Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1
144

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MACKIE, JOHN (1917–1981). An
Australian born, Oxford philosopher in
the Humean tradition who argued sys-
tematically for atheism and a noncogni-
tive view of ethical values. One of his
arguments against ethics is that objective
ethical properties would be “queer” given
our understanding of the natural world.
His chief debating partner in print was
Richard Swinburne, an advocate of theis-
tic natural theology. Mackie’s chief works
include The Cement of the Universe (1974,
1980), The Miracle of Theism (1982), “Evil
and Omnipotence,” Mind, 64 (1955),
“A refutation of Morals,” Australasian
Journal of Philosophy and Psychology, 24
(1946), and Ethics: Inventing Right and
Wrong (1977).


MAGIC. Christian Old and New Testa-
ment sources associate magic with sor-
cery and devilish arts, but the Renaissance
promoted a form of white magic involv-
ing alchemy and the development of
virtue through enchantment. See also
WICCA.


MAGICK. See MAGIC.

MAIMONIDES (1135–1204). Also
known as Moses ben Maimon, Rabbi
Moses, and the Rambam (from the ini-
tials of “Rabbi Moses ben Maimon”).
Maimonides was the most important
Jewish philosopher of the Middle Ages
and one of the most important Jewish
thinkers of all time. He was born in
Córdoba, Spain, and spent much of his
life fleeing religious persecution. His
family fled to Fez in 1148, then to Egypt
in 1165. He was a court physician in Cairo
until his death. He wrote a number of
works in Hebrew and Arabic. His major
work, the Guide of the Perplexed, is an
important work of apophatic theology
and one of the most important philo-
sophical works of Judaism. In the Guide,
Maimonides attempted a rational recon-
ciliation of philosophy and revealed
religion. His Guide was of interest not just
to Jews but also to Christians and Muslims.
Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas
were both influenced by Maimonides’
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