Royce and Religious Naturalism
Keywords:
Royce, Religious naturalism, Natura naturans, Donald Crosby, Schleiermacher, Immanence and transcendence, Absolute, Fault, Community, Atonement, Contingency, Pursuit of securityAbstract
The purpose of this paper is to compare and contrast the orientation proposed by the American philosopher Josiah Royce, which puts an infinite, absolute, and saving consciousness at the center of religion and the orientation set forth by a broad range of thinkers who have developed and defended various forms of religious naturalism where it is nature fundamentally in the form of natura naturans, not a center of consciousness, that is the focal point of religious concerns. The paper examines the key features of Royce's notion of the Absolute and its relation to the three pivots of the religious problem as Royce saw it: an experienced fault lying at the heart of existence, a need for a beloved community of interpreters who would be loyal not just to one another but loyal to loyalty itself, and practices of atonement that would heal the broken world of human existence in time. I show how it is possible to reconstruct these pivots in religious naturalist terms: 'fault' can be reconstructed as the sense of 'creatureliness,' 'atonement' as 'healing the rift' in human existence by the 'free creation and preservation of values,' and the 'beloved community' as a variety of interpretation communities open to the appearance of meaning and value in all the ways they emerge from natura naturans. Various ways of reconfiguring other elements of the Roycean position are also developed in the course of the paper.Metrics
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Innis, R. E. (2012). Royce and Religious Naturalism. Cognitio: Revista De Filosofia, 12(2), 221–236. Retrieved from https://revistas.pucsp.br/index.php/cognitiofilosofia/article/view/11604
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Cognitio Papers






