The God of Religion and the God of Philosophy

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 2:152-167 (1968)
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Abstract

In several great religions God is thought of as an agent or active individual exalted in principle above other agents, the supreme creative and controlling power. But, however exalted, the deity is still, in spite of what Tillich and others say, an individual being, somehow analogous to a human person. Indeed, man is said to be created in the divine image. Without this analogy religion loses an essential trait. Not only in faiths derived from Judaism, but also in Zoroastrianism, and even in much Hinduism and some Buddhism, the analogy plays a central role.

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reprint Hartshorne, Charles (1968) "The God of Religion and the God of Philosophy". Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 2():152-167

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