Denys Turner once offered a provocatively titled lecture, “How to be an Atheist”. Here he argued that in order to be a sophisticated atheist, one must learn to deny the most sophisticated forms of belief in God. Similarly, if one is to be a sophisticated Christian, we can equally argue that we need to learn to negate the most sophisticated forms of unbelief—or, indeed to recognise the various shades of grey. This unit charts a course through a variety of modern forms of unbelief in order to provide students with the skills required to avoid precisely those problematic forms of belief that are negated and to get inside the heads of various thinkers. The supposition is, then, that behind every atheism is a problematic theism that ought to be denied. This unit functions to provide two things then: first, it serves as an introduction to modern philosophy insofar as it pertains to the question of God, and, second, it serves as a course in the doctrine of God and negative theology as the students learn in practice the art of negation endemic to the Christian tradition.
Unit code: CT9309T
Unit status: Archived (New unit)
Points: 24.0
Unit level: Postgraduate Elective
Unit discipline: Systematic Theology
Delivery Mode: Online
Proposing College: Trinity College Theological School
Show when this unit is running1. | Critically evaluate the relationship between a variety of forms of atheistic philosophy and Christian belief |
2. | Describe key elements of modern philosophical works. |
3. | Outline aspects of the history of modern forms of atheistic philosophy and their critical importance to Christian theology. |
4. | Identify and critique theological assumptions embedded within non-theological text. |
5. | Critically engage with negative theological traditions, and how they might find application in contemporary questions of nonbelief. |
Prerequisite: an introductory unit in Systematic Theology or Philosophy
Socratic dialogue and flipped learning
Type | Description | Word count | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Essay | Major Essay (3500 words) |
0 | 50.0 |
Essay | Forums (equivalent to 1000 words) |
0 | 16.0 |
Essay | Short Essay (1500 words) |
0 | 30.0 |
Unit approved for the University of Divinity by John Capper on 18 Oct, 2018
Unit record last updated: 2024-08-09 13:10:51 +1000