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  1. The love racket: Defining love and agapefor the love-and-science research program.Thomas Jay Oord - 2005 - Zygon 40 (4):919-938.
    Scholars of religion and science have generated remarkable scholarship in recent years in their explorations of love. Exactly how scholars involved in this budding field believe that love and science should relate and/or be integrated varies greatly. What they share in common is the belief that issues of love are of paramount importance and that the various scientific disciplines—whether natural, social, or religious—must be brought to bear upon how best to understand love. I briefly introduce the emergence of the love‐and‐science (...)
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  2.  14
    Can God Be Essentially Loving without Being Essentially Social?Thomas Jay Oord - 2016 - Philosophia Christi 18 (2):353-361.
    Keith Ward is right in Christ and the Cosmos that “the idea of God as a sort of society is a bad idea”. Christian theology would make better sense if Christians did not say God is comprised of three persons, each with distinct centers of consciousness, distinct relations, distinct wills, and so on. This formulation of the Trinity is more tritheistic than monotheistic. I argue that for a host of reasons, Christians should conceive of the Trinity as one God who (...)
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  3. Chapter Three Process Answers to Love Questions Thomas Jay Oord.Thomas Jay Oord - 2007 - In The Many Facets of Love: Philosophical Explorations. Cambridge Scholars Press.
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  4. Genuine (but limited) freedom for creatures and for a god of love.Thomas Jay Oord - 2020 - In Philip Clayton, James W. Walters & John Martin Fischer (eds.), What's with free will?: ethics and religion after neuroscience. Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books, an imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers.
     
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  5.  94
    The divine spirit as causal and personal.Thomas Jay Oord - 2013 - Zygon 48 (2):466-477.
    Theists in general and Christians in particular have good grounds for affirming divine action in relation to twenty-first-century science. Although humans cannot perceive with their five senses the causation—both divine and creaturely—at work in our world, they have reasons to believe God acts as an efficient, but never sufficient, cause in creation. The essential kenosis option I offer overcomes liabilities in other kenosis proposals, while accounting for a God who acts personally, consistently, persuasively, and yet in diversely efficacious ways. We (...)
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  6.  8
    The many facets of love: philosophical explorations.Thomas Jay Oord (ed.) - 2007 - Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    Poets, theologians, romantics, scientists, and revolutionaries alike have explored the many facets of love. Judging by the wide use of the word love and the high praise it typically receives, we might think that philosophers have thoroughly analyzed love. But this is not the case. This book takes a step toward rectifying the neglect of a philosophical analysis of love. It brings together fifteen philosophical perspectives that explore some of loves most important facets. Most of the essays have theistic or (...)
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  7.  21
    Most Moved Mover: A Theology of God’s Openness. [REVIEW]Thomas Jay Oord - 2002 - Process Studies 31 (2):164-166.
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    Most Moved Mover: A Theology of God’s Openness. [REVIEW]Thomas Jay Oord - 2002 - Process Studies 31 (2):164-166.
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  9.  16
    Reflection on Whitehead’s Philosophical Theology. [REVIEW]Thomas Jay Oord - 2003 - International Studies in Philosophy 35 (4):188-189.
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