Deism/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 16:14, 11 September 2009
- See also changes related to Deism, or pages that link to Deism or to this page or whose text contains "Deism".
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- Atheism [r]: Absence of belief in any god or other supernatural beings. [e]
- Benjamin Franklin [r]: 1706-1790, American statesman and scientist, based in Philadelphia. [e]
- France [r]: Western European republic (population c. 64.1 million; capital Paris) extending across Europe from the English Channel in the north-west to the Mediterranean in the south-east; bounded by Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco, Andorra and Spain; founding member of the European Union. Colonial power in Southeast Asia until 1954. [e]
- Genesis [r]: First book of the Torah and the Hebrew Bible. [e]
- God [r]: Supreme, supernatural entity, often credited with omnipotence, omniscience and rulership of the universe. [e]
- Immanuel Kant [r]: (1724–1804) German idealist and Enlightenment philosopher who tried to transcend empiricism and rationalism in the Critique of Pure Reason. [e]
- Monotheism [r]: Belief in only one God. [e]
- Omnipotence paradox [r]: Family of related paradoxes addressing the question of what is possible for an omnipotent being to do. [e]
- Panentheism [r]: The theological position that God is immanent within the Universe, but also transcends it. [e]
- Pantheism [r]: A religious and philosophical doctrine that everything is of an all-encompassing immanent abstract God; or that the universe, or nature, and God are equivalent. [e]
- Philosophes [r]: Group of eighteenth century French intellectuals who dominated the French Enlightenment. [e]
- Religion [r]: Belief in, and systems of, worshipful dedication to a superhuman power or belief in the ultimate nature of existence. [e]
- Unitarianism [r]: A theology of God which insists that there is only one divine person, one of the tenets of the Unitarian Universalist Association [e]