This second volume of A Guide to the Philosophy of Religion, entitled Works and Writings, continues the intellectual project initiated by the first volume, moving from theoretical concepts to the foundational texts that have shaped philosophical consciousness of religion across the ages.

The book brings together analytical studies of major works ranging from Philo of Alexandria to Kant and Rudolf Otto, passing through Maimonides, al-Ghazali, Ibn Rushd, Spinoza, and Hegel, along with other texts that have defined the contours of the philosophy of religion at the intersection of reason and revelation, science and faith, and metaphysics and spiritual experience.

Through in-depth critical and reflective readings, this volume revives the philosophical religious heritage as a renewed dialogue among minds and cultures, affirming that the relationship between philosophy and theology has never been marked by rupture, but rather a continuous path of interpretation and questioning.

It is a scholarly work that draws classical texts into conversation in order to illuminate the questions of the present, while continuing to chart an integrated intellectual map for understanding religion philosophically in its human and rational extension across time.