Religion and Philosophy
Copleston's 1974 study on the philosophical assessment of religion — natural theology after the analytic turn
Tradition: Neo-Scholastic Thomism / philosophy of religion
Copleston's 1974 monograph — philosophy of religion after Ayer and after Vatican II
Published by Gill & Macmillan in 1974, 'Religion and Philosophy' is Copleston's late, sustained statement on the philosophical assessment of religion in a climate transformed by both the analytic turn (Ayer, Flew, Mackie) and the post-conciliar Catholic theological situation. The book addresses verificationism, the cognitive status of religious language, the classical proofs, and the question whether philosophy can give content to terms like 'God' without simply borrowing the content from prior religious experience.
Author
Editions cited
- Religion and Philosophy (Gill & Macmillan, Dublin, 1974)
School Embodiments
Major mid-1970s English-language statement on philosophy of religion.
"Religion is not a kind of philosophy, but philosophy can examine it." (Religion and Philosophy, ch. 1)
Thomist framework for the philosophical examination of religion.
"The Thomist tradition offers the natural framework for philosophy of religion." (Religion and Philosophy, ch. 3)
Defends natural-theological inquiry against verificationist closure.
"Natural theology survives the dismissal of verificationism." (Religion and Philosophy, ch. 5)
Engages analytic philosophy of religion (Ayer, Flew, Mitchell).
"Analytic philosophy has clarified, not closed, the questions of religion." (Religion and Philosophy, ch. 4)
Perennial-philosophical framing of the religious questions.
"The metaphysical questions about God and the soul are perennial." (Religion and Philosophy, conclusion)
Analytic-philosophical tradition.
Internal Tensions
Late-career synthesis of Copleston's lifelong philosophy-of-religion programme.
I. Time
1974 — post-Vatican-II, post-verificationist Anglophone setting.
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II. Space
Dublin / London Catholic-academic context.
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III. Matter
Monograph on philosophy of religion.
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IV. Observer
Late Copleston synthesising decades of engagement.
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V. Energy
Patient critical engagement with both analytic and post-conciliar developments.
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VI. Information
Single-volume systematic monograph.
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How Religion and Philosophy resolves each dilemma
31 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 26 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.