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oapen-20.500.12657-400322023-07-25T09:45:09Z Panentheism and Panpsychism Brüntrup, Godehard Göcke, Benedikt Paul Jaskolla, Ludwig Tapp, Christian Niederbacher, Bruno Religion Philosophy bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HR Religion & beliefs bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HP Philosophy Panpsychism has become a highly attractive position in the philosophy of mind. On panpsychism, both the physical and the mental are inseparable and fundamental features of reality. Panentheism has also become immensely popular in the philosophy of religion. Panentheism strives for a higher reconciliation of an atheistic pantheism, on which the universe itself is causa sui, and the ontological dualism of necessarily existing, eternal creator and contingent, finite creation. Historically and systematically, panpsychism and panentheism often went together as essential parts of an allembracing metaphysical theory of Being. The present collection of essays analyses the relation between panpsychism and panentheism and provides critical reflections on the significance of panpsychistic and panentheistic thinking for recent debates in philosophy and theology. 2020-07-20T13:37:46Z 2020-07-20T13:37:46Z 2020 book ONIX_20200720_9783957431714_14 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/40032 eng Innsbruck Studies in Philosophy of Religion application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9783957437303.pdf mentis 10.30965/9783957437303 10.30965/9783957437303 Brill mentis 2 311 open access
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Panpsychism has become a highly attractive position in the philosophy of mind. On panpsychism, both the physical and the mental are inseparable and fundamental features of reality. Panentheism has also become immensely popular in the philosophy of religion. Panentheism strives for a higher reconciliation of an atheistic pantheism, on which the universe itself is causa sui, and the ontological dualism of necessarily existing, eternal creator and contingent, finite creation. Historically and systematically, panpsychism and panentheism often went together as essential parts of an allembracing metaphysical theory of Being. The present collection of essays analyses the relation between panpsychism and panentheism and provides critical reflections on the significance of panpsychistic and panentheistic thinking for recent debates in philosophy and theology.
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