Introduction to a Special Issue of Philosophia Christi on Ramified Natural Theology
August 12, 2013
The Evangelical Philosophical Society (EPS) is pleased to introduce a unique and ongoing project on “Philosophical Issues in ‘Afterlife Apologetics’: Assessing the Evidential Values of Near-Death and Deathbed Experiences.” Your contributions, readership, exploration and support are most welcomed. For more on this theme and additional Christian contributions to philosophy, become a subscriber – for as low as $25 per year! – to Philosophia Christi, the peer-reviewed journal of the EPS (all EPS members receive Philosophia Christi as part of their membership).
Afterlife Apologetics proposes that the best studies of near-death experiences (NDEs) and deathbed experiences (DBEs) provide evidence for the existence of a personal, loving God, a separation of the soul/mind from the body at death, the afterlife, and much more. Yet, Christian scholars have been slow to assess the data accumulated by 50 years of near-death studies and over 130 years of deathbed studies. This web project encourages participation by philosophers and theologians in this emerging field with candid reflections, challenges, and observations from various related fields of study. Multidisciplinary insights are encouraged with an emphasis on ‘philosophy of’ factors and their implications for Christian apologetics.
The International Association for Near-Death Studies defines an NDE as “a distinct subjective experience that a minority of people report after a near-death episode. In a near-death episode, a person is either clinically dead, near-death, or in a situation where death is likely or expected.” Core elements include leaving the body, otherworldly vistas, visiting with deceased relatives, angels and God, absence of time, mind-to-mind communication, passing through tunnels, life reviews, a decision to return, return to the body.”
Our definition for DBEs is our own, since many terms have been in use to refer to several different experiences surrounding death. DBEs are here defined as “a cluster of experiences surrounding final earthly death, including deathbed visions, terminal lucidity, crisis apparitions, shared death experiences, premonitions of death, and after death communications.”
We are focused on philosophical topics related to the afterlife and how other areas of importance (e.g., substance dualism versus monism, phenomenology, plausibility of miracles, theism, visions, religious experience, grief studies) bear upon an assessment of the evidential values of near-death and deathbed experiences.
Seven core areas of project inquiry:
Options for Contributing: We’re open to a wide variety of contributions, since this is an emerging field, including, but not limited to philosophizing about fresh research, developing reflection essays (e.g., from a first-person perspective) about a personal experience or one from your circles of trust, responses to other essays [critical or confirmatory or clarifying], summaries of research, book reviews, theological/biblical contributions, practical essays on harnessing afterlife apologetics to impact others, ministering to those who’ve had such experiences, etc. We welcome responses to any of the Project’s papers.
Length: While longer papers [6,000 + words] are permitted, shorter papers [500-2000 words] may invite more responses to specific ideas. Consider dividing longer pieces into several essays, each covering a tidy topic.
Suggested topics: Near-death experiences as evidence for the afterlife and cumulative arguments for theism; explanatory opportunities and limits to ‘Afterlife Apologetics’; assessment of methodological issues when researching and assessing the plausibility of NDEs and DBEs;
Explore further with the co-editors, including different possible levels of engagement with the project.
Submit a Proposal: Email a topic, thesis and description of the proposed paper (250 words max) to Project Editors J. Steve Miller and Stuart H. Gray [see below]. They will help guide your proposal toward being a contribution of this web project.
Web Project Overseer: Joseph E. Gorra, Consulting Editor, Philosophia Christi.
Please consider becoming a regular annual or monthly financial partner with the Evangelical Philosophical Society in order to expand its reach, support its members, and be a credible presence of Christ-shaped philosophical interests in the academy and into the wider culture!
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