Henry More and Thomas Hobbes’s Corporeal God
Thomas Hobbes’s strict monistic materialism led many contemporaries to believe he must be an atheist—to hold God to be a corporeal being, they claimed, was effectively to deny his existence. This paper is an addition to those works suggesting that Hobbes’s belief in a corporeal God must be taken ser...
        Saved in:
      
    
          | Main Author: | John Henry | 
|---|---|
| Format: | Article | 
| Language: | English | 
| Published: | MDPI AG
    
        2024-11-01 | 
| Series: | Religions | 
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/15/11/1394 | 
| Tags: | Add Tag 
      No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
   | 
Similar Items
- 
                
                    Theologico-political Issues in Richard Hooker’s Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity and Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan        
                          
 by: Pierre Lurbe
 Published: (2011-04-01)
- 
                
                    De vuelta a Hobbes        
                          
 by: Wilmar Martínez Márquez
 Published: (2013-01-01)
- 
                
                    The Tachtigers’ ideology in D.G. Jelgersma’s portraits of Francis Bacon and Thomas Hobbes in “De Nieuwe Gids”        
                          
 by: Przemysław A. Paluszek
 Published: (2024-12-01)
- 
                
                    Hobbes bez Schmitta. Suwerenność, prawa człowieka a porównawcza teologia polityczna        
                          
 by: Mariusz Turowski
 Published: (2024-09-01)
- 
                
                    Hobbes and Kant: Materialism and Rhetoric        
                          
 by: Gonzalo Bustamante Kuschel
 Published: (2024-10-01)
 
       