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  1. 15. März 2021 · Internet Archive. Language. English. vii, 135 pages ; 22 cm. Includes bibliographical references (pages 130-132) and index. The God of the philosophers -- The eternal truths -- Omniscience and experience -- Omniscience, eternity, and time -- Foreknowledge and indetermination -- Foreknowledge and determination -- The definition of ...

  2. 20. Juni 2024 · Summary. The God that philosophers in the early modern period intended to refer to was the God of the Judeo-Christian tradition, which is to say, the being who created the world, who spoke to Moses from the burning bush, and who, through Jesus Christ, saved mankind from the consequences of sin.

    • Thomas M. Lennon
    • 2006
  3. The God of the Philosophers Georg Picht ABSTRACT Today all schools of philosophy seem to be agreed that God has no place in philosophy except as a phenomenon of the past. Whether the same fate awaits the God of Christian theology depends on whether the truth that appeared to the Greeks in the epiphany of the "God of the philosophers,"

  4. 19. Feb. 1987 · The God of the Philosophers. by Anthony Kenny (Author) 4.8 6 ratings. See all formats and editions. This provocative book examines some of the principal attributes traditionally ascribed to God in western theism, particularly omniscience and omnipotence.

    • (6)
    • 1979
    • Anthony John Patrick Kenny
    • Anthony Kenny
  5. The philosophers of medieval Christendom held that God was omniscient (foreknowning men's future free actions), omnipotent, omnipresent, timeless, immutable, and perfectly good; and also (in a sense) a person.

  6. The God of the Philosophers. Anthony Kenny. Clarendon Press, 1979 - Philosophy - 135 pages. This provocative book examines some of the principal attributes traditionally ascribed to God in...

  7. PART I - THE GOD OF THE PHILOSOPHERS. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010. Richard Mason. By. Thomas Traherne. Chapter. Get access. Cite. Summary. Natural Philosophy teaches us the Causes and Effects of all Bodies simply and in them selvs.