1st Edition
Eighteenth-Century Dissent and Cambridge Platonism Reconceiving the Philosophy of Religion
Introduction
Chapter 1: Enlightenments, the Philosophy of Religion and the History of Philosophy
Chapter 2: Godliness and Godlikeness: Deiform Reason and the Honest Mind
Chapter 3: State Cozenage and Political Fictions: Reason, Revelation and the Politics of Conformity
Chapter 4: The Ethical Cosmos: Natural Theology, Epistemic Humility and the Immutability of Goodness
Chapter 5: Casting out Hagar and her Children: Deiformity, Liberty and Politics
Chapter 6: Wrought in each Flower, Inscrib’d on ev’ry tree’: Wollstonecraft, Reason and the Contemplation of Divinized Nature
Conclusion
Biography
Louise Hickman is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Ethics at Newman University, Birmingham, UK
"This short volume is ambitious: it aims to offer both a clear and accurate account of a little known slice of the history of philosophy, and an argument for revising the way analytic philosophers conceive of philosophy of religion ... It succeeds, to a large extent, in doing both. In particular, Louise Hickman offers ... useful resources for rethinking some aspects of how natural theology is read and taught." - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"There is much to appreciate in this study. Hickman’s explanation of eighteenth-century arguments for the existence of God that claimed the status of scientific proof and justified belief in God on just such scientific grounds is useful. So, too, is her exposure of the often unrecognized political contexts and implications of theological inquiry that entailed the endorsement of both divine and secular power and will as the source and foundation of moral right and order." - Martha, K. Zebrowski, Columbia University






