Ben Rogers is the author of several books, including Beef and Liberty (Chatto and Windus)

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Ben Rogers is the author of several books, including Beef and Liberty (Chatto and Windus)"

Transcription

1 Charles Taylor Prospect, February » Taylor may be the most important philosopher writing in English today. He is drawn to big issues like the evolution of the modern self, and his latest book defends religion from its critics Ben Rogers Ben Rogers is the author of several books, including Beef and Liberty (Chatto and Windus) Charles Taylor's new book A Secular Age is well timed. Begun long ago, it is now published in the middle of intense public discussion about religion. But though the book reads like an argument with Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins, it won't be joining theirs at the front of the bookshops. That is a pity, as Taylor is arguably the most interesting and important philosopher writing in English today. It is also in some respects surprising. For Taylor has most of the attributes that the public look for in a philosopher. His work addresses the big issues. He is politically engaged indeed, he is a leading public figure in his Canadian homeland. He writes appreciatively about thinkers including Hegel, the French existentialists and Heidegger whom most anglophone philosophers view as suspect, but whom many students and nonphilosophers find attractive. He addresses himself not just to academics but to educated readers. Tall and handsome, he is a confident and charming public speaker. It has to be said, however, that at 850 pages, A Secular Age is not the Taylor book one would recommend to a novice. What makes Taylor so important? Over more than 40 years, four large books, four or five slimmer essays and several volumes of articles, he has worked out a distinctive network of arguments and an exceptionally rich analysis of the modern self and its values an analysis that reveals us to be altogether deeper and more interesting, but also less self-aware, than we tend to suppose. At the heart of Taylor's thought is a critique of "naturalist" modes of thinking, whether manifest in philosophy, social science, economics or psychology. For Taylor, naturalism is the view that all human and social phenomena, including our subjectivity, are best understood on the model of natural phenomena, by using scientific canons of explanation. So wherever possible, apparently complicated social entities should be reduced to their simple component parts; social and cultural institutions and practices explained in terms of the beliefs and actions of individuals; value judgements reduced to brute animal preferences; the physical world to sense data; sense data to neurological activity and so on. Taylor believes that in the last 400 years, naturalism has fundamentally reshaped our

2 individual and collective self-understanding. Seeing the limits of this mode of thought promises to give us a critical purchase on ourselves and our culture. Taylor's critique starts from the belief that you can't understand human actions unless you make an imaginative leap into the worlds of the agents a leap which has no counterpart in natural science. You can't understand ethical or aesthetic values on the model of animal preferences because all human cultures give central place to some version of the distinction between "lower" appetites and higher goals by which appetites should be judged and regulated. Taylor argues, in short, that narrowly scientific, reductive approaches to the human world always prove "terribly implausible." For Taylor, all outlooks, actions and meanings take place against largely unarticulated background understandings something he suggests both Heidegger and the later Wittgenstein understood. These background understandings or moral and social "imaginaries" will generally centre on beliefs about the universe and the place of humans in it, the good society and the good life. Naturalism then finds its support in one particular scientific "imaginary." Taylor's account of the rise of naturalism shows us modernity against a background of pre-modernity, thus throwing characteristically modern values into relief. We are predisposed to see the universe in "flat" rather than hierarchical terms and to understand everything as existing in a single temporal order. So did Descartes. But reading Descartes in context, we see that this is in fact a peculiar way of understanding the world. Taylor challenges naturalism's understanding of its own history as the "forward march of reason," and shows how it emerged from religious, cultural and political movements. This brings us to the second major concern of Taylor's work. Beyond demonstrating the limits of naturalism, Taylor is concerned to help us understand our modern selves, our values and culture. What is the modern social imaginary? Taylor gives the most worked-out answer in one of his masterworks, Sources of the Self (1989). Here, he sets out to tell the story of the evolution of the modern self or perhaps just the "self" insofar as it is really only in modern times that humans have had a strong sense of selfhood. Taylor seeks to unweave a number of conceptually distinct but historically related strands to the self. First, we moderns characteristically make a sharp distinction between the inner self and the outer world, finding the sources of reason and value not, as classical and medieval cultures did, in some higher, external realm, but by ordering our inner lives properly. We assume truth and virtue are reached by stepping back from the outer world and getting our thoughts and emotions in order by following logical procedures, listening to our conscience and subjecting our emotions to reason. The second distinctive characteristic of the modern age is the significance it attaches to

3 ordinary life. In a movement that began with the Reformation, we have come to find value in spheres once thought of as "low" work, family life, play, sport, sensual enjoyment. Two further elements to the story are worth mentioning. First, beginning with the Romantics, modern culture took an "expressivist" turn. Previously, people had been expected to conform to some more or less standard model of the good life. The Romantics, however, attached a new value to self-expression and authenticity, in both individual and collective-national forms. Second, while at first the new ways of thinking and feeling were limited to the elite, in the 20th century the culture of the "inner self" and in particular its "ethics of authenticity" seeped downwards, transforming the values of ordinary people. Nowadays we all seek our own paths through life, whether experimenting with alternative religions, finding ourselves through travel or expressing ourselves through taste in music and books. Taylor has sometimes been classed as a "communitarian." But that term is misleading if it suggests someone unsympathetic to the modern values of freedom and self-expression. Taylor has always argued that modern culture is enormously, perhaps uniquely, rich his quarrel is with what he sees as its pathologies. I have mentioned his criticism of naturalism, but his argument with aspects of liberal individualism is another example. Taylor is no enemy of liberal democracy. But he has argued that liberals are often not sufficiently sensitive to the strength and value of cultural ties particularly nationality and language. We need a politics, Taylor has argued, that can articulate liberal forms of community and identity, otherwise we will simply get illiberal versions of these things. The challenge facing nations with high immigration, like Britain, France or Canada as Taylor argues in our interview with him is not, as some multiculturalists have argued, to dismantle national culture, but to tackle the obstacles that hinder integration, including narrow, monistic or xenophobic identities among both migrant and "host" cultures. There are few better living examples of an engaged public intellectual than Taylor. Born in 1931, he was brought up in Quebec. In the 1950s, he studied at Oxford, where he became a theorist of the "new left" a loose group of young intellectuals united by little more than a desire to distance themselves from both Soviet-style communism and British Labourism. Regular visits to France left him with a taste for francophone thinkers. In 1961, he gained his doctorate a critique of psychological behaviourism under the supervision of Isaiah Berlin. He returned to Canada and, in the 1960s, ran four times for parliament as a candidate for the centre-left New Democratic party. He was never successful, but the 1965 election found him in a high-profile contest in the Quebec constituency of Mount Royal against friend, fellow intellectual and future Liberal prime minister Pierre Trudeau. Taylor returned to Oxford in 1976 to become Chichele professor of social and political theory, and while there published two widely read books on Hegel that did something to reconcile English-language philosophers to that famously obscure German. Hegel's metaphysics in particular his pre-darwinian, teleological view of nature as an expression of spiritual power may be dead, Taylor argued, but he analysed better than anyone the tensions between scientific instrumentalist and Romantic expressivist values, tensions which remain at the centre of society, culture and philosophy today. Taylor's move back to Canada in 1981 marked a new phase in his political career, this time as a leading commentator in debates about the future of the Canadian federation and

4 Quebec's place in it. He has consistently argued for devolution but against independence he is as suspicious of tidy answers in politics as in philosophy. His position on Quebec has informed his qualified support for multiculturalism, expressed most famously in an influential 1992 essay "The politics of recognition." Taylor acknowledges that his bilingual upbringing has informed his argument that language cannot be understood, as many scientifically influenced linguists and philosophers have argued, as a purely representational tool. Following Rousseau and Herder, Taylor suggests that language determines what it is possible to think and feel much like the "background understandings" with which language is intertwined. At 77, now a widely honoured elder statesman, Taylor has just been appointed to co-chair a government-sponsored inquiry into the accommodation of religious minorities in Quebec. It would be hard to make the case for Taylor as a great stylist. He writes too much and too casually. But looking over his books, I find them better written than I remembered. He is a notable phrasemaker the "ethics of authenticity," "politics of recognition," "shared understandings" have to some degree entered the academic lexicon. He wears his learning lightly, and writes, like he dresses, in a casual, open-necked style. If the major books go on a bit, the articles and essays don't mess around. Two final features of Taylor's work deserve note. One is the breadth of his learning. No contemporary philosopher moves as easily between anglophone, French and German thinkers, helping outsiders see what is of value in thinkers and schools with whom they are not familiar. The second is a great generosity of spirit. Taylor writes with appreciation and insight about a wide and idiosyncratic range of figures Isaiah Berlin, Michel Foucault, Jürgen Habermas, Stuart Hall, Iris Murdoch, Alistair MacIntyre, Richard Rorty and Clifford Geertz, to mention a few. And he is generous about more minor academic figures. Looking over his bibliography, it is striking how many of his essays have been written for festschrifts. Like Taylor's early work, the new book, A Secular Age, is in part a quarrel with naturalism in this case naturalistic accounts of religion's place in the modern world. Ever since the Enlightenment, naturalistically minded thinkers have assumed science and modernity were inimical to religion. A particularly confident version of this viewpoint predicts that with time religion will succumb to modernity bringing about the "death of God." This view looks less credible now than it did 150 years ago, with around nine out of ten Americans now professing belief. Yet a more modest variant to which both Dawkins and Hitchens subscribe is widespread; this holds, first, that scientific progress has been animated by a timeless commitment to scientific truth, and second, that insofar as religion has survived, this is thanks to the tenacity of pre-modern modes of thought. A Secular Age sets out to offer a richer characterisation of secularisation and the nature of contemporary belief, both religious and sceptical. Where Dawkins-type naturalists see modern religiosity as a throwback, Taylor argues that all modern western religious

5 attitudes believing and non-believing are expressions of a distinctively modern culture. Building on the narrative developed in earlier works, the first part of the book traces the evolution of this culture from its emergence in the Reformation and counter-reformation to the present. Again, much of the analysis revolves around a contrast between a pre-modern understanding of the self as embedded in a confined, hierarchical and purposeful order "an enchanted world," with only the fuzziest distinction between nature, man and the supernatural and a modern "disenchanted" understanding, premised on sharp distinctions between the natural, supernatural and human. The self emerges on this understanding as a new entity, to some degree cut off from other selves and the external world, but with a compensatingly rich "interiority." Each modern "self" contains within it conflicting feelings or drives some higher, some lower and each is responsible for achieving some sort of ethical ordering of these, through a combination of religious practice, moral and bodily discipline, good work and industry. There is a sense in which this new culture of the self was and is intensely "individualistic." But it was never unsocial. Taylor writes brilliantly about the new social forms the nation state, the market economy, the charitable enterprise and the ideals of altruism and public service that have emerged with them. Having laid out the origins and anatomy of the early modern self, Taylor then goes on to chart its evolution. Christian understandings of the self were challenged by deist and humanist ones. The limits to the humanist creed led in turn to it being challenged by Romantic and anti-humanist movements. Indeed, Taylor suggests, we see in modernity a characteristic dynamic by which the limits of one outlook spawn several others (he writes of "a nova effect") until we get to our own time, where there is an enormous array of worldviews "deep ecology," Taylor suggests, being perhaps the latest. We are now better placed to understand the relation of modernity to religion. The naturalists and progressivists are right that modernisation has brought with it secularisation. It has taken us from an "enchanted world," in which the holy and the magical are intertwined with the mundane, to a naturalised one, where even believers understand God as a "transcendent" and in some ways hidden force. But, Taylor contends, it is not the spirit of scientific reason alone that got us here. On the contrary, the modern worldview, including our "scientific" understanding of nature as rule-governed but purposeless, was largely born from the Reformation: "The new interest in nature was not a step outside of a religious outlook it was a mutation within this outlook." It is equally mistaken to believe and this is Taylor's most fundamental point that the survival of religious attitudes in our own day can only be explained by the process of secularisation having not gone far enough. For Taylor, insofar as we live in a secular age, this means not that religion is in decline or has declined in some places it is on the rise but that there is no religious orthodoxy; that religion and scepticism live side by side, often in the same person. There are, Taylor thinks, several reasons why secularisation has not brought with it a thorough "atheisation." Most fundamentally, we moderns are subject to a number of "crosspressures." We are proudly commonsensical, suspicious of extravagant belief systems and anything that smells of magic or superstition. Yet the modern or "immanent" universe can also seem flat and constraining. The spiritual and bodily disciplines and good work it

6 demands can feel oppressive or limited. It leaves us with a very imperfect, often violent, nature and a particularly bloody political legacy and no sure means of escaping these. No wonder the "buffered self" is prone to feel isolated to hanker after a cosmic order or some route to spiritual transcendence. Thoroughgoing naturalism in particular struggles to do justice to many of the things we moderns feel and believe. It tends to exist in tension with other aspects of the humanist inheritance the sense that great works of art, especially music, can put us in touch with something higher; the feeling that some things (great cultural artefacts, what remains of wilderness, human life) are "sacred," or that some causes (the eradication of poverty, the end of political oppression, the preservation of species) are "transcendent." Hence we find even the most hardheaded naturalists, like Dawkins, insisting that atheism has a place for reverence, awe and the sacred. But the more they insist on this, the more problematic their naturalism seems. The big weakness of Dawkins's books has always been the chasm between his materialism the stuff of his main chapters and the somewhat starry-eyed humanism, bookended into his introductions and conclusions. Subject to these cross-pressures, the "great majority," says Taylor, "live in a neutral no man's land between strong atheism and strong religiosity," a land in which people can wander between options, and carve their own path. Taylor has been a devout Catholic all his adult life in our interview with him, he describes being brought up in a family of Catholics, Anglicans and ardent atheists and admits to not being able to make sense of the steps that led him as a young man to Catholicism and it is obvious that his belief has shaped his thought. There is even something distinctively Catholic in his depiction of our searching modern souls and elusive predicament at once greater and sorrier than naturalists recognise. And as he has got older, his belief has become more explicit in his writing. A Secular Age is effectively a polemic against dogmatic atheism. The history of the "forward march of reason" atheists is often bad. Their worldview feels narrow and they find it hard to offer a position from which to resist the "cross-pressures" that buffer all modern belief systems. But A Secular Age is also meant, I think, to show how religious belief is not as logically aberrant as atheists like Dawkins suggest. Here it is much less successful. The heart of the atheist case against religion where "religion" denotes more than a vague spirituality is that its claims seem wildly unreasonable. Taylor does not even try to persuade us otherwise. The views of naturalists and atheists, whatever their shortcomings, are positively sober when compared to what even liberal churches ask us to believe. A Secular Age is far too long and undisciplined. Seasons waxed and waned in the time it took me to read it. Yet it is full of insights, and many of its component parts notably Taylor's discussion of the "pressures" that make a settled view on the big ontological questions hard to sustain are as good as anything by this magnificent philosopher.

WHAT DO MOST PEOPLE THINK OF AS EVANGELICALS? [i.e., Moral Majority1, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Tim LaHaye]

WHAT DO MOST PEOPLE THINK OF AS EVANGELICALS? [i.e., Moral Majority1, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Tim LaHaye] Question: Who are the Evangelicals, and what do they want? Subquestions: WHAT DO MOST PEOPLE THINK OF AS EVANGELICALS? [i.e., Moral Majority1, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Tim LaHaye] [Local figure: Lon

More information

Your signature doesn t mean you endorse the guidelines; your comments, when added to the Annexe, will only enrich and strengthen the document.

Your signature doesn t mean you endorse the guidelines; your comments, when added to the Annexe, will only enrich and strengthen the document. Ladies and Gentlemen, Below is a declaration on laicity which was initiated by 3 leading academics from 3 different countries. As the declaration contains the diverse views and opinions of different academic

More information

Theories of the mind have been celebrating their new-found freedom to study

Theories of the mind have been celebrating their new-found freedom to study The Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical Debates edited by Ned Block, Owen Flanagan and Güven Güzeldere Cambridge: Mass.: MIT Press 1997 pp.xxix + 843 Theories of the mind have been celebrating their

More information

Nation, Science and Religion in Nehru s Discovery of India

Nation, Science and Religion in Nehru s Discovery of India Journal of Scientific Temper Vol.1(3&4), July 2013, pp. 227-231 BOOK REVIEW Nation, Science and Religion in Nehru s Discovery of India Jawaharlal Nehru s Discovery of India was first published in 1946

More information

Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1. By Tom Cumming

Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1. By Tom Cumming Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1 By Tom Cumming Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics represents Martin Heidegger's first attempt at an interpretation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (1781). This

More information

Introduction. Bernard Williams

Introduction. Bernard Williams Introduction Bernard Williams Isaiah Berlin is most widely known for his writings in political theory and the history of ideas, but he worked first in general philosophy, and contributed to the discussion

More information

NON-RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHIES OF LIFE AND THE WORLD Support Materials - GMGY

NON-RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHIES OF LIFE AND THE WORLD Support Materials - GMGY People express non-religious philosophies of life and the world in different ways. For children in your class who express who express a non-religious worldview or belief, it is important that the child

More information

Qué es la filosofía? What is philosophy? Philosophy

Qué es la filosofía? What is philosophy? Philosophy Philosophy PHILOSOPHY AS A WAY OF THINKING WHAT IS IT? WHO HAS IT? WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A WAY OF THINKING AND A DISCIPLINE? It is the propensity to seek out answers to the questions that we ask

More information

Charles Taylor & the Immanent Frame of the Secular ~Dr. Gordon E. Carkner

Charles Taylor & the Immanent Frame of the Secular ~Dr. Gordon E. Carkner Charles Taylor & the Immanent Frame of the Secular ~Dr. Gordon E. Carkner We are offered a particularly insightful analysis of our current cultural ethos by McGill Philosophy Professor Charles Taylor in

More information

Honours Programme in Philosophy

Honours Programme in Philosophy Honours Programme in Philosophy Honours Programme in Philosophy The Honours Programme in Philosophy is a special track of the Honours Bachelor s programme. It offers students a broad and in-depth introduction

More information

COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding

COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding Alain Badiou, Professor Emeritus (École Normale Supérieure, Paris) Prefatory Note by Simon Critchley (The New School and University of Essex) The following

More information

BOOK REVIEW. Jeffrey Mishlove, Ph.D. University of Philosophical Research

BOOK REVIEW. Jeffrey Mishlove, Ph.D. University of Philosophical Research BOOK REVIEW Jeffrey Mishlove, Ph.D. University of Philosophical Research The Big Book of Near-Death Experiences: The Ultimate Guide to What Happens When We Die, by P. M. H. Atwater. Charlottes ville, VA:

More information

Communicative Rationality and Deliberative Democracy of Jlirgen Habermas: Toward Consolidation of Democracy in Africa

Communicative Rationality and Deliberative Democracy of Jlirgen Habermas: Toward Consolidation of Democracy in Africa Ukoro Theophilus Igwe Communicative Rationality and Deliberative Democracy of Jlirgen Habermas: Toward Consolidation of Democracy in Africa A 2005/6523 LIT Ill TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATION ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

More information

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works Title Disaggregating Structures as an Agenda for Critical Realism: A Reply to McAnulla Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4k27s891 Journal British

More information

Religious Studies. Name: Institution: Course: Date:

Religious Studies. Name: Institution: Course: Date: Running head: RELIGIOUS STUDIES Religious Studies Name: Institution: Course: Date: RELIGIOUS STUDIES 2 Abstract In this brief essay paper, we aim to critically analyze the question: Given that there are

More information

Authority Beyond the Bounds of Mere Reason in the Schmitt-Strauss Exchange

Authority Beyond the Bounds of Mere Reason in the Schmitt-Strauss Exchange Authority Beyond the Bounds of Mere Reason in the Schmitt-Strauss Exchange John P. McCormick Political Science, University of Chicago; and Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University Outline This essay reevaluates

More information

Process Thought and Bridge Building: A Response to Stephen K. White. Kevin Schilbrack

Process Thought and Bridge Building: A Response to Stephen K. White. Kevin Schilbrack Archived version from NCDOCKS Institutional Repository http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/asu/ Schilbrack, Kevin.2011 Process Thought and Bridge-Building: A Response to Stephen K. White, Process Studies 40:2 (Fall-Winter

More information

Philosophy Courses Fall 2016

Philosophy Courses Fall 2016 Philosophy Courses Fall 2016 All 100 and 200-level philosophy courses satisfy the Humanities requirement -- except 120, 198, and 298. We offer both a major and a minor in philosophy plus a concentration

More information

Citation Philosophy and Psychology (2009): 1.

Citation Philosophy and Psychology (2009): 1. TitleWhat in the World is Natural? Author(s) Sheila Webb Citation The Self, the Other and Language (I Philosophy and Psychology (2009): 1 Issue Date 2009-12 URL http://hdl.handle.net/2433/143002 Right

More information

Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte

Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte Maria Pia Mater Thomistic Week 2018 Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte Introduction Cornelio Fabro s God in Exile, traces the progression of modern atheism from its roots in the cogito of Rene

More information

Postmodernism. Issue Christianity Post-Modernism. Theology Trinitarian Atheism. Philosophy Supernaturalism Anti-Realism

Postmodernism. Issue Christianity Post-Modernism. Theology Trinitarian Atheism. Philosophy Supernaturalism Anti-Realism Postmodernism Issue Christianity Post-Modernism Theology Trinitarian Atheism Philosophy Supernaturalism Anti-Realism (Faith and Reason) Ethics Moral Absolutes Cultural Relativism Biology Creationism Punctuated

More information

Dave Elder-Vass Of Babies and Bathwater. A Review of Tuukka Kaidesoja Naturalizing Critical Realist Social Ontology

Dave Elder-Vass Of Babies and Bathwater. A Review of Tuukka Kaidesoja Naturalizing Critical Realist Social Ontology Journal of Social Ontology 2015; 1(2): 327 331 Book Symposium Open Access Dave Elder-Vass Of Babies and Bathwater. A Review of Tuukka Kaidesoja Naturalizing Critical Realist Social Ontology DOI 10.1515/jso-2014-0029

More information

Non-Religious Demographics and the Canadian Census Speech delivered at the Centre For Inquiry Ontario April 29, 2011

Non-Religious Demographics and the Canadian Census Speech delivered at the Centre For Inquiry Ontario April 29, 2011 Non-Religious Demographics and the Canadian Census Speech delivered at the Centre For Inquiry Ontario April 29, 2011 Contact: Greg Oliver President Canadian Secular Alliance president@secularalliance.ca

More information

Nietzsche and Aristotle in contemporary virtue ethics

Nietzsche and Aristotle in contemporary virtue ethics Ethical Theory and Practice - Final Paper 3 February 2005 Tibor Goossens - 0439940 CS Ethics 1A - WBMA3014 Faculty of Philosophy - Utrecht University Table of contents 1. Introduction and research question...

More information

EXERCISES, QUESTIONS, AND ACTIVITIES My Answers

EXERCISES, QUESTIONS, AND ACTIVITIES My Answers EXERCISES, QUESTIONS, AND ACTIVITIES My Answers Diagram and evaluate each of the following arguments. Arguments with Definitional Premises Altruism. Altruism is the practice of doing something solely because

More information

John Scottus Eriugena: Analysing the Philosophical Contribution of an Forgotten Thinker

John Scottus Eriugena: Analysing the Philosophical Contribution of an Forgotten Thinker John Scottus Eriugena: Analysing the Philosophical Contribution of an Forgotten Thinker Abstract: Historically John Scottus Eriugena's influence has been somewhat underestimated within the discipline of

More information

William Hasker s discussion of the Thomistic doctrine of the soul

William Hasker s discussion of the Thomistic doctrine of the soul Response to William Hasker s The Dialectic of Soul and Body John Haldane I. William Hasker s discussion of the Thomistic doctrine of the soul does not engage directly with Aquinas s writings but draws

More information

Answer the following in your notebook:

Answer the following in your notebook: Answer the following in your notebook: Explain to what extent you agree with the following: 1. At heart people are generally rational and make well considered decisions. 2. The universe is governed by

More information

AS-LEVEL Religious Studies

AS-LEVEL Religious Studies AS-LEVEL Religious Studies RSS03 Philosophy of Religion Mark scheme 2060 June 2015 Version 1: Final Mark Scheme Mark schemes are prepared by the Lead Assessment Writer and considered, together with the

More information

Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture

Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture Intentionality It is not unusual to begin a discussion of Kant with a brief review of some history of philosophy. What is perhaps less usual is to start with a review

More information

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT FALL SEMESTER 2009 COURSE OFFERINGS

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT FALL SEMESTER 2009 COURSE OFFERINGS PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT FALL SEMESTER 2009 COURSE OFFERINGS INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY (PHIL 100W) MIND BODY PROBLEM (PHIL 101) LOGIC AND CRITICAL THINKING (PHIL 110) INTRODUCTION TO ETHICS (PHIL 120) CULTURE

More information

The Middle Path: A Case for the Philosophical Theologian. Leo Strauss roots the vitality of Western civilization in the ongoing conflict between

The Middle Path: A Case for the Philosophical Theologian. Leo Strauss roots the vitality of Western civilization in the ongoing conflict between Lee Anne Detzel PHI 8338 Revised: November 1, 2004 The Middle Path: A Case for the Philosophical Theologian Leo Strauss roots the vitality of Western civilization in the ongoing conflict between philosophy

More information

Metaphysical atomism and the attraction of materialism.

Metaphysical atomism and the attraction of materialism. Metaphysical atomism and the attraction of materialism. Jane Heal July 2015 I m offering here only some very broad brush remarks - not a fully worked through paper. So apologies for the sketchy nature

More information

Cover Page. The handle holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation

Cover Page. The handle   holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation Cover Page The handle http://hdl.handle.net/1887/25894 holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation Author: Keogh, Gary Title: Reconstructing a hopeful theology in the context of evolutionary

More information

Psychology and Psychurgy III. PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHURGY: The Nature and Use of The Mind. by Elmer Gates

Psychology and Psychurgy III. PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHURGY: The Nature and Use of The Mind. by Elmer Gates [p. 38] blank [p. 39] Psychology and Psychurgy [p. 40] blank [p. 41] III PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHURGY: The Nature and Use of The Mind. by Elmer Gates In this paper I have thought it well to call attention

More information

Review: The Objects of Thought, by Tim Crane. Guy Longworth University of Warwick

Review: The Objects of Thought, by Tim Crane. Guy Longworth University of Warwick Review: The Objects of Thought, by Tim Crane. Guy Longworth University of Warwick 24.4.14 We can think about things that don t exist. For example, we can think about Pegasus, and Pegasus doesn t exist.

More information

PHILOSOPHY. Chair: Karánn Durland (Fall 2018) and Mark Hébert (Spring 2019) Emeritus: Roderick Stewart

PHILOSOPHY. Chair: Karánn Durland (Fall 2018) and Mark Hébert (Spring 2019) Emeritus: Roderick Stewart PHILOSOPHY Chair: Karánn Durland (Fall 2018) and Mark Hébert (Spring 2019) Emeritus: Roderick Stewart The mission of the program is to help students develop interpretive, analytical and reflective skills

More information

Uganda, morality was derived from God and the adult members were regarded as teachers of religion. God remained the canon against which the moral

Uganda, morality was derived from God and the adult members were regarded as teachers of religion. God remained the canon against which the moral ESSENTIAL APPROACHES TO CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS EDUCATION: LEARNING AND TEACHING A PAPER PRESENTED TO THE SCHOOL OF RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE STUDIES UGANDA CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY ON MARCH 23, 2018 Prof. Christopher

More information

Mika Ojakangas. A Philosophy of Concrete Life. Carl Schmitt and the Political Thought of Late Modernity.

Mika Ojakangas. A Philosophy of Concrete Life. Carl Schmitt and the Political Thought of Late Modernity. Mika Ojakangas. A Philosophy of Concrete Life. Carl Schmitt and the Political Thought of Late Modernity. Stefan Fietz During the last years, the thought of Carl Schmitt has regained wide international

More information

AKC Lecture 1 Plato, Penrose, Popper

AKC Lecture 1 Plato, Penrose, Popper AKC Lecture 1 Plato, Penrose, Popper E. Brian Davies King s College London November 2011 E.B. Davies (KCL) AKC 1 November 2011 1 / 26 Introduction The problem with philosophical and religious questions

More information

Response to Gregory Floyd s Where Does Hermeneutics Lead? Brad Elliott Stone, Loyola Marymount University ACPA 2017

Response to Gregory Floyd s Where Does Hermeneutics Lead? Brad Elliott Stone, Loyola Marymount University ACPA 2017 Response to Gregory Floyd s Where Does Hermeneutics Lead? Brad Elliott Stone, Loyola Marymount University ACPA 2017 In his paper, Floyd offers a comparative presentation of hermeneutics as found in Heidegger

More information

SCIENCE AND RELIGION: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY THOMAS DIXON DOWNLOAD EBOOK : SCIENCE AND RELIGION: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY THOMAS DIXON PDF

SCIENCE AND RELIGION: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY THOMAS DIXON DOWNLOAD EBOOK : SCIENCE AND RELIGION: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY THOMAS DIXON PDF Read Online and Download Ebook SCIENCE AND RELIGION: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY THOMAS DIXON DOWNLOAD EBOOK : SCIENCE AND RELIGION: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY THOMAS DIXON PDF Click link bellow and

More information

MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY. by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink

MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY. by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink Abstract. We respond to concerns raised by Langdon Gilkey. The discussion addresses the nature of theological thinking

More information

LOCKE STUDIES Vol ISSN: X

LOCKE STUDIES Vol ISSN: X LOCKE STUDIES Vol. 18 https://doi.org/10.5206/ls.2018.3525 ISSN: 2561-925X Submitted: 28 JUNE 2018 Published online: 30 JULY 2018 For more information, see this article s homepage. 2018. Nathan Rockwood

More information

Tu Quoque, Archbishop

Tu Quoque, Archbishop Tu Quoque, Archbishop On 8 March 2004, Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, gave an address at 10 Downing Street called Belief, unbelief and religious education. 1 In it, he considers the future

More information

Some Background on Jonas

Some Background on Jonas Hans Jonas (1903-1993) German-American (or, arguably, German-Canadian) )philosopher, p typically y identified (e.g., by Mitcham and Nissenbaum) with a continental approach to ethics and technology I.e.,

More information

Multiculturalism and Social Justice. Working Papers Series. Social/Political/Psychological Identity

Multiculturalism and Social Justice. Working Papers Series. Social/Political/Psychological Identity Multiculturalism and Social Justice Working Papers Series Social/Political/Psychological Identity Steven Davis Philosophy Department Carleton University Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6 steven_davis@carleton.ca MCSJ-02-07

More information

1/24/2012. Philosophers of the Middle Ages. Psychology 390 Psychology of Learning

1/24/2012. Philosophers of the Middle Ages. Psychology 390 Psychology of Learning Dark or Early Middle Ages Begin (475-1000) Philosophers of the Middle Ages Psychology 390 Psychology of Learning Steven E. Meier, Ph.D. Formerly called the Dark Ages. Today called the Early Middle Ages.

More information

College of Baptist Ministers Monthly Newsletter March Ignite: Investing in Leaders Some reflections from Paul Beasley-Murray

College of Baptist Ministers Monthly Newsletter March Ignite: Investing in Leaders Some reflections from Paul Beasley-Murray College of Baptist Ministers Monthly Newsletter March 2016 Ignite: Investing in Leaders Some reflections from Paul Beasley-Murray The Board of the College of Baptist Ministers (CBM) read with great interest

More information

God After Darwin. 3. Evolution and The Great Hierarchy of Being. August 6, to 9:50 am in the Parlor All are welcome!

God After Darwin. 3. Evolution and The Great Hierarchy of Being. August 6, to 9:50 am in the Parlor All are welcome! God After Darwin 3. Evolution and The Great Hierarchy of Being August 6, 2006 9 to 9:50 am in the Parlor All are welcome! God Our Father, open our eyes to see your hand at work in the splendor of creation,

More information

Strange bedfellows or Siamese twins? The search for the sacred in practical theology and psychology of religion

Strange bedfellows or Siamese twins? The search for the sacred in practical theology and psychology of religion Strange bedfellows or Siamese twins? The search for the sacred in practical theology and psychology of religion R.Ruard Ganzevoort A paper for the Symposium The relation between Psychology of Religion

More information

Two books, one title. And what a title! Two leading academic publishers have

Two books, one title. And what a title! Two leading academic publishers have Disjunctivism Perception, Action, Knowledge Edited by Adrian Haddock and Fiona Macpherson Oxford: Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978-0-19-923154-6 Disjunctivism Contemporary Readings Edited by Alex

More information

The Question of Metaphysics

The Question of Metaphysics The Question of Metaphysics metaphysics seriously. Second, I want to argue that the currently popular hands-off conception of metaphysical theorising is unable to provide a satisfactory answer to the question

More information

Kant and his Successors

Kant and his Successors Kant and his Successors G. J. Mattey Winter, 2011 / Philosophy 151 The Sorry State of Metaphysics Kant s Critique of Pure Reason (1781) was an attempt to put metaphysics on a scientific basis. Metaphysics

More information

Taylor: What s Wrong with Negative Liberty

Taylor: What s Wrong with Negative Liberty Taylor: What s Wrong with Negative Liberty Charles Taylor (1931 - ) Canadian philosopher; succeeded Berlin as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Philosophy; taught for many years at McGill; now

More information

POLI 342: MODERN WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT

POLI 342: MODERN WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT POLI 342: MODERN WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT THE POLITICS OF ENLIGHTENMENT (1685-1815) Lecturers: Dr. E. Aggrey-Darkoh, Department of Political Science Contact Information: eaggrey-darkoh@ug.edu.gh College

More information

MDiv Expectations/Competencies ATS Standard

MDiv Expectations/Competencies ATS Standard MDiv Expectations/Competencies by ATS Standards ATS Standard A.3.1.1 Religious Heritage: to develop a comprehensive and discriminating understanding of the religious heritage A.3.1.1.1 Instruction shall

More information

UC Davis Philosophy Department Expanded Course Descriptions Fall, 2009

UC Davis Philosophy Department Expanded Course Descriptions Fall, 2009 UC Davis Philosophy Department Expanded Course Descriptions Fall, 2009 PHILOSOPHY 1 INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY Adam Sennet MWF 12:10-1:00 P.M. Social Science and Humanities 1100 CRNs: 35738-35749 Reason

More information

The dangers of the sovereign being the judge of rationality

The dangers of the sovereign being the judge of rationality Thus no one can act against the sovereign s decisions without prejudicing his authority, but they can think and judge and consequently also speak without any restriction, provided they merely speak or

More information

Book Review. The Cambridge Companion to Dewey. Justin Bell

Book Review. The Cambridge Companion to Dewey. Justin Bell Book Review The Cambridge Companion to Dewey Justin Bell Molly Cochran (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Dewey. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. 356 +xvii pages. ISBN 978-0-521-69746-0. $25.00

More information

AN OUTLINE OF CRITICAL THINKING

AN OUTLINE OF CRITICAL THINKING AN OUTLINE OF CRITICAL THINKING LEVELS OF INQUIRY 1. Information: correct understanding of basic information. 2. Understanding basic ideas: correct understanding of the basic meaning of key ideas. 3. Probing:

More information

Philosophy Courses-1

Philosophy Courses-1 Philosophy Courses-1 PHL 100/Introduction to Philosophy A course that examines the fundamentals of philosophical argument, analysis and reasoning, as applied to a series of issues in logic, epistemology,

More information

Naturalism Without Reductionism. A Pragmatist Account of Religion. Dr. des. Ana Honnacker, Goethe University Frankfurt a. M.

Naturalism Without Reductionism. A Pragmatist Account of Religion. Dr. des. Ana Honnacker, Goethe University Frankfurt a. M. Naturalism Without Reductionism. A Pragmatist Account of Religion Dr. des. Ana Honnacker, Goethe University Frankfurt a. M. [Draft version, not for citation] Introduction The talk of naturalizing religion

More information

Law as a Social Fact: A Reply to Professor Martinez

Law as a Social Fact: A Reply to Professor Martinez Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School Digital Commons at Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review Law Reviews 1-1-1996 Law as a Social Fact: A Reply

More information

Part I Religion, Culture and Development Islam between Past and Present

Part I Religion, Culture and Development Islam between Past and Present Part I Religion, Culture and Development Islam between Past and Present 24 Islam between Culture and Politics Introductory remarks Among the hallmarks of our new century is the renewed importance of religion.

More information

Identities and Reasons (Comment on T.M. Scanlon s Ideas of Identity and their Normative. Status ) John Skorupski

Identities and Reasons (Comment on T.M. Scanlon s Ideas of Identity and their Normative. Status ) John Skorupski 1 Identities and Reasons (Comment on T.M. Scanlon s Ideas of Identity and their Normative Status ) John Skorupski Tim Scanlon s lecture discusses what kind of reasons one s identity may give rise to. It

More information

John Stuart Mill ( ) is widely regarded as the leading English-speaking philosopher of

John Stuart Mill ( ) is widely regarded as the leading English-speaking philosopher of [DRAFT: please do not cite without permission. The final version of this entry will appear in the Encyclopedia of the Philosophy of Religion (Wiley-Blackwell, forthcoming), eds. Stewart Goetz and Charles

More information

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair FIRST STUDY The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair I 1. In recent decades, our understanding of the philosophy of philosophers such as Kant or Hegel has been

More information

The Paradox of the stone and two concepts of omnipotence

The Paradox of the stone and two concepts of omnipotence Filo Sofija Nr 30 (2015/3), s. 239-246 ISSN 1642-3267 Jacek Wojtysiak John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin The Paradox of the stone and two concepts of omnipotence Introduction The history of science

More information

UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE (IN TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABILITY) Vol. I - Philosophical Holism M.Esfeld

UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE (IN TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABILITY) Vol. I - Philosophical Holism M.Esfeld PHILOSOPHICAL HOLISM M. Esfeld Department of Philosophy, University of Konstanz, Germany Keywords: atomism, confirmation, holism, inferential role semantics, meaning, monism, ontological dependence, rule-following,

More information

Meta-Debate: A necessity for any debate style.

Meta-Debate: A necessity for any debate style. IPDA 65 Meta-Debate: A necessity for any debate style. Nicholas Ducote, Louisiana Tech University Shane Puckett, Louisiana Tech University Abstract The IPDA style and community, through discourse in journal

More information

Cosmopolitan Theory and the Daily Pluralism of Life

Cosmopolitan Theory and the Daily Pluralism of Life Chapter 8 Cosmopolitan Theory and the Daily Pluralism of Life Tariq Ramadan D rawing on my own experience, I will try to connect the world of philosophy and academia with the world in which people live

More information

BENJAMIN R. BARBER. Radical Excess & Post-Modernism Presentation By Benedetta Barnabo Cachola

BENJAMIN R. BARBER. Radical Excess & Post-Modernism Presentation By Benedetta Barnabo Cachola BENJAMIN R. BARBER Radical Excess & Post-Modernism Presentation By Benedetta Barnabo Cachola BENJAMIN R. BARBER An internationally renowned political theorist, Dr. Barber( b. 1939) brings an abiding concern

More information

SECULARISM AND RELIGION-STATE RELATIONS AROUND THE WORLD

SECULARISM AND RELIGION-STATE RELATIONS AROUND THE WORLD Hartford Seminary, Fall Semester 2014 SECULARISM AND RELIGION-STATE RELATIONS AROUND THE WORLD Professor Barry A. Kosmin Introduction The primary focus of this inter-disciplinary social science course,

More information

Bob Atchley, Sage-ing Guild Conference, October, 2010

Bob Atchley, Sage-ing Guild Conference, October, 2010 1 Roots of Wisdom and Wings of Enlightenment Bob Atchley, Sage-ing Guild Conference, October, 2010 Sage-ing International emphasizes, celebrates, and practices spiritual development and wisdom, long recognized

More information

Ibuanyidanda (Complementary Reflection), African Philosophy and General Issues in Philosophy

Ibuanyidanda (Complementary Reflection), African Philosophy and General Issues in Philosophy HOME Ibuanyidanda (Complementary Reflection), African Philosophy and General Issues in Philosophy Back to Home Page: http://www.frasouzu.com/ for more essays from a complementary perspective THE IDEA OF

More information

Darwinism as Religion: What Literature Tells us about evolution

Darwinism as Religion: What Literature Tells us about evolution Darwinism as Religion: What Literature Tells us about evolution By Michael Ruse. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016 jennifer komorowski In his book Darwinism as Religion: What Literature Tells Us About

More information

Department of Philosophy

Department of Philosophy The University of Alabama at Birmingham 1 Department of Philosophy Chair: Dr. Gregory Pence The Department of Philosophy offers the Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in philosophy, as well as a minor

More information

How Technology Challenges Ethics

How Technology Challenges Ethics How Technology Challenges Ethics For the last while, we ve looked at the usual suspects among ethical theories Next up: Jonas, Hardin and McGinn each maintain (albeit in rather different ways) that modern

More information

Course Text. Course Description. Course Objectives. StraighterLine Introduction to Philosophy

Course Text. Course Description. Course Objectives. StraighterLine Introduction to Philosophy Introduction to Philosophy Course Text Moore, Brooke Noel and Kenneth Bruder. Philosophy: The Power of Ideas, 7th edition, McGraw-Hill, 2008. ISBN: 9780073535722 [This text is available as an etextbook

More information

POLITICAL SECULARISM AND PUBLIC REASON. THREE REMARKS ON AUDI S DEMOCRATIC AUTHORITY AND THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE

POLITICAL SECULARISM AND PUBLIC REASON. THREE REMARKS ON AUDI S DEMOCRATIC AUTHORITY AND THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE SYMPOSIUM THE CHURCH AND THE STATE POLITICAL SECULARISM AND PUBLIC REASON. THREE REMARKS ON AUDI S DEMOCRATIC AUTHORITY AND THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE BY JOCELYN MACLURE 2013 Philosophy and Public

More information

Radical Centrism & the Redemption of Secular Philosophy

Radical Centrism & the Redemption of Secular Philosophy Radical Centrism & the Redemption of Secular Philosophy Ernest N. Prabhakar, Ph.D. DrErnie@RadicalCentrism.org Radical Centrism is an new approach to secular philosophy 1 What we will cover The Challenge

More information

1. Atheism We begin our study with a look at atheism. Atheism is not itself a religion.

1. Atheism We begin our study with a look at atheism. Atheism is not itself a religion. 1 1. Atheism We begin our study with a look at atheism. Atheism is not itself a religion. What is atheism Atheism is the view that God does not exist. The word comes from the Greek atheos which when we

More information

Care of the Soul: Service-Learning and the Value of the Humanities

Care of the Soul: Service-Learning and the Value of the Humanities [Expositions 2.1 (2008) 007 012] Expositions (print) ISSN 1747-5368 doi:10.1558/expo.v2i1.007 Expositions (online) ISSN 1747-5376 Care of the Soul: Service-Learning and the Value of the Humanities James

More information

Philosophy Courses-1

Philosophy Courses-1 Philosophy Courses-1 PHL 100/Introduction to Philosophy A course that examines the fundamentals of philosophical argument, analysis and reasoning, as applied to a series of issues in logic, epistemology,

More information

Carvaka Philosophy. Manisha Dutta Hazarika, Assistant Professor Department of Philosophy

Carvaka Philosophy. Manisha Dutta Hazarika, Assistant Professor Department of Philosophy Carvaka Philosophy Manisha Dutta Hazarika, Assistant Professor Department of Philosophy Introduction Carvaka Philosophy is a non-vedic school of Indian Philosophy. Generally, Carvaka is the word that stands

More information

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION. Address by Mr Federico Mayor

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION. Address by Mr Federico Mayor DG/95/9 Original: English/French UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION Address by Mr Federico Mayor Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural

More information

REASON AND PRACTICAL-REGRET. Nate Wahrenberger, College of William and Mary

REASON AND PRACTICAL-REGRET. Nate Wahrenberger, College of William and Mary 1 REASON AND PRACTICAL-REGRET Nate Wahrenberger, College of William and Mary Abstract: Christine Korsgaard argues that a practical reason (that is, a reason that counts in favor of an action) must motivate

More information

Christian scholars would all agree that their Christian faith ought to shape how

Christian scholars would all agree that their Christian faith ought to shape how Roy A. Clouser, The Myth of Religious Neutrality: An Essay on the Hidden Role of Religious Beliefs in Theories (Notre Dame: The University of Notre Dame Press, 2005, rev. ed.) Kenneth W. Hermann Kent State

More information

Rorty on the Priority of Democracy to Philosophy

Rorty on the Priority of Democracy to Philosophy Rorty on the Priority of Democracy to Philosophy Kai Nielsen I Richard Rorty seeks to defend and newly recontextualize social democratic liberalism and pluralism without an appeal to Enlightenment rationalism

More information

EXAM PREP (Semester 2: 2018) Jules Khomo. Linguistic analysis is concerned with the following question:

EXAM PREP (Semester 2: 2018) Jules Khomo. Linguistic analysis is concerned with the following question: PLEASE NOTE THAT THESE ARE MY PERSONAL EXAM PREP NOTES. ANSWERS ARE TAKEN FROM LECTURER MEMO S, STUDENT ANSWERS, DROP BOX, MY OWN, ETC. THIS DOCUMENT CAN NOT BE SOLD FOR PROFIT AS IT IS BEING SHARED AT

More information

How Trustworthy is the Bible? (1) Written by Cornelis Pronk

How Trustworthy is the Bible? (1) Written by Cornelis Pronk Higher Criticism of the Bible is not a new phenomenon but a problem that has plagued the church for over a century and a-half. Spawned by the anti-supernatural spirit of the eighteenth century movement,

More information

Preliminary Syllabus. Hartford Seminary, Fall Semester SECULARISM AND RELIGION-STATE RELATIONS AROUND THE WORLD Professor Barry A.

Preliminary Syllabus. Hartford Seminary, Fall Semester SECULARISM AND RELIGION-STATE RELATIONS AROUND THE WORLD Professor Barry A. Preliminary Syllabus Hartford Seminary, Fall Semester 2016 SECULARISM AND RELIGION-STATE RELATIONS AROUND THE WORLD Professor Barry A. Kosmin Introduction The primary focus of this inter-disciplinary social

More information

An Article for Encyclopedia of American Philosophy on: Robert Cummings Neville. Wesley J. Wildman Boston University December 1, 2005

An Article for Encyclopedia of American Philosophy on: Robert Cummings Neville. Wesley J. Wildman Boston University December 1, 2005 An Article for Encyclopedia of American Philosophy on: Robert Cummings Neville Wesley J. Wildman Boston University December 1, 2005 Office: 745 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215 (617) 353-6788 Word

More information

In this response, I will bring to light a fascinating, and in some ways hopeful, irony

In this response, I will bring to light a fascinating, and in some ways hopeful, irony Response: The Irony of It All Nicholas Wolterstorff In this response, I will bring to light a fascinating, and in some ways hopeful, irony embedded in the preceding essays on human rights, when they are

More information

Video 1: Worldviews: Introduction. [Keith]

Video 1: Worldviews: Introduction. [Keith] Video 1: Worldviews: Introduction Hi, I'm Keith Shull, the executive director of the Arizona Christian Worldview Institute in Phoenix Arizona. You may be wondering Why do I even need to bother with all

More information

Ground Work 01 part one God His Existence Genesis 1:1/Psalm 19:1-4

Ground Work 01 part one God His Existence Genesis 1:1/Psalm 19:1-4 Ground Work 01 part one God His Existence Genesis 1:1/Psalm 19:1-4 Introduction Tonight we begin a brand new series I have entitled ground work laying a foundation for faith o It is so important that everyone

More information

EUROPEAN POLITICAL THEORY: ROUSSEAU AND AFTER

EUROPEAN POLITICAL THEORY: ROUSSEAU AND AFTER Oberlin College Department of Politics Bogdan Popa, Ph.D. Politics 232, 4SS, 4 Credits Meets: Tu/Th 11.00-12.15 King 343 Office hours: T-TH 03.00-04.00pm; And by appointment EUROPEAN POLITICAL THEORY:

More information

REVIEW THE DOOR TO SELLARS

REVIEW THE DOOR TO SELLARS Metascience (2007) 16:555 559 Ó Springer 2007 DOI 10.1007/s11016-007-9141-6 REVIEW THE DOOR TO SELLARS Willem A. de Vries, Wilfrid Sellars. Chesham: Acumen, 2005. Pp. xiv + 338. 16.99 PB. By Andreas Karitzis

More information

Method in Theology. A summary of the views of Bernard Lonergan, i taken from his book, Method in Theology. ii

Method in Theology. A summary of the views of Bernard Lonergan, i taken from his book, Method in Theology. ii Method in Theology Functional Specializations A summary of the views of Bernard Lonergan, i taken from his book, Method in Theology. ii Lonergan proposes that there are eight distinct tasks in theology.

More information