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God, Time and Freedom

Religious Studies 23 (1):81 - 94 (1987)

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  1. Rational theology and the creativity of God.Keith Ward & François Helft - 1983 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 173 (1):72-73.
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  • Critical notice.D. M. Armstrong - 1958 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 36 (2):128 – 145.
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  • Divine Sempiternity and Atemporality: J. L. TOMKINSON.J. L. Tomkinson - 1982 - Religious Studies 18 (2):177-189.
    Notable among the current fashions in philosophical theology is the movement away from the view that the mode of being properly attributable to God is some form of atemporal eternity. It sometimes seems almost to be the case that a consensus is in process of formation in support of the contention that the only rationally defensible interpretation of the divine eternity is in terms of sempiternity, i.e. of beginingless and endless temporal duration. This is true not only of the so-called (...)
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  • The Openness of Being: Natural Theology Today.E. L. Mascall - 1971
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  • The Problem of the Divine Eternity: R. L. STURCH.R. L. Sturch - 1974 - Religious Studies 10 (4):487-493.
    The ‘traditional’ view among philosophical theologians, that God is eternal not merely in the sense of being everlasting but in the sense of being outside time altogether, has come under sharp criticism in recent years, both from biblical theologians and from philosophers. It is against the latter form of attack, particularly as represented by the detailed criticisms of Professor Nelson Pike, that I wish to try and defend the notion of a divine timelessness.
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  • Making Things to Have Happened.Roderick M. Chisholm & Richard Taylor - 1959 - Analysis 20 (4):73 - 78.
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  • (1 other version)God, Time and Eternity.Stewart R. Sutherland - 1979 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 79 (1):103-122.
    In this paper I propose to examine three different accounts of what it means to talk of God as eternal. Probably the most generally understood sense in which God is believed to be eternal is that of timelessness, as expounded for example by Boethius and Aquinas. An alternative view on the matter is to be found in Nelson Pike's God and Timelessness and in Richard Swinburne's The Coherence of Theism. Swinburne argues explicitly, and Pike implicitly, that talk of the eternity (...)
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  • God's World, God's Body.Grace M. Jantzen - 1984 - Religious Studies 20 (4):688-692.
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  • The direction of causation.John L. Mackie - 1966 - Philosophical Review 75 (4):441-466.
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  • Aquinas.F. C. COPLESTON - 1955 - Philosophy 32 (120):86-87.
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  • The Physical Basis of Mind.Peter Laslett - 1951 - Philosophy 26 (97):167-168.
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  • Kenny on God.Brian Davies Op - 1982 - Philosophy 57 (219):105-.
    Anthony Kenny concludes The God of the Philosophers by saying that ‘If the argument of the previous chapters has been correct then there is no such being as the God of traditional natural theology … There cannot, if our argument has been sound, be a timeless, immutable, omniscient, omnipotent all-good being’ . According to Kenny.
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  • Kenny on God.Brian Davies - 1982 - Philosophy 57 (219):105 - 117.
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