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The Knowledge of God According to Two Process Theologians: A Twentieth-Century Gnosticism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

Colin Gunton
Affiliation:
Lecturer in the Philosophy of Religion, Kings College, University of London

Extract

Knowledge of God, in the sense of acquaintance with him, is an unavoidable part of our experience as human beings. God is presented to us along with the other data of our experience. That is the heart of the understanding of the knowledge of God according to the doctrines of the two Process theologians who are the subjects of this paper. Quite how it is so will, I hope, follow from an exposition of the views of Schubert M. Ogden and Charles Hartshorne, who represent different aspects of the situation. Hartshorne is the philosopher, who has devoted all his intellectual life to preaching and refining his metaphysical system, while Ogden has taken up Hartshorne's discoveries for apologetic and theological reasons. A brief look at Ogden's intellectual history will set the scene.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1975

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References

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