Religious Belief, 1st ed. 2021
Palgrave Frontiers in Philosophy of Religion Series

Language: English

68.56 €

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100 p. · 14.8x21 cm · Hardback
This book addresses the different forms that religious belief can take. Two primary forms are discussed: propositional or doctrinal belief, and belief in God. Religious belief in God, whose affective content is trust in God, it is seen, opens for believers a relationship to God defined by trust in God. The book addresses the issue of the relation between belief and faith, the issue of what Søren Kierkegaard called the subjectivity of faith, and the issue of the relation between religious belief and religious experience. After the introductory chapter the book continues with a chapter in which features and forms of belief allowed by the general concept of belief are presented. Several of these forms and features are related to the features of religious belief examined in succeeding chapters. The book's final chapter examines God-relationships in the Christian tradition that de-emphasize belief and are not defined by belief.
Chap 1 Introduction.- Chap 2 Features and Forms of Belief.- Chap 3 Confessional Belief.- Chap 4 Belief in God.- Chap 5 Implicit Belief.- Chap 6 Belief and Subjectivity.-- Chap 7 Belief in Relics.- Chap 8 Religious Experience and Belief.- Chap 9 Divisions of Belief.- Chap 10 Belief/Faith in God and Other God-Relationships.

James Kellenberger is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Northridge, USA. His previous books include Kierkegaard andNietzsche (1997), Dying to Self and Detachment (2017), and Religious Revelation (2021).

Explores religious belief in its several forms, including propositional or doctrinal belief, belief - or belief-faith - in God, and implicit belief

Examines the issue of the relationship between religious belief and religious experience

Presents the case that in the Christian tradition there are God-relationships not defined by belief