Abstract
In this article I concentrate on three issues. First, Graham Oppy’s treatment of the relationship between the concept of infinity and Zeno’s paradoxes makes apparent several problems that must be dealt with if the concept of infinity is to do any intellectual work in the philosophy of religion. Here I will expand on some insightful remarks by Oppy in an effort to adequately respond to these problems. Second, I will do the same regarding Oppy’s treatment of Kant’s first antinomy in the first critique, which deals in part with the question of whether the world had a beginning in time or if time extends infinitely into the past. And third, my examination of these two issues will inform what I have to say regarding a key topic in philosophy of religion: the question regarding the proper relationship between the infinite and the finite in the concept of God.
This article is reprinted with permission of the author and publisher. The original article was entitled “Oppy, Infinity, and the Neoclassical Concept of God” and appeared in International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 61 (1), 2007.
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Suggested Readings: Neo-classical Theism
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6.Dombrowski, Daniel. 2006. Rethinking the ontological argument: A neoclassical theistic response. New York: Cambridge University Press.
7.Forrest, Peter. 2007. Developmental theism: From pure will to unbounded love. Oxford: Clarendon.
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11.Leslie, John. 1989. Universes. London: Routledge.
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13.Nagasawa, Yujin. 2008. A new defence of Anselmian theism. Philosophical Quarterly 58: 577–596.
14.Whitehead, Alfred North. 2007. Religion in the making. New York: Fordham University Press.
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Dombrowski, D.A. (2013). Infinity, the Neoclassical Concept of God, and Oppy. In: Diller, J., Kasher, A. (eds) Models of God and Alternative Ultimate Realities. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5219-1_21
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