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Thinking Through Feeling : God, Emotion and Passibility

Part of the Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion series
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Contemporary debates on God's emotionality are divided between two extremes.

Impassibilists deny God's emotionality on the basis of God's omniscience, omnipotence and incorporeality.

Passibilists seem to break with tradition by affirming divine emotionality, often focusing on the idea that God suffers with us. Contemporary philosophy of emotion reflects this divide.

Some philosophers argue that emotions are voluntary and intelligent mental events, making them potentially compatible with omniscience and omnipotence.

Others claim that emotions are involuntary and basically physiological, rendering them inconsistent with traditional divine attributes. Thinking Through Feeling: God, Emotion and Passibility creates a three-way conversation between the debate in theology, contemporary philosophy of emotion, and pre-modern (particularly Augustinian and Thomist) conceptions of human affective experience.

It also provides an exploration of the intelligence and value of the emotions of compassion, anger and jealousy.

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Product Details
Bloomsbury Academic USA
1623560713 / 9781623560713
Paperback / softback
128.37
23/05/2013
United States
English
240 pages
345 grams