The founders of the Chicago School of Theology sought to develop a fully modernist theology, the first one by their standard. They swept aside the a prioris of Kant and Schleiermacher, declaring that nothing is given and no norm from the past holds legitimate authority. Theologian Shailer Mathews, philosopher of religion George Burman Foster, church historian Shirley Jackson Case, and psychologist of religion Edward Scribner Ames were the founders. They agreed with Ernst Troeltsch that Ritschlian historicism is not true historicism and with William James that lingering over the mystery of subjectivity is a loser for theology and philosophy. Theology had to change to deserve the modernist name. Instead of claiming that religious knowledge is a product of religious experience, theologians should say that religious knowledge is a product of disciplined empirical reflection on experience, especially the experience of external relations. Moreover, the Ritschlian approach of employing a Christian framework...
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Research Article|
May 01 2023
Naturalistic Empiricism as Process Theology
Gary Dorrien
Gary Dorrien
Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University
Gary Dorrien teaches at Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University. His many books include Kantian Reason and Hegelian Spirit (Blackwell, 2012), which won the Association of American Publishers’ PROSE Award in 2013, and The New Abolition: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Black Social Gospel (Yale, 2015) which won the Grawemeyer Award in 2017. His most recent book is A Darkly Radiant Vision: The Black Social Gospel in the Shadow of MLK (Yale, 2023).
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American Journal of Theology & Philosophy (2023) 44 (2): 5–56.
Citation
Gary Dorrien; Naturalistic Empiricism as Process Theology. American Journal of Theology & Philosophy 1 May 2023; 44 (2): 5–56. doi: https://doi.org/10.5406/21564795.44.2.01
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