William James''s Radically Empirical Philosophy of Religion
English
By (author): J. Edward Hackett
This book takes a stand against and critiques readings of William James that do not pay attention to the metaphysics of experience. Such interpretations overlook the first mentions of radical empiricism in Jamess Will to Believe argument. By attending to James's metaphysics of experience, this book argues that Jamess universe is a quasi-chaos of becoming in our relations with nature and other people, so that things independent of us relate, evolve, and change in space and time. Jamess metaphysics of relations is what unifies his various psychological, poetic, mystical, and religious commitments. These metaphysical implications have consequences for how James understood what metaphysics can do in philosophy, how it relates to theology, what we can say about his will-to-believe argument, mysticism, free-will, Gods finitism, the problem of One and the Many, and panpsychism.
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 21 Jan 2025