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Modern Philosophy - General & Miscellaneous, God - Theology
The Problem of God in Modern Thought by Philip Clayton β€” book cover

The Problem of God in Modern Thought

by Philip Clayton
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Overview

This study by Philip Clayton reconstructs and evaluates the steps by which the concept of God became a problem in modern thought. Clayton shows that this development has its roots in Descartes's break with the medieval tradition, in Leibniz's failure to build a modern metaphysics of perfection, in Kant's reduction of God to a regulative concept, and in the increasing power of the Spinoza tradition as it met the challenge of German idealism and became incorporated into it. These developments provide the backdrop against which theology's prospects today can be assessed." "Clayton shows how key thinkers of the modern period continued to wrestle with the concept of God as "infinite" and "perfect" and to make fresh proposals for understanding the divine. The sophisticated models of God developed by Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza, Fichte, and Schelling, among others, are presented, analyzed, and constructively applied to contemporary philosophical theology. Clayton's work reveals the resources that modern thought continues to offer to philosophical theologians. Ultimately, he finds in the narrative of modern thought about God strong support for panentheism, the new theological movement that maintains the transcendence of God while denying the separation of God and the world.

Synopsis

This study by Philip Clayton reconstructs and evaluates the steps by which the concept of God became a problem in modern thought. Clayton shows that this development has its roots in Descartes's break with the medieval tradition, in Leibniz's failure to build a modern metaphysics of perfection, in Kant's reduction of God to a regulative concept, and in the increasing power of the Spinoza tradition as it met the challenge of German idealism and became incorporated into it. These developments provide the backdrop against which theology's prospects today can be assessed." "Clayton shows how key thinkers of the modern period continued to wrestle with the concept of God as "infinite" and "perfect" and to make fresh proposals for understanding the divine. The sophisticated models of God developed by Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza, Fichte, and Schelling, among others, are presented, analyzed, and constructively applied to contemporary philosophical theology. Clayton's work reveals the resources that modern thought continues to offer to philosophical theologians. Ultimately, he finds in the narrative of modern thought about God strong support for panentheism, the new theological movement that maintains the transcendence of God while denying the separation of God and the world.

Louis DuprΓ©

"This study, already laureled in its German version, accomplishes a veritable breakthrough in philosophical theology. Philip Clayton rescues the discipline from a stagnant epistemology and returns it to its native metaphysical ground. His imaginative reinterpretation of major modern thinkers, his careful analysis of seldom examined theological notions, and his comprehensive philosophical erudition give this work the stature of a classic."

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Editorials

Joseph A. Bracken

Having set forth the case for panentheism as the most appropriate model for the God-world relationship in God and Contemporary Science, Clayton here investigates panentheism's historical antecedents in modern philosophy from Descartes to Schelling. Especially valuable is his critique of the classical notion of divine infinity; he asks whether God cannot be both infinite and finite at the same time. Using the resources of Spinoza, Lessing, and the German Idealists, especially Schelling, Clayton points the way to a contemporary solution to some of the enduring problems in modern philosophical theology. In particular, he underscores the need for a radical rethinking of the classical God-world relationship if one is to truly endorse the notion of panentheism.

Louis DuprΓ©

"This study, already laureled in its German version, accomplishes a veritable breakthrough in philosophical theology. Philip Clayton rescues the discipline from a stagnant epistemology and returns it to its native metaphysical ground. His imaginative reinterpretation of major modern thinkers, his careful analysis of seldom examined theological notions, and his comprehensive philosophical erudition give this work the stature of a classic."

Wolfhart Pannenberg

The Problem of God in Modern Thought offers a new approach to the history of metaphysics in modern philosophy based on the most recent research into the thought of the leading figures from Descartes to Schelling. It takes its cue from the recent French interpretation of Descartes as the founder of a new approach to philosophical theology. This book is the most comprehensive account of the modern history of philosophical theology that presently exists.

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2000
Publisher
Eerdmans, William B. Publishing Company
Pages
536
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780802864789

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