s trajectory. Then it surveys what has been learned about brains and consciousness in the past century. With that updated perspective, the book takes a fresh look at ‘religion’ — at how belief in gods/God ‘out there’ might be reinterpreted as a Life Urge that emerges spontaneously in humans and at how a rapport with one’s Life Urge might be fostered. And also from that perspective, the book looks at our runaway material culture and suggests a prototheistic ethic consistent with and supportive of evolution’s trajectory, as we perceive it. Throughout, but especially at the outset, the book tries to be sensitive to how theistic beliefs were instilled in most of us and may still linger in the ways we think and conceptualize our world. It suggests ways the reader might ‘rewire their brain’ in making this often arduous paradigm shift. Although addressed to Christians, appendixes speak to Jews and Muslims.
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Displaying records 311 through 320 of 321
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