Philosophia Reformata

Philosophia Reformata is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal of the Association for Reformational Philosophy, which was founded in 1935. Formerly published by the Association, as of 2015 the journal is published by Brill Publishers. The editor-in-chief is Gerrit Glas (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam).

Philosophia Reformata
DisciplinePhilosophy
LanguageEnglish
Edited byGerrit Glas
Publication details
History1935–present
Publisher
FrequencyBiannually
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Philos. Reformata
Links

The book, Philosophia Reformata, was written by Johannes Daniel Mylius and published in 1622 by the publisher, Jennis.[1]

History

The journal was first published by the Association for Reformational Philosophy in 1935. Among the Association's and the journal's founding members were Herman Dooyeweerd and Dirk Vollenhoven. The journal has its historical and intellectual background in the neo-Calvinist movement that gained momentum through the work of the 19th century Dutch theologian, politician, university founder and publicist Dr. Abraham Kuyper. One basic idea in this movement, reflected in the journal, is that all human activity, including theoretical endeavor, is shaped by supratheoretical religious motivations (whether implicitly or explicitly, conscious or unconscious). A corollary idea is that Christian belief can consciously and consistently guide philosophical and other theoretical work. For example, neocalvinists hold that the idea of creation by God entails a firm distinction between Creator and creature, and that various kinds of (Divinely established) laws govern reality, and this requires a non-reductionistic theoretical account of the created order.

gollark: Isn't `c` in quite a few equations? Including the electromagnetism one and stuff. It seems pretty fundamental.
gollark: The great thing about brain rewriting technology is that it makes it easy to hide brain rewriting technology.
gollark: It's a computer game, not an ultra-accurate physics simulator.
gollark: I was going to say something, but it seems kind of politicky after reading it to myself...
gollark: Bugs™

References

  1. Mylius, Johannes Daniel (1622). "Philosophia Reformata (Etc.)".
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