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8 - Conclusion: Humane Philosophizing about Religion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2014

John Cottingham
Affiliation:
University of Reading
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Summary

Do you see yon wicket gate?

John Bunyan

To bring our discussion to a close, let us draw together some of the threads of the last chapter and indeed of the book as a whole. Ancient religious imagery, going right back to the Gospels, speaks of the road to salvation as a journey that has to be entered upon by first passing through a gate – the ‘wicket gate’, as it appears in John Bunyan's famous seventeenth-century allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress. In Christian symbolism, of course, Christ himself is the gate, or ‘door’ (thura) to salvation: the entrance the flock must pass through to find ‘pasture’ (John 10:9). Like many symbols, the gate image contains many layers of meaning. But the idea of a transition that needs to be made, or a change that needs to be undergone, in order for certain possibilities to become actual turns out to be a linking thread that ties together many of the themes in this book.

We began by suggesting that the special nature of religious understanding requires a certain methodology if it is to be approached in a philosophically appropriate way. An epistemology of detachment, so far from being the paradigm of proper philosophizing that it is often supposed to be, may be a way of hardening oneself against the porousness and receptivity that is a necessary condition for certain kinds of evidence to become salient (Chapter 1). As we have just seen in Chapter 7, the disciplines of spiritual praxis can be interpreted as a training process that facilitates just the kind of interior moral transformation that will generate the required receptivity, as envisaged in the conversion process as traditionally understood.

Type
Chapter
Information
Philosophy of Religion
Towards a More Humane Approach
, pp. 169 - 176
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

Ayer, A. J., Logical Positivism (New York: Free Press, 1959), p. 13Google Scholar
Dupré, John, ‘Review of Nagel's Mind and Cosmos’, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, 29 October 2012.
Sheppard, Philip, ‘Conclusion of a Life's Journey’, Douai Magazine 173 (2011), 16–17Google Scholar

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