Citations:pandeist
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English citations of pandeist
- One who believes in pandeism, a blend of pantheism and deism.
- 1975, American Jewish Congress, Judaism: A Quarterly Journal of Jewish Life and Thought p. 41:
- Is Gordon a pan-deist, or a monotheist?
- 1998, Scott Corey and Mary Foley, The 1979 Bombing/Ellul and TK's use of "Enoch", [1]:
- I think pantheist is properly the same, but might also imply what I think of as pandeist, which is that God is singular, but pervades all things (or all living things).
- 1999, Why Can God Be An Evolutionist:
- I was analyzing the psychology of the "External Creator" as an allegory. I'm beginning to believe I'm a pan-deist.
- 2003, Clay Colwell, BC Court rules FOR same sex marriage!!! YEAH!/CBC:
- Does that mean that it holds a majority of Christians as its subjects? That it was founded by Christians? That it must hold only to what Christians say, ignoring Jews, Muslims, non-deists, pandeists, and all other non-Christians?
- Of or relating to pandeism.
- 1974, Bert Beverly Beach, Ecumenism: Boon Or Bane? (1974), p. 259:
- It was felt that ecumenism was being contaminated by "pan-Deist" and syncretistic tendencies.
- 1971, Rousas John Rushdoony, The One and the Many: Studies in the Philosophy of Order and Ultimacy, Ch. VIII-7, p. 143:
- But a sincere idealist, implicitly pan-Deist in faith, deeply concerned with the problems of the world and of time, can be a Ghibelline pope, and Dante's Ghibellines have at last triumphed.
- 1999, Brian R. West, Where is my God.
- [Y]ou're drifting somewhere in the Pandeist or Deist dogma, where god is either the universe itself or is a part of each person.
- 2003, Paul La Porte, Social Work and Other Experiences in India:
- Indeed, most of the staff is either Hindu or Moslem, but they are full of these pan-deist ideas, and even Zahir deliberately used the Christian word "God" rather than "Allah" when talking with me.
- 2007, John Lachs and Robert Talisse, American Philosophy: An Encyclopedia, p. 310:
- [S]ome pragmatists (such as William James) took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world.