Joseph Hinman develops the notion that belief in God, while not absolutely provable, is rationally warranted and that the experience is life-transforming and vital. He utilizes a body of empirical scientific studies that go back fifty years and draws upon sociological experts including Abraham Maslow, Robert Wuthnow, and Andrew Greeley. The huge body of work includes many important advances in this scientific work (such as the M scale) this allow for carefully study of mystical experience and offers a range of evidence that warrants belief. Arguments for God based upon personal religious experience have always been considered weak by both apologists and skeptics. This has been the case due to prejudices and misconceptions about the nature of religious experiences... A vast body of data demonstrates that religious experiences, what some call "mystical" and others refer to as "peak," have positive, long term effects so dramatic it can only be described as "transformative"... Religious experience is the effect of God has upon the human heart, thus, the Trace of God. Hinman establishes that the Trace of God and religious experience -far from being caused by or related to mental or emotional instability- has an impact that is not just positive and life-transforming but vital: that belief in God is rationally warranted. A fine exploration of the meaningfulness of arguments from human experience to the reality of God. - Ralph Hood, Jr., The Psychology of Religion and Handbook of Religious Experiencesome much-needed scientific rigour on the subject of mysticism and religious experience - James Hannam God's Philosophers (shortlisted, Royal Society Prize for Science Books 2010) Hinman's book will give you something to think about. - Nick Peters, Christian Answers to This Generation's Questions (with J. P. Holding) presents an important argument in a strong and forceful way... a great contribution to discussions of the rationality of belief in God. - William S. Babcock, Professor Emeritus of Church History, Southern Methodist University
Author: Tim Wood, Joseph Hinman Publisher: Grandviaduct Published: 05/28/2014 Pages: 418 Binding Type: Paperback Weight: 1.16lbs Size: 8.50h x 5.51w x 0.93d ISBN: 9780982408711
About the Author Mr. Hinman did his undergraduate work in sociology and debate at the University of Texas at Arlington. He earned a Masters degree in Theological studies where he focused upon history of doctrine at Perkins school of Theology, Southern Methodist University. He was a Ph.D. candidate in the History of Ideas (Intellectual History) and studied at the doctoral level for several years at University of Texas at Dallas. He began work focusing upon Derrida and the postmodern understanding of the self. He then switched and spent five years studying history and philosophy of science, focusing upon Newton, Boyle and the Latitudinarians. In the process of completing his dissertation, he was forced to terminate his studies ABD (all but the dissertation) due to family tragedies. Mr. Hinman published the peer-reviewed academic journal, Negations: an interdisciplinary journal of social criticism. He now works as an independent scholar.