1st Edition

On God, Space, and Time

By Akiva Vroman Copyright 1999
264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

244 Pages
by Routledge

For Akiva Jaap Vroman "a day in the infinite past" is nonsense. All the days that have elapsed belong to a past of countable days; they started on a first day a finite number of days ago. Time began this first day. It follows that an eternal past does not exist. Vroman bases his reasoning on a simple mathematical law: an infinite quantity remains the same infinite quantity if a finite quantity,... Read more
Introduction, 1. An Introduction to Reality and Imagination, 2. The Modem Vindication of the Existence of the Creator, 3. God: The Ontological Argument and the Argument from Design, 4. God, Mind, and Body: Part 1, 5.God, Mind, and Body: Part 2, 6. The Spanish Intermezzo, 7. Spinoza: The Aftermath of the Spanish Intermezzo, 8. The Very Few Jewish Idealists after Spinoza, 9. The Legacy of Spinoza, 10. The Development of the Concept of Space-Time, 11. Immanuel Kant and His Spiritual Inheritance, 12. Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Max Wentscher, 13. Charles Darwin and the Ensuing -ism, 14. An Introduction to Ignorance, 15. Religious Eschatology, Part 1: The Jewish Messiah, 16. Religious Eschatology, Part 2: The Christian Messiah, 17. Religious Eschatology, Part 3: Apocalyptic Revelation in Psychological Science, 18. Religious Eschatology, Part 4: The Fate of the World in the, 19. God and Moral Virtue, 20. The Modem World against God, 21. The Question of Life and Death: The Medical Approach, 22. Bridging the Chasm between God and Mankind in Judaism, 23. On the Future of Humanism and Divine Justice in Judaism, 24. Worship and Service in Prospect.

Biography

Akiva Vroman