Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-5nwft Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-05T04:41:44.787Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Professor N. H. G. Robinson and Natural Theology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

Illtyd Trethowan
Affiliation:
Monk of Downside Abbey

Extract

In a recent article ‘The Problem of Natural Theology’, Professor N. H. G. Robinson has considered the requirements of a ‘genuinely empirical natural theology’. For the first section of it, a very clear sorting-out of recent debates on the ontological argument, I have nothing but admiration. It ends with the question: ‘Granted that if we think of God we must think of him as necessarily existing, why must we think of God at all?’, followed by the comment: ‘We seem thrown, without any prospect of rest, between apriorism and [Barthian] empiricism’. Robinson is rightly dissatisfied with that situation, and in his second section he raises the question whether there cannot be an approach to God which the debates on the ontological arguments (as so far described) have overlooked and which may be properly called an ‘empirical’ one, free from Barthian presuppositions. He finds what seems to be such an approach in Professor E. L. Mascall's Existence and Analogy but concludes that it is in fact after all a form of ‘rationalism’. In the third section he criticises Professor T. F. Torrance's defence of Barth's position in a way which seems to me most satisfactory, and in the fourth he makes his own positive proposals. With these I am in substantial agreement. It is only his account of Mascall's position, in particular at the end of his second section, which seems to call for critical comment.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 463 note 1 Religious Studies, 8, pp. 319–333.

page 463 note 2 Existence and Analogy (1949), p. 80.Google Scholar

page 464 note 1 Existence and Analogy, p. 71.

page 464 note 2 Our Experience of God (1959); pp. 4143, 65.Google Scholar

page 466 note 1 In Words and Images (1957), for example.

page 466 note 2 I have discussed it in some detail elsewhere, most recently in Absolute Value and The Absolute and the Atonement (Muirhead Library, 1970 and 1971) and in Mysticism and Theology, a short synthesis of those two books, forthcoming in 1974.

page 467 note 1 P. 111.