@article{Carroll_2019, title={Between the Infinite and the Finite: God, Hegel and Disagreement}, volume={11}, url={https://www.philosophy-of-religion.eu/index.php/ejpr/article/view/2959}, DOI={10.24204/ejpr.v11i3.2959}, abstractNote={In this article, I consider the importance of philosophy in the dialogue between religious believers and non-believers. I begin by arguing that a new epistemology of epistemic peer disagreement is required if the dialogue is to progress. Rather than viewing the differences between the positions as due to a deficit of understanding, I argue that differences result from the existential anchoring of such enquiries in life projects and the under-determination of interpretations by experience.  I then explore a central issue which is often implicit in these dialogues, namely the ontological status of God-world relations. Drawing on the reflections of Hegel on the infinite and the finite, I argue that his version of panentheism provides an insightful way to conceptualise God-world relations that avoids both dualistic and monistic approaches and helps to explicate a holistic ontology of transcendence from within the world of experience.}, number={3}, journal={European Journal for Philosophy of Religion}, author={Carroll, Anthony Joseph}, year={2019}, month={Sep.}, pages={95–113} }