The idea of God, historical, critical, constructive,

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Beckwith, Clarence Augustine, 1849-1931.
Imprint:New York, Macmillan, 1922.
Description:xiii, 343 pages 20 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/3172074
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Notes:Includes bibliographical references.
Also issued online.
Other form:Online version: Beckwith, Clarence Augustine, 1849-1931. Idea of God. New York, Macmillan, 1922

MARC

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245 1 4 |a The idea of God,  |b historical, critical, constructive,  |c by Clarence Augustine Beckwith. 
260 |a New York,  |b Macmillan,  |c 1922. 
300 |a xiii, 343 pages  |c 20 cm 
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references. 
505 0 |a I. Causes necessitating change in the idea of God. Introduction ; Changes in other departments of thought ; The scientific spirit ; The changed world-view ; The never theories concerning the scriptures ; The notion of authority ; The supernatural ; The historical origin of the idea of God ; Fusion of Semitic and Aryan thought ; The new study of Jesus Christ ; The psychology of religion ; The static and the dynamic theory of reality ; The contribution of experience ; The ethicizing of theology ; Literary interest in the idea of God ; The new social emphasis ; Influence of the war ; The revision of the theistic arguments ; The notion of the Trinity -- II. Historical sketch of the idea of God. Introduction ; The Hebrew and Greek conception of God ; The early Christian centuries ; Augustine ; The Scholastic period ; Beginnings of the modern era ; The nineteenth century ; The idea of God and experience -- III. Present-day conceptions of God. Introduction ; God as finite ; The social approach ; The new realism ; God as immanent ; Christ and the Spirit substituted for God ; Values enshrined in the idea of God ; God in Christian Science ; A questionnaire on the idea of God -- IV. The theistic arguments -- in general. Introduction ; Hebrew and Greek thought ; Anselm ; Hume ; Kant ; The common English and American doctrine ; Hegelian idealism ; The pragmatic conception ; Summary and criticism. 
505 0 |a V. The idea of God and the doctrine of cause. Introduction ; The common and the scientific world-view ; The doctrine of cause ; Relation of the human consciousness to creation ; An eternal creative process and salvation -- VI. The idea of God and the doctrine of ends. Introduction ; Sketch of teleology ; Place of teleology in animal and human life ; Bearing of teleology on the idea of God ; Purposive activity and consciousness ; "Hit or miss," "trial and error" method in nature ; Plan in the universe ; The immanent tendency to development -- VII. The idea of God in relation to evil. Co-existence of God and evil ' Experience and evil ; Evil as occasion of sympathy and social service ; Evil in a good world ; Evil and the idea of God ; Moral evil and the overcoming of it -- VIII. Moral values and the idea of God. Introduction ; The question of values ; God in terms of value ; Values and the psychology of religion ; The idea of God and the consciousness of values ; Relation of value judgments to reality -- IX. The finite and the infinite. Introduction ; Dilemma of God as infinite ; God as finite ; Value and happiness in relation to God ; More recent presentation ; "Infinite" as applied to God. 
505 0 |a X. The absolute and the idea of God. The metaphysical approach ; The ethical argument for the absolute ; Pragmatic pluralism and the absolute ; God and the absolute -- XI. Transcendence and immanence. Introduction ; The theological conception of transcendence ; The mystical idea of transcendence ; The philosophical view of transcendence ; Forms of the doctrine of immanence ; Revaluation of transcendence and immanence -- XII. The personality of God. Introduction ; Inherent difficulties in the term "person" ; Person and personality ; The naive approach to personality ; Personality and the absolute ; Primacy of the will and the absolute ; God as super-personal ; God as the perfect personality ; The personality of God and purposive ends -- XIII. The living God. Introduction ; The idea of God a postulate of faith ; The living God as a simplifying conception ; The tension between justice and mercy ; The idea of God as related to prayer ; Co-operation with the divine good will ; The great Comforter. 
530 |a Also issued online. 
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776 0 8 |i Online version:  |a Beckwith, Clarence Augustine, 1849-1931.  |t Idea of God.  |d New York, Macmillan, 1922  |w (OCoLC)614733293 
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927 |t Library of Congress classification  |a BT101.B3  |l JRL  |c JRL-Gen  |b 090210263  |i 5521435