Abstract
The paper considers premises of the hiddenness argument with an emphasis on its usage of the concept of a personal God. The paper’s assumption is that a recent literature on second-person experiences could be useful for theists in their efforts to defend their position against Schellenberg’s argument. Stump’s analyses of a second-person knowledge indicate that what is required in order to establish an interpersonal relationship is a personal presence of the persons in question, and therefore they falsify the thesis that a minimalist requirement for a relationship between a man and God has to be belief in his existence. Recent works by developmental psychologists not only verify a hypothesis that a second-person knowledge is not reducible to knowledge-that, but also suggest that one needs a shared form of life in order to establish an interpersonal relationship. These two insights allow the author to formulate his own response to the hiddenness argument: only when God’s presence is non-explicit—for example, when God is hidden in a human nature—can a finite person enter into a personal relationship with him. It is the fulfilment of the requirement of being personally present that is the justifying reason for God to permit non-resistant non-belief.
Highlights
The Hidden God, Second-PersonThe hiddenness argument formulated by J
(2015, p. 21), should reveal his existence in such a way that would enable people to believe in his existence—otherwise there would be an obstacle in establishing an interpersonal relationship with him and one could not speak of his openness to those who want to know him
I am not the first theistic philosopher who refers to the concept of the incarnation in the debate on HA
Summary
The hiddenness argument (later in the text: HA) formulated by J. 21), should reveal his existence in such a way that would enable people to believe in his existence—otherwise there would be an obstacle in establishing an interpersonal relationship with him (namely, ignorance with respect to his existence) and one could not speak of his openness to those who want to know him In my opinion her inquiry compels us to re-think our expectations regarding an unsurpassably loving and omnipotent God. I will argue in favour of Stump’s conviction that her hypothesis finds confirmation in research on developmental psychology and I shall show what morals could be drawn from the study of Vittorio Gallese’s “shared manifold” hypothesis (Section 4).
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