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Full Description
The Latter-day Saint theological tradition includes philosophically interesting commitments that are distinctive in relation to Classical Christian traditions. This is the first volume to offer an explicitly philosophical treatment of key ideas in the Latter-day Saint tradition.
Contemporary philosophy of religion has paid little attention to minority and heterodox traditions like that of the Latter-day Saints. This volume provides a starting place for the inclusion of the Latter-day Saint tradition in philosophy of religion. It collects original essays from contemporary philosophers, most of whom come from Latter-day Saint backgrounds and tackle philosophical issues concerning the Latter-day Saint tradition from an internal perspective. The chapters are divided into four thematic sections that explore the existence and nature of God, rationality and religious belief, ethics and morality, and issues related to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Contemporary Philosophy and the Latter-day Saint Tradition will appeal to researchers and graduate students working in philosophy of religion, Mormon studies, and theology.
Contents
Introduction Chapter 1: Bare Theism and Latter-day Saint Philosophical Theology Mike Ashfield Chapter 2: God an Alien, or an Alien God? Joseph Lawal Chapter 3: Is God Subordinate to Law? Derek Christian Haderlie Chapter 4: What Kind of Body is Gods? Mark A. Wrathall Chapter 5: Joseph Smith and the Specter of Classical Theism Taylor-Grey Miller Chapter 6: A Social Contract Theodicy Nathan Rockwood Chapter 7: Mormonism, Feminism, and Relational Moral Agency Eliza Wells Chapter 8: Authority Without Dominion Ryan W. Davis Chapter 9: The Sacred Nature of Shared Feeling: The Centrality of Empathy in the Latter-day Saint Tradition Katharina Paxman Chapter 10: Why a Latter-day Saint Might Recite the Nicean Creed Ryan Christensen. Index



