scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

God and the Processes of Reality: Foundations of a Credible Theism

A. P. Shooman
- 01 Jan 1990 - 
- Vol. 31, Iss: 1, pp 51-53
About
This article is published in Philosophical Books.The article was published on 1990-01-01. It has received 3 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Theism.

read more

Citations
More filters

Protology and Eschatology in the Writings of John C. Polkinghorne: a Study of Contrastive Roles of Scripture

TL;DR: A study of CONTRASTIVE ROLES OF SCRIPTURE by H. Nicholas De Lima and John T. Baldwin was published in 1989 as mentioned in this paper with the title "Protestology and ESCHATOLOGY in the WRITINGS OF JOHN C. POLKINGHORNE".

John hick's pluralistic hypothesis and john cobb's process pluralism

TL;DR: This paper brought John Hick's hypothesis into engagement with the process pluralism position developed by John B. Cobb Jr. and David Ray Griffin in the ongoing attempt to adequately account for the reality of religious truth-claim diversity.
Dissertation

Confronting 'meaningless' suffering : from suffering-as-insult to suffering-as-ontological-impertinence

Sally Nelson
TL;DR: Nelson as discussed by the authors argues that suffering is primarily identified in the modern West as an insult to normality, often expressed in various forms of the question: "Why me?" and challenges this view of suffering as insult by selectively identifying and critiquing some culturally embedded views of the nature of reality.
References
More filters

Protology and Eschatology in the Writings of John C. Polkinghorne: a Study of Contrastive Roles of Scripture

TL;DR: A study of CONTRASTIVE ROLES OF SCRIPTURE by H. Nicholas De Lima and John T. Baldwin was published in 1989 as mentioned in this paper with the title "Protestology and ESCHATOLOGY in the WRITINGS OF JOHN C. POLKINGHORNE".

John hick's pluralistic hypothesis and john cobb's process pluralism

TL;DR: This paper brought John Hick's hypothesis into engagement with the process pluralism position developed by John B. Cobb Jr. and David Ray Griffin in the ongoing attempt to adequately account for the reality of religious truth-claim diversity.
Dissertation

Confronting 'meaningless' suffering : from suffering-as-insult to suffering-as-ontological-impertinence

Sally Nelson
TL;DR: Nelson as discussed by the authors argues that suffering is primarily identified in the modern West as an insult to normality, often expressed in various forms of the question: "Why me?" and challenges this view of suffering as insult by selectively identifying and critiquing some culturally embedded views of the nature of reality.