The Review of Metaphysics, December 1st, 1995
Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison and William Ritchie Sorley were Scottish idealists who each gave Gifford Lectures on philosophical theology between 1912 and 1915, shortly before interest in the topic waned. Both were influenced by British Hegelianism in the 1870s; by the time of the Gifford Lectures they were arguing against the monism of the absolute idealists, while also attempting to avoid the pluralism of the more extreme personal idealists. These issues would soon be superseded by a turn toward empiricism, but recently some interest in philosophical theology has resurfaced.
When Andrew Seth...
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