Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1

BEAUTY


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for its subversive criticism of human
pretensions.


BEAUTY. Beauty is a central object of
interest for Platonists and a recurring
theme in Platonic forms of Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam. Beauty has been
defined as an inherent objective property
(perfect symmetry) or as a relational
property (something is beautiful if it
should generate pleasure or delight). In
the modern era, some philosophers have
promoted non-normative and non-
cognitive concepts of beauty, but beauty
persists as an ongoing theme in norma-
tive accounts in which God, justice,
human love, and so on, are considered
beautiful. Beauty is also one of the main
topics in contemporary aesthetics.


BEAUVOIR, SIMONE DE (1908–1986).
Her critique of patriarchy in religious and
secular culture helped promote feminist
philosophy of religion, as well as expose
the vices of male-dominated institutions
and personal, oppressive practices. She is
the author of The Second Sex (1949) and a
variety of other works including philo-
sophical novels and an autobiography.


BEHAVIORISM. A movement that seeks
to replace subjective and introspective
psychology with an analysis of overt and
implied action or behavior. Behaviorism
is often part of an overall naturalist phi-
losophy of nature that is materialistic.


BEING. While logical positivists eschewed
the intelligibility of being as a concept,
being has been an object of philosophical
inquiry since Parmenides. Some identify
God as being itself or as the ground of
being (e.g., Paul Tillich).

BEING, THE GREAT CHAIN OF. The
intellectual historian, A. O. Lovejoy,
employed this term to refer to the hierar-
chical relationship between levels of
reality with God at the highest point of
this order. The material world is at the
lowest level with plants, animals, human
persons, and angels in an ascending order.
These interwoven stages or levels may
be found in medieval philosophy but
came under attack in modern science.
The Great Chain of Being was a teleologi-
cal (purposive) order as distinct to a non-
purposive, mechanical view of nature.
See also LOVEJOY.

BELIEF. In philosophy, belief is usually
treated in propositional terms. To believe
that God exists is to hold (or accept or
maintain) that it is true that God exists
or, technically, that the proposition “God
exists” is true. Some philosophers and
theologians also recognize types of belief
that are not propositional in a narrow
sense. For example, one might believe in a
person (and thereby have trust in her) or
believe in a cause (and thereby hold that
the cause is worthy). Some philosophers
argue that there is always evidence for
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