Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Biographical Introduction.- Chapter 3. Unamuno on Spinoza's Conatus: the 'hambre de inmortalidad'.- Chapter 4. Reason and Experience Against Our Natural Longing for an Endless Existence.- Chapter 5. The Biblical Testimony about the Resurrection of Jesus Crhist and Our Longing for the Existence of the Christian God.- Chapter 6. The "sentimiento trágico de la vida".- Chapter 7. Love, Charity, and the Argument from Common Consent.- Chapter 8. Unamuno's Epistemological Paradigm.- Chapter 9. Unamuno's Naturally Founded Religious Fictionalism.- Chapter 10. Conclusion.
Alberto Oya is a research fellow at the University of Girona, Spain, where he obtained his PhD in Philosophy. His main research interests are in philosophy of religion, with a particular focus on non-doxastic conceptions of religious faith.
This book provides a coherent and systematic analysis of Miguel de Unamuno’s notion of religious faith and the reasoning he offers in defense of it. Unamuno developed a non-cognitivist Christian conception of religious faith, defending it as being something which we are all naturally lead to, given our (alleged) most basic and natural inclination to seek an endless existence. Illuminating the philosophical relevance this conception still has to contemporary philosophy of religion, Oya draws connections with current non-cognitivist notions of religious faith in general, and with contemporary religious fictionalist positions more particularly.
The book includes a biographical introduction to Miguel de Unamuno, as well as lucid and clear analyses of his notions of the ‘tragic feeling of life’, his epistemological paradigm, and his naturally founded religious fictionalism. Revealing links to current debates, Oya shows how the works of Unamuno are still relevant and enriching today