RT Article T1 Henry More and Thomas Hobbes’s Corporeal God JF Religions VO 15 IS 11 A1 Henry, John 1950- LA English YR 2024 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1908832533 AB Thomas Hobbes’s strict monistic materialism led many contemporaries to believe he must be an atheist—to hold God to be a corporeal being, they claimed, was effectively to deny his existence. This paper is an addition to those works suggesting that Hobbes’s belief in a corporeal God must be taken seriously. Unlike earlier studies on this theme, it emphasises the change in Hobbes’s theism from an insistence early in his career that God’s nature is utterly unknowable (exempting God from the implications of Hobbes’s materialism) to a belief, first stated in 1668, that God is indeed a corporeal being. Seeking to explain this radical change, this article suggests that Hobbes’s later theology was influenced by the Cambridge Platonist Henry More, who developed the idea that God was an extended three-dimensional being. This article briefly considers alternative accounts, suggesting the influence of ancient Stoicism and aether theories, but affirms the influence of Henry More. K1 Stoicism K1 Spirit K1 Henry More K1 mechanical philosophy K1 Materialism K1 Thomas Hobbes K1 Dualism K1 Atheism K1 apophatic theology K1 aether DO 10.3390/rel15111394