Classical pantheism

Classical Pantheism, as defined by Charles Hartshorne in 1953, is the theological deterministic philosophies of pantheists such as Baruch Spinoza and the Stoics. Hartshorne sought to distinguish panentheism, which rejects determinism, from deterministic pantheism.

The term has also been used to mean Pantheism in the classical Greek and Roman era,[1][2] or archetypal pantheism as variously defined by different authors.[3]

  1. ^ Principles of Natural Theology, George Hayward Joyce, 2003, p. 482.
  2. ^ Anti-Theistic Theories: Being the Baird Lecture for 1877, Robert Flint, p. 536.
  3. ^ Pantheism: A Non-Theistic Concept of Deity, Michael Philip Levine, 1994, p. 163.

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