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Philosophical Approaches to Demonology [Pehme köide]

Edited by (University of Missouri Kansas City, USA), Edited by (University of South Carolina Upstate, USA)

In contradistinction to the many monographs and edited volumes devoted to historical, cultural, or theological treatments of demonology, this collection features newly written papers by philosophers and other scholars engaged specifically in philosophical argument, debate, and dialogue involving ideas and topics in demonology. The contributors to the volume approach the subject from the perspective of the broadest areas of Western philosophy, namely metaphysics, epistemology, logic, and moral philosophy. The collection also features a plurality of religious, cultural, and theological views on the nature of demons from both Eastern and Western thought, in addition to views that may diverge from these traditional roots. Philosophical Approaches to Demonology will be of interest to philosophers of religion, theologians, and scholars working in philosophical theology and demonology, as well as historians, cultural anthropologists, and sociologists interested more broadly in the concept of demons.

Introduction

Robert Arp and Benjamin W. McCraw

Part I. Demons in Christianity

1 Augustine and Aquinas on the Demonic

Benjamin W. McCraw

2 The Demonic Body: Demonic Ontology and the Domicile of the Demons in
Apuleius and Augustine

Seamus ONeill

3 Christian Demonology: A New Philosophical Perspective

Shandon L. Guthrie

4 Women as "The Devils Gateway": A Feminist Critique of Christian
Demonology

Jeff Ewing

Part II. Non-Christian Conceptions of Demons

5 Socrates Demonic Sign (Daimonion Smeion)

Charlene Elsby

6 The Ecological Demon: Silent Running and Interstellar

Brian Willems

7 Demons of Seduction in Early Jewish Literature

Dawn Hutchinson

8 The Jinn and the Shayatn

Edward Moad

9 Mra: Dev and Demon

Christopher Ketcham

Part III. Demons and Epistemological Issues

10 Justified Belief in the Existence of Demons is Impossible

David Kyle Johnson

11 Esoteric Spirituality, Devils and Demons: Introducing the Gnostic Vision
of Modernity

Kristina Sipova

12 Re-Enchantment and Contemporary Demonology

Olli Petteri Pitkänen

Part IV. Demons in Moral and Social Philosophy

13 Whedons Demons: The Immorality of Moral Clarity and the Ethics of Moral
Complexity

Talia Morag

14 Modern Representations of Evil: Kant, Arendt, and the Devil in Goethes
Faust and Bulgakovs The Master and Margarita

Elvira Basevich

15 The Politics of Possession: Reading King Jamess Daemonologie Through the
Lens of Mimetic Realism

Duncan Reyburn
Benjamin W. McCraw teaches philosophy at the University of South Carolina Upstate. He has a PhD from the University of Georgia and a BA from Wofford College. His research focuses primarily on epistemology and philosophy of religionespecially their intersection in religious epistemology. Hes published articles in the International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Philosophy and Theology, Social Epistemology, and Logos and Episteme as well as co-editor of The Concept of Hell (2015), Philosophical Approaches to the Devil (Routledge, 2015), and The Problem of Evil: New Philosophical Directions (2015).

Robert Arp works as a research analyst for the US Army. He has published in many philosophical areas, including philosophy of religion, philosophy of biology, and philosophy of mind. His work in philosophy of religion has appeared in Religious Studies, History of Philosophy Quarterly, Journal of Philosophical Research, International Philosophical Quarterly, and American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly. He is editor of Revisiting Aquinas' Proofs for the Existence of God and co-editor of The Concept of Hell with Ben McCraw. See robertarp.com.