Stream principal | # News DFaria (RSS Feed) on Nostr: Divine Revelation [Revised entry by Mats Wahlberg on June 26, 2024. Changes to: Main ...
Divine Revelation
[Revised entry by Mats Wahlberg on June 26, 2024.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html]
"Revelation" (lat. revelatio) is a translation of the Greek word apokalypsis, which means the removal of a veil so that something can be seen. Many religions appeal to purported divine revelations in order to explain and justify their characteristic beliefs about God, and revelation has usually been understood as an epistemic notion.[1] Paradigmatically, it refers to alleged instances of divine speaking or special divine acts in history, although in a more general sense "revelation" can denote any means of divine self-disclosure, for example through nature. The topic of divine revelation has been a long-standing and central focus in theology, and philosophical discussions have often taken their cues from Christian theological debates.[2] This entry will treat theological perspectives only in so far as they are relevant for philosophical questions about the purported nature and means of divine revelation and the justification of revelatory claims. 1. Conceptions of Divine Revelation...
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/divine-revelation/
[Revised entry by Mats Wahlberg on June 26, 2024.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html]
"Revelation" (lat. revelatio) is a translation of the Greek word apokalypsis, which means the removal of a veil so that something can be seen. Many religions appeal to purported divine revelations in order to explain and justify their characteristic beliefs about God, and revelation has usually been understood as an epistemic notion.[1] Paradigmatically, it refers to alleged instances of divine speaking or special divine acts in history, although in a more general sense "revelation" can denote any means of divine self-disclosure, for example through nature. The topic of divine revelation has been a long-standing and central focus in theology, and philosophical discussions have often taken their cues from Christian theological debates.[2] This entry will treat theological perspectives only in so far as they are relevant for philosophical questions about the purported nature and means of divine revelation and the justification of revelatory claims. 1. Conceptions of Divine Revelation...
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/divine-revelation/