Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

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CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA


cosmological argument for God’s exis-
tence. He also defended Newton’s view
of nature and God in a correspondence
with Leibniz. His works include A Dem-
onstration of the Being and Attributes of
God (1706), A Discourse concerning the
Unchangeable Obligations of Natural Reli-
gion and the Truth and Certainty of
Christian Revelation (1706), and Scripture
Doctrine of the Trinity (1712).


CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA (c. 150–
215 CE). An outstanding synthesizer
of Christianity and Platonism, Clement
developed a cosmic Christology in which
the incarnation is seen as the fulfillment
of world history. He is the author of
Protrepticus, A Hortatory Address to the
Greeks, and The Teacher Stromata (Patch-
Wo r k ).


COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR
(1722–1834). Along with fellow Roman-
tic poet, William Wordsworth, Coleridge
opposed rationalism and the mechanistic
materialism of his age, arguing for the
indispensability and value of the imagi-
nation in inquiry. He was in the Christian,
Cambridge Platonist tradition. His works
include Biographia Literaria (1818), Aids
to Reflection (1825), and Confessions of
an Inquiring Spirit (1840).


COLLINGWOOD, ROBIN GEORGE
(1889–1943). A British philosopher who


contributed to many areas, especially the
philosophy of history in which he argued
for the indispensability of placing your-
self subjectively in the position of relevant
agents. His works include Essay on Philo-
sophical Method (1933), Autobiography
(1939), The Principles of Art (1938), The
Idea of History (1946), and The Idea of
Nature (1945).

COMMON CONSENT ARGUMENTS.
Principally an argument for theism, but it
can also be used to support other views.
“If all people or most believe there is a
God, that is some reason for thinking
there is a God.” The argument is not a
demonstration. It is possible everyone is
wrong, but it may also be argued that if
theism is true, one would expect many
(but perhaps not all) persons to believe
it. A contemporary argument against
Christian theism reverses the common
consent argument and proposes that the
God of Christianity would make Godself
manifest to all people everywhere. Thus,
because there is no such global manifes-
tation, some argue that Christianity is
false. Some anti-skeptical arguments are
also akin to common consent arguments:
e.g., Is it plausible to believe that universal
convictions about there being moral
truths are false?

COMMUNITARIANISM. A late
twentieth-century ethical movement
that stresses the essential role of the
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