The book makes a full critical analysis of John Hick's pluralistic hypothesis from an Islamic perspective. To be able to do this, it begins with a survey of Islamic responses to the problem of religious diversity in the first chapter. It then starts examining Hick's pluralism by giving an extensive account of it. Drawing on the Kantian distinction of noumenon and phenomenon, Hick claims that great world religions, with their personal gods and impersonal absolutes, are phenomenal responses to the noumenal Real. After careful critical consideration, the book concludes that Hick's pluralism...
The book makes a full critical analysis of John Hick's pluralistic hypothesis from an Islamic perspective. To be able to do this, it begins with a sur...