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  1. John Harwood Hick war ein britischer presbyterianischer Theologe und Religionsphilosoph. Er war ein wichtiger Vertreter der pluralistischen Religionstheologie – also der Überlegung, dass unterschiedliche Religionen wahr und heilsvermittelnd sein können. Das philosophisch-theologische Werk von Hick fokussierte sich auf die Punkte ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_HickJohn Hick - Wikipedia

    John Harwood Hick (20 January 1922 – 9 February 2012) was an England-born philosopher of religion and theologian who taught in the United States for the larger part of his career.

  3. Hick geht in seiner religionstheologischen Reflexion zunächst von den Weltreligionen aus, die in und nach der „Achsenzeit“ ( Karl Jaspers) entstanden sind. Sie – so seine zentrale These – stellen Antworten auf den einen göttlichen Wirklichkeitsgrund dar, den Hick „the Real“ („das Wirkliche“) nennt.

  4. John Hick was arguably one of the most important and influential philosophers of religion of the second half of the twentieth century. As a British philosopher in the anglo-analytic tradition , Hick did groundbreaking work in religious epistemology, philosophical theology, and religious pluralism.

  5. John Hick was an internationally read and discussed philosopher of religion and theologian. His many books have, between them, been translated into seventeen languages. More than twenty books have been published about his work in English, German, French, Chinese and Japanese.

  6. This volume contains fresh scholarly contributions to mark the birth centenary of John Hick, the world-renowned British theologian and philosopher of religion, whose works continue to have significant global relevance in today’s religiously diverse and conflict-ridden world.

  7. What Hick means by religion is made clear very early in the book. It is “belief in the transcendent” (1989: 6), for which Hick’s preferred term is “the Real” (1989: 11, 252-296). This religious characterizing of the argument by Hick is also part of the critical discussions that follow.