Exploring Approaches to Apologetics

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Exploring Approaches to Apologetics"

Transcription

1 Exploring Approaches to Apologetics CA513 LESSON 16 of 24 Gordon Lewis, Ph.D. Experience: Senior Professor of Christian and Historical Theology, Denver Seminary, Colorado. As we begin this morning, think of the teaching of Paul in Romans 10: Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. How then can the call on one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent? This passage indicates the indispensability of people hearing the Gospel of Jesus Christ in order to be saved. Our Father in heaven, we pray that You will enable us to see the importance of making clear the truth of the Gospel in order that people might be saved. For their sake and the sake of Your kingdom we pray, amen. Reviewing the approach of Christian Mysticism, consider how it would be presented to Jane who lost her faith in college. If Jane s pastor or youth leader were a Christian Mystic, what approach would they take? Of course, before one begins the logical reasoning of any of these approaches, one would seek to establish a context of friendship evangelism as far as possible. Only after that would one begin reasoning from the logical starting point chosen. So then Jane s youth minister would not appeal to evidence or argument whether inductive or deductive. None of the apologetic approaches studied would be considered effective until she converted to Christ. From this mystical approach, a youth leader s logical starting point and primary task with Jane is to witness to his or her own direct, rationally intuitive experience of God through faith in Jesus as the Messiah. So he or she would witness as meaningfully and accurately as possible. Once I was blind, now I see. The counselor might speak of his or her sense of alienation from the architect of the universe that turned to one of reconciliation and peace. Or one might describe his or her previous inability to break sinful habits in contrast to the liberation from addictive 1 of 12

2 conduct experienced through faith in the risen Christ. In addition, the counselor as a Christian mystic might depict the inescapable feelings of guilt that have been replaced by the good news of justification by faith, including the forgiveness of all sins past, present, and future and the imputation of Christ s perfect righteousness. The hope is that the witness to one s own experience of reconciliation, redemption, and forgiveness through faith in Christ may evoke in Jane a desire to have a similar experience, and all of that as a gift through faith in Christ s atonement by the renewal of the Holy Spirit. Only after Jane does have a Christian mystical encounter, a personal experience of fellowship with God the Father and with His unique Son, Jesus Christ, will she be able to assent to the coherence of a Christian worldview. Then one can help her develop a Christian philosophy of life and answers to the non- Christian philosophies at the university. How then should we evaluate the Christian mystical approach? Young and Barrett must be commended for stressing a distinctive aspect of experience that the other apologists have not made as explicit. The personal experience of Christians is part of the data of human experience for which any philosophy must give account. The approach gives more explicit recognition through the work of the Holy Spirit in regeneration, although it fails to focus on the Spirit s attestation of evidence and argument as a means to conviction of sin and conversion to Christ. In calling sinners to Christ and convicting them of their sin and guilt, the Spirit uses the presentations of human evangelists and apologists, and he uses those that make sense. The Christian mystical approach has not given this instrumentality of the Spirit sufficient recognition. But giving one s testimony is an easier approach to use than the amassing of extensive historical evidence or tracing intricate logical arguments. A Christian mystical approach also combines experience with the occasion of biblical study. Furthermore, this refreshingly personal approach is more likely to be listened to in the world of television testimonials to many different products. So every defender of the truth of Christian claims should be prepared to give a personal testimony of what faith has meant in his or her experience. 2 of 12

3 Furthermore, Young and Barrett have sought to defend a distinctive emphasis of evangelical Christianity, personal conversion to God through faith in Christ, and they note that twentieth century people are not satisfied with a merely mediated knowledge of God. People today, as always, deeply desire an experience of transcendent, unchanging reality of God. They desire a manifestation of God in their own spirits. They are, as Augustine said, restless until they find their rest in God. Although personal experience of God is crucial, Barrett has opened himself to unnecessary misunderstanding by using the designation mystic or even Christian mystic. The term mystic in the history of thought usually means a totally noncognitive experience of oneness with an impersonal ultimate like the forest. It would have been wiser to have spoken of a person-to-person encounter or an I/Thou relationship. Or one who favors this view might use the biblical terms of fellowship and communion with the personal God on the ground of the atonement of the Messiah and the power of the Holy Spirit. The problems are not just with wording, however. Young and Barrett do not seem to have adequately highlighted the conceptual truth that leads to a Christian conversion. An immediate experience that is salvific begins with knowing that God is and is living and active (Hebrews 11:6). It begins also with knowing one s morally lawless life is under the sentence of death physically and spiritually. Sinners must hear of the incarnation, atonement, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. They must believe that Good News and trust the living Christ who graciously saves through faith alone. Next, I am concerned about the Christian mystics priorities. Barrett expresses a thought often met in devotional literature the actual presence of God in human life; that is, genuine contact with God is of more importance than our rational explanations of it. But we need not choose for experience over thought or thought over experience. We need both. Why not say then that among all of life s experiences none is more important than experience of God, and among all the mind s beliefs, none is more important than believing the truth about God. It is as important that the truth of the Word tests the spirits as that the Holy Spirit attests the truth of the Word. There is no self-authenticating experience. The experience does not come with a tag on it. The question is whether the claims made on the basis of an experience by a Christian are true or false by some objective criteria. 3 of 12

4 The primary issue in apologetics that Gordon Clark noted is not who decides, but on what grounds a decision can legitimately be made. Is the ground of the most momentous decision in life just the fact of the experience? Many statements sound like the experience itself confirms its validity as we read the Christian mystics, but what does it mean to say that anyone who claims to have experienced Jesus Christ has a redemptive experience of God? In some contexts, Barrett claims that the certitude resulting from experiences of either God s first or second work of grace is immediate or non-inferred, instantaneous, compelling, complete, and self-validating. Those are not the only strong words he uses. He also claims that the certitude of a Christian mystical experience is impregnable, unshakable, imperturbable, unchallengeable, indubitable, and permanent. Is the claim of self-authentication of an experience a sufficient ground for the ultimate decision? Although these amazing claims make it seem sufficient, on Barrett s own admission in other contexts, the experience as such is not sufficient; it is not sell-validating. In those other contexts, Barrett admits that intuitions need to be checked and supplemented because it is easy to claim as an intuition, a hunch, or feeling that does not pan out in the whole of life. So the true mystic, he says, insists that his intuitions should be tested by other experience and the Word of God. Furthermore, intuitive apprehension should not be regarded as assured knowledge until it has been verified by observation and reason. How can one and the same experience be unchallengeable and in need of confirmation? It cannot be both self-authenticating and in need of further authentication. If, as Barrett says, the Christian mystical experience requires confirmation by a noncontradictory and adequate account of the relevant evidence, the experience itself cannot be as determinative of a whole worldview and way of life as he claims. It seems that in itself the experience is no longer the foundation stone to settle the issue of conflicting truth claims in this pluralistic world. Rather, experience becomes a part of the evidence for which we need a coherent account. We will look for an approach that includes the strengths of witness to one s own personal experience, the sense data of the empiricists, the categories and principles of the rationalists, and the starting point of the presuppositionalists. But this will need to be done in a way that does not result in a buzzing, blooming mass of confusion, but a coherent world and life view. 4 of 12

5 This brings us to the final Roman numeral in our outline, The Approach of Edward John Carnell. Carnell s apologetic, and let me spell that it s C A R (not O R) C A R N E L L. Carnell s apologetic will be given more thorough consideration than the other approaches for several reasons. It merits more extensive consideration because of its complexity. The other approaches utilize a single line of thought empirical, rational, presuppositional, or mystical and Hackett s employs a dual approach as Rational Empiricism. But Carnell s approach is at least five-fold. It not only incorporates the strengths of the others we have studied, it also adds unique contributions from Carnell s entire volume on values, another work on ethical norms, and a third on psychological phenomena. We may add the phenomena of personal Christian experience of God also. I will seek to introduce his approach then by interspersing his thought with his life experiences through the remainder of this lecture and the next. Destined to become one of the leaders in the rise of Evangelicalism in the twentieth century, Edward John Carnell was born in 1919 in Antigo, Wisconsin. He was the son of a Baptist pastor who had had come to the United States from England and had studied two years at Moody Bible Institute. Though a confirmed fundamentalist, Herbert Carnell deplored the acrimonious debates between fundamentalists and liberals in the meetings of the Northern Baptist Convention. Think now of the educational influences in Carnell s life and how thoroughly he did his homework as a student. After an unimpressive record in high school, Edward Carnell enrolled at Wheaton College from where his academic abilities were awakened by a professor of philosophy, Gordon H. Clark. In his Introduction to Christian Apologetics, Carnell would later acknowledge an incalculable indebtedness to his former professor, Dr. Clark at Butler University, whose spiritual kindness, fatherly interest, and academic patience made the convictions which stimulated the pending of this volume possible. Clark defended Christianity primarily by exhibiting its logical consistency and displaying the contradictions in other systems. Although Carnell also included empirical and existential data among the criteria of truth, he never abandoned Clark s emphasis on the law of noncontradiction. 5 of 12

6 During his Th.B. and Th.M. studies at Westminster Theological Seminary ( ), Carnell came under the influence of Cornelius Van Til. In his Introduction to Christian Apologetics, Carnell also paid tribute to Van Til s stress on Trinitarianism as the solution to the philosophical problem of the one and the many. In addition, Van Til had pointed out to him the impact that presuppositions have upon all of our thought about experience, but Carnell could not agree that these presuppositions are too ultimate for critical examination and testing. Rather, Carnell considered them hypotheses to be either verified or falsified by evidence. In content, his logical starting point was identical with Van Til, the God of the Bible, but the view that Carnell simply followed in the stream of Dutch presuppositionalists that include Van Til, Abraham Kuyper, and Herman Dooyeweerd does not adequately take into consideration the distinction he drew between untestable presuppositions and hypotheses that need to be verified. As a student at Westminster, Carnell was also influenced by the writings of its cofounder, New Testament scholar J. Gresham Machen. Carnell echoed Machen s affirmation that at no point is faith independent of the knowledge upon which it is logically based and with Machen he indicted the Hegelian rationalists for procrastinating and geometrizing reality. He noted, for example, that Ferdinand Christian Baur on the basis of his Hegelian philosophy with its thesis, antithesis, and synthesis expected to find a conflict in the Apostolic Age with a gradual compromise and settlement. He found that phenomenon surely enough in defiance of the facts, but in agreement with his philosophy. Carnell also agreed with Machen that the great weapon with which the disciples of Jesus set out to conquer the world was not a mere comprehension of eternal principles, it was an historical message, an account of something that had recently happened. It was the message, He is risen! Carnell s writings also reflect his study of philosopher and theologian, James Orr. Carnell quotes Orr that Flowing from God who is Himself truth, the system of meaning in the Bible has a character coherence and unity of its own and stands in sharp contrast with counter theories and speculations. It has the stamp of reason and reality upon itself and can amply justify itself at the bar of both history and experience. Quoting Orr again, Carnell notes that A religion based on feeling is the vaguest, most unreliable, most unstable of all things. A strong, stable religious life can be built on no other ground than that of intelligent conviction. Carnell likewise agrees with Orr that 6 of 12

7 skepticism becomes irresistible when one leaves the doctrine that Christ is God for a mediating position. And with Orr he concurs that the issue of miracles is not of this or that particular miracle; far more crucial matters are at stake here is there a supernatural being? If so, does that being govern the world and relate to humans? Who is Christ? How can we obtain redemption? Is there a hereafter? It is these larger questions that have to be settled first and then the question of particular miracles will fall into its proper place. Humans, Carnell points out, will think on those deep problems which lie at the root of religious belief, on the nature of God, His character, His relations to the world, and man sin, the means of deliverance from it, the end to which all things are moving. And if Christianity does not give them answer suited to their deeper and more reflective moods, they will simply put it aside as inadequate for their needs. While doing graduate work at Harvard University ( ), Carnell interacted at length with the existentialism of Reinhold Neibuhr. Having learned much from Neibuhr s realistic view of sin s pervasiveness, he later noted, for example, that fundamentalism exempts itself from the limits that original sin places on history. It wages holy wars without acknowledging the elements of pride and personal interest that prompt the call to battle. Carnell differed, however, with Neibuhr s assumption of an infinite qualitative distinction between God and humans, maintaining that God created the human mind to think, at least in part, his thoughts after Him. So Carnell opposed Neibuhr s contention that there is no univocal point between God and humanity, such as the law of noncontradiction. Carnell also opposed Neibuhr s belief that an irresolvable dialectic between time and eternity renders all seemingly logical and literal biblical teaching symbolic. Having given the lion s share in his epistemology to an inward Empiricism, Carnell wrote, Neibuhr cannot avoid skepticism within the natural law. Everything is provisional and tentative. In the end, Neibuhr is left with an Absolute Relativism. Carnell concluded, The evangelical says that inward experience is to be explained in terms of the biblical revelation; whereas, Existentialism says that the biblical revelation is to be explained in terms of our inward experience. 7 of 12

8 It was from another influential professor at Harvard in 1944, D. Elton Trueblood, that Carnell adopted his verificational approach, integrating his varied, logical, empirical, existential emphases in hypothetical if then sequences. Although Trueblood noted what he interpreted as emotional difficulties and narrow dogmatism in this graduate of Westminster Seminary, Carnell was open enough to learn from him. Trueblood s Logic of Belief is the source of Carnell s observation that interpersonal experience of God sustains one not merely temporarily as do drugs, but through both bright and dark hours. Carnell also utilizes Trueblood s statement that If all evil, whether moral, natural, or intellectual is truly illusory, we are foolish indeed to fight it. It would be far preferable to forget it. And citing Trueblood s predicament of modern man, Carnell observes, Man is an animal who is peculiarly in need of something to buttress and to guide his spiritual life. Without this, the very capacities that make him a little lower than the angels lead to his destruction. The beasts do not need a philosophy or a religion, but man does. Carnell also uses Trueblood s argument in Philosophy of Religion, a later version of The Logic of Belief, that if God exists, then we can make sense of several lines of evidence stemming from our subjective human experience as well as from external observation. Carnell s own hypothetical starting point is not mere theism if God exists, but the triune God disclosed in the Jesus of history and in the inspired teaching of Scripture and most frequently referred to as simply the God who has revealed Himself in Scripture or the God of the Bible. Carnell learned much at Boston University ( ) from empirical philosopher, Edgar S. Brightman. For example, a theologian cannot ignore the hard data of sensory observation. Utilizing Brightman s evaluation of various criteria of truth, Carnell argued that consistency tells us in general that all things must stand together. It does not tell us specifically how or where or why they are to stand. Like Brightman, Carnell insisted that religious emotion, if worthy, must conform to truth and not truth to religious emotion. In addition, philosophy is interested in everything in the universe that in any way enters into human experience. Carnell quoted Brightman, In any event, one s starting point is not decisive in philosophical investigation. The main thing is to conclude the whole range of relevant experience before we are through. Parting ways with Brightman, however, Carnell vigorously opposed his case for a finite God and his denial of God s absoluteness. 8 of 12

9 During his graduate studies, Carnell furthered his existentialist interests through the study of the writings of Soren Kierkegaard. In fact, Carnell s dissertation at Boston University considered the problem of verification in Soren Kierkegaard. That dissertation was accepted in Carnell appreciated many of Kierkegaard s emphases, especially the individual s total dependence on God in humility, thankfulness, and love. Kierkegaard developed the meaning of Christian love with a profundity, thoroughness, and biblical accuracy which it is no exaggeration to say surpassed all previous efforts. Carnell adds, He was convinced and rightly so that far too many ethicists were quagmire in legalism. That love is the fulfillment of the law and that the ethical self falls short of it duties until it performs works of love. The term existential may strike some as nothing but a sign of academic pomposity, but it actually signifies that the spiritual being of a person has no reality apart from works of love. In contrast to all the strengths Carnell found in Kierkegaard, he continued to find epistemological weakness. Kierkegaard offered a very inadequate relation between the Christian religion and public evidences. Although Kierkegaard said many fine things about faith, he was rather disappointing when he attempted to define the relation between faith and public evidences. Whereas Kierkegaard claimed Certainty and passion do not go together, Carnell maintained that As far as the state of certainty is concerned, the one and only issue is the sufficiency of the evidences. All else is beside the point. Sufficiency is simply a characteristic of evidences on which we are willing to act. This statement from Carnell s last publication reflected his continuing concern that one s opinions in philosophy and theology fit the facts; that is, they must be well-informed. Did Carnell radically change his apologetic later in life? Although his later publications emphasize existential values more than his earlier books, they are consistent with his earlier studies. In his Introduction to Christian Apologetics (1948), the facts or givens include internal existential data as well as external empirical data, and his Christian Commitment (1957) emphasizes the law of noncontradiction and the sufficiency of the evidence. Interpreters of Carnell who claim that he radically changed his approach in later years do not do justice to either the variety of his graduate work on Neibuhr and Kierkegaard or his continued interest to the end of his life in verifying hypotheses. 9 of 12

10 In Christian Commitment, one of his later works he wrote, Christianity is true because its major elements are consistent with one another and with the broad facts of history and nature. You can see then how Carnell did his homework thoroughly. He learned much from those under whom he studied in Christian schools and secular universities, but he kept his critical mind about him. He saw not only their strengths, but also their weaknesses and sought to combine in his own approach their strengths. I think because he did his homework so thoroughly, he had unusual early success. During his graduate studies in theology and philosophy at Harvard and Boston Universities, Carnell taught philosophy and apologetics at Gordon College and philosophy of religion at Gordon Divinity School. As one of his students at Gordon College in those years, I took all the courses I could from the stimulating, young professor. The brilliant scholar punctuated his lectures of stories of his dialogues with empiricists and existentialists at the universities. He challenged students fresh from pietistic homes and churches to formulate a defense of their faith in the God of the Bible. Carnell s account of a visit to the mother Church of Christian Science was unforgettable. He said the fervent testimonies of healings outdid many of the testimony meetings in evangelical churches, but the fervency of testimonies and the changed lives did not of themselves show that Christian Science is true. Experienced healings did not free the belief system from contradictions and discrepancies with fact. While teaching and completing two doctorates in theology and philosophy, Carnell found time to write An Introduction to Christian Apologetics. It won a $5000 prize from the publisher. Not yet thirty years of age with one earned doctorate, neither another, and a prize winning book to his credit, Carnell was invited to teach at the new Fuller Theological Seminary. Carnell arrived in Pasadena in September 1948, excited about teaching both philosophical apologetics and systematic theology. Ahead of his times, he published Television: Servant or Master? in 1950, and in 1951, a revision of his Harvard dissertation, The Theology of Reinhold Neibuhr. This was followed in 1952 by A Philosophy of the Christian Religion, a substantial work on values. From , Carnell gave up teaching theology and writing major books to serve as President of Fuller Seminary. Under his leadership, it achieved accreditation. Robert Rankin, a member of the accreditation team of the American Theological Schools said, The accomplishments of the seminary are sound measurements, I believe, of the distinguished leadership which Dr. Carnell gave to it during those formative years of his presidency. 10 of 12

11 Notice then the highlights of his verificational method. Carnell s most significant scholarly contribution was his method of reasoning to determine the truth when one is faced with contradictory interpretations or claims. His method of justifying beliefs integrates the emphases of Clark on logic, Van Til on presuppositions, Machen on historical facts, Brightman on empirical givens, and existentialists like Neibuhr and Kierkegaard on internal data. Carnell s if/then verificational approach acknowledges that there is subjectivity in every decision about the ultimately real and good. But it also finds that some convictions are better informed than others. The more coherent and viable proposals have greater probability than the others. Carnell was acutely aware that minds torn asunder by contradictory claims regarding such ultimate concerns as God, Christ, and the Bible cannot commit themselves authentically to God s kingdom, nor can these contradictory claims upon our loyalties be finally resolved by appeals to authority, for the authorities that roam Mecca, Salt Lake City, and Banaries contradict one another. Appeals to self-authenticating religious experience and intuition are not the answer either, for they also result in contradictions. One must choose between contradictory claims on other grounds. By what method of reasoning then can contradictory claims be resolved? Carnell carefully considered and rejected deductive, inductive, and mystical approaches. Deductive reasoning from assumed premises, axioms, or presuppositions to conclusions that are logically true is useful only if the premises are in fact true. If the proponents of particular religious claims merely assume the truth of their basic premises, their reasoning is circular. A purely inductive method of reasoning is equally unfit for the task. It assumes that the mind is tabula rasa that observed empirical phenomena and then infers general conclusions with various degrees of probability. Total objectivity, however, seems impossible in religion as in other fields. Our controlled observations are extremely hampered by limitations of time, space, and energy. Furthermore, a conductive method can neither confirm nor disconfirm the universal statements entailed in Christian faith; for example, all people ought to respect the rights of others. A purely empirical approach can never completely confirm God s sovereignty overall. Hence, Carnell does not utilize the usual inductive arguments for God s existence. The mystical method, furthermore, assumes that religious knowledge is a matter of 11 of 12

12 immediate experiential acquaintance. Carnell acknowledges that mystical experiences and person encounters do provide important data. Unfortunately, however, the experiences do not interpret themselves. Naturalists explain them as the intellects being overwhelmed by emotions. Monists regard them as a realization of fusion with the cosmos, and theists may speak of a person-to-person encounter with the living God distinct from the world but active in it. Only critical discernment determines whether an immediate experience is introverted narcissistic self-worship, a consciousness of fusion with mother nature, a personal awareness of the Creator, or a selling of one s soul to the devil. Without discernment we cannot distinguish authentic from counterfeit religious experiences. Having rejected the deductive, inductive, and mystical approaches to settling conflicting truth claims about the ultimate subject/ object of worship, Carnell proposed a verificational method of reasoning. We will look at it fully next time. Christ-Centered Learning Anytime, Anywhere 12 of 12

Cataloging Apologetic Systems. Richard G. Howe, Ph.D.

Cataloging Apologetic Systems. Richard G. Howe, Ph.D. Cataloging Apologetic Systems Richard G. Howe, Ph.D. Bernard Ramm 1916-1992 1 According to Bernard Ramm Varieties of Christian Apologetics Systems Stressing Subjective Immediacy Systems Stressing Natural

More information

A Review of Norm Geisler's Prolegomena

A Review of Norm Geisler's Prolegomena A Review of Norm Geisler's Prolegomena 2017 by A Jacob W. Reinhardt, All Rights Reserved. Copyright holder grants permission to reduplicate article as long as it is not changed. Send further requests to

More information

Presuppositional Apologetics

Presuppositional Apologetics by John M. Frame [, for IVP Dictionary of Apologetics.] 1. Presupposing God in Apologetic Argument Presuppositional apologetics may be understood in the light of a distinction common in epistemology, or

More information

Presuppositional Apologetics

Presuppositional Apologetics Presuppositional Apologetics Bernard Ramm 1916-1992 1 According to Bernard Ramm Varieties of Christian Apologetics Systems Stressing Revelation Augustine AD 354-AD 430 John Calvin 1509-1564 Abraham Kuyper

More information

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies ST503 LESSON 14 of 24 John S. Feinberg, Ph.D. Experience: Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. In

More information

Christian Evidences. The Verification of Biblical Christianity, Part 2. CA312 LESSON 06 of 12

Christian Evidences. The Verification of Biblical Christianity, Part 2. CA312 LESSON 06 of 12 Christian Evidences CA312 LESSON 06 of 12 Victor M. Matthews, STD Former Professor of Systematic Theology Grand Rapids Theological Seminary This is lecture 6 of the course entitled Christian Evidences.

More information

Chapter Summaries: Three Types of Religious Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1

Chapter Summaries: Three Types of Religious Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1 Chapter Summaries: Three Types of Religious Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1 In chapter 1, Clark begins by stating that this book will really not provide a definition of religion as such, except that it

More information

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics Exploring Approaches to Apologetics CA513 LESSON 14 of 24 Gordon Lewis, Ph.D. Experience: Senior Professor of Christian and Historical Theology, Denver Seminary, Colorado. My prayer for you as you study

More information

Christ-Centered Critical Thinking. Lesson 6: Evaluating Thinking

Christ-Centered Critical Thinking. Lesson 6: Evaluating Thinking Christ-Centered Critical Thinking Lesson 6: Evaluating Thinking 1 In this lesson we will learn: To evaluate our thinking and the thinking of others using the Intellectual Standards Two approaches to evaluating

More information

THE APOLOGETICAL VALUE OF THE SELF-WITNESS OF SCRIPTURE

THE APOLOGETICAL VALUE OF THE SELF-WITNESS OF SCRIPTURE THE APOLOGETICAL VALUE OF THE SELF-WITNESS OF SCRIPTURE JAMES M. GRIER, JR. INTRODUCTION P HILOSOPHY traditionally has handled the analysis of the origin of knowledge by making authority one of the four

More information

Naturalized Epistemology. 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? Quine PY4613

Naturalized Epistemology. 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? Quine PY4613 Naturalized Epistemology Quine PY4613 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? a. How is it motivated? b. What are its doctrines? c. Naturalized Epistemology in the context of Quine s philosophy 2. Naturalized

More information

Building Systematic Theology

Building Systematic Theology 1 Building Systematic Theology Study Guide LESSON FOUR DOCTRINES IN SYSTEMATICS 2013 by Third Millennium Ministries www.thirdmill.org For videos, manuscripts, and other resources, visit Third Millennium

More information

Apologetics. by Johan D. Tangelder

Apologetics. by Johan D. Tangelder Apologetics (Part 2 of 2) Scripture tells us that the Gospel message is foolishness to those who are perishing. But if that is true, if unbelievers will find the Gospel foolish, then how do we tell them

More information

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics Exploring Approaches to Apologetics CA513 LESSON 01 of 24 Gordon Lewis, Ph.D. Experience: Senior Professor of Christian and Historical Theology, Denver Seminary, Colorado. Welcome to Exploring Approaches

More information

Can A Priori Justified Belief Be Extended Through Deduction? It is often assumed that if one deduces some proposition p from some premises

Can A Priori Justified Belief Be Extended Through Deduction? It is often assumed that if one deduces some proposition p from some premises Can A Priori Justified Belief Be Extended Through Deduction? Introduction It is often assumed that if one deduces some proposition p from some premises which one knows a priori, in a series of individually

More information

A Brief History of Thinking about Thinking Thomas Lombardo

A Brief History of Thinking about Thinking Thomas Lombardo A Brief History of Thinking about Thinking Thomas Lombardo "Education is nothing more nor less than learning to think." Peter Facione In this article I review the historical evolution of principles and

More information

Ideas Have Consequences

Ideas Have Consequences Introduction Our interest in this series is whether God can be known or not and, if he does exist and is knowable, then how may we truly know him and to what degree. We summarized the debate over God s

More information

Philosophy of Science. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology

Philosophy of Science. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology Philosophy of Science Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology Philosophical Theology 1 (TH5) Aug. 15 Intro to Philosophical Theology; Logic Aug. 22 Truth & Epistemology Aug. 29 Metaphysics

More information

Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind. By Mark A. Noll. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011, xii+

Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind. By Mark A. Noll. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011, xii+ Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind. By Mark A. Noll. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011, xii+ 180 pp., $25.00. Over 25 years have passed since Noll s indictment of the evangelical mind (The Scandal of the

More information

- We might, now, wonder whether the resulting concept of justification is sufficiently strong. According to BonJour, apparent rational insight is

- We might, now, wonder whether the resulting concept of justification is sufficiently strong. According to BonJour, apparent rational insight is BonJour I PHIL410 BonJour s Moderate Rationalism - BonJour develops and defends a moderate form of Rationalism. - Rationalism, generally (as used here), is the view according to which the primary tool

More information

Why Study Christian Evidences?

Why Study Christian Evidences? Chapter I Why Study Christian Evidences? Introduction The purpose of this book is to survey in systematic and comprehensive fashion the many infallible proofs of the unique truth and authority of biblical

More information

In Defense of Radical Empiricism. Joseph Benjamin Riegel. Chapel Hill 2006

In Defense of Radical Empiricism. Joseph Benjamin Riegel. Chapel Hill 2006 In Defense of Radical Empiricism Joseph Benjamin Riegel A thesis submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

More information

Who or what is God?, asks John Hick (Hick 2009). A theist might answer: God is an infinite person, or at least an

Who or what is God?, asks John Hick (Hick 2009). A theist might answer: God is an infinite person, or at least an John Hick on whether God could be an infinite person Daniel Howard-Snyder Western Washington University Abstract: "Who or what is God?," asks John Hick. A theist might answer: God is an infinite person,

More information

Midway Community Church "Hot Topics" Young Earth Presuppositionalism: Handout 1 1 Richard G. Howe, Ph.D.

Midway Community Church Hot Topics Young Earth Presuppositionalism: Handout 1 1 Richard G. Howe, Ph.D. Midway Community Church "Hot Topics" 1 Richard G. Howe, Ph.D. I. First Things A. While perhaps most Christians will understand something about how the expression 'young earth' is used (especially with

More information

Contemporary Theology II: From Theology of Hope to Postmodernism. Introduction: Review and Preview. ST507 LESSON 01 of 24

Contemporary Theology II: From Theology of Hope to Postmodernism. Introduction: Review and Preview. ST507 LESSON 01 of 24 Contemporary Theology II: From Theology of Hope to Postmodernism ST507 LESSON 01 of 24 John S. Feinberg, PhD University of Chicago, MA and PhD Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, ThM Talbot Theological

More information

PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY

PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY Paper 9774/01 Introduction to Philosophy and Theology Key Messages Most candidates gave equal treatment to three questions, displaying good time management and excellent control

More information

Karl Barth and Neoorthodoxy

Karl Barth and Neoorthodoxy Karl Barth and Neoorthodoxy CH512 LESSON 21 of 24 Lubbertus Oostendorp, ThD Experience: Professor of Bible and Theology, Reformed Bible College, Kuyper College We have already touched on the importance

More information

Are Miracles Identifiable?

Are Miracles Identifiable? Are Miracles Identifiable? 1. Some naturalists argue that no matter how unusual an event is it cannot be identified as a miracle. 1. If this argument is valid, it has serious implications for those who

More information

Delton Lewis Scudder: Tennant's Philosophical Theology. New Haven: Yale University Press xiv, 278. $3.00.

Delton Lewis Scudder: Tennant's Philosophical Theology. New Haven: Yale University Press xiv, 278. $3.00. [1941. Review of Tennant s Philosophical Theology, by Delton Lewis Scudder. Westminster Theological Journal.] Delton Lewis Scudder: Tennant's Philosophical Theology. New Haven: Yale University Press. 1940.

More information

Contents. Guy Prentiss Waters. Justification and the New Perspectives on Paul: A Review and Response. P&R, pp.

Contents. Guy Prentiss Waters. Justification and the New Perspectives on Paul: A Review and Response. P&R, pp. Guy Prentiss Waters. Justification and the New Perspectives on Paul: A Review and Response. P&R, 2004. 273 pp. Dr. Guy Waters is assistant professor of biblical studies at Belhaven College. He studied

More information

A HOLISTIC VIEW ON KNOWLEDGE AND VALUES

A HOLISTIC VIEW ON KNOWLEDGE AND VALUES A HOLISTIC VIEW ON KNOWLEDGE AND VALUES CHANHYU LEE Emory University It seems somewhat obscure that there is a concrete connection between epistemology and ethics; a study of knowledge and a study of moral

More information

A CRITIQUE OF THE FREE WILL DEFENSE. A Paper. Presented to. Dr. Douglas Blount. Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. In Partial Fulfillment

A CRITIQUE OF THE FREE WILL DEFENSE. A Paper. Presented to. Dr. Douglas Blount. Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. In Partial Fulfillment A CRITIQUE OF THE FREE WILL DEFENSE A Paper Presented to Dr. Douglas Blount Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for PHREL 4313 by Billy Marsh October 20,

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

ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION Christian Apologetics Journal, 11:2 (Fall 2013) 2013 Southern Evangelical Seminary Reviews Norman L. Geisler, Ph.D. Reading the articles by Drs. Jason Lisle, Scott Oliphint, and Richard Howe was like watching

More information

The Spirituality Wheel 4

The Spirituality Wheel 4 Retreat #2 Tools Tab 82 The Spirituality Wheel 4 by Corinne D. Ware, D. Min. The purpose of this exercise is to DRAW A PICTURE of your personal style of spirituality. Read through the following statements,

More information

Understanding Our Mormon Neighbors

Understanding Our Mormon Neighbors Understanding Our Mormon Neighbors Contributed by Don Closson Probe Ministries Mormon Neo-orthodoxy? Have you noticed that Mormons are sounding more and more like evangelical Christians? In the last few

More information

PHIL 480: Seminar in the History of Philosophy Building Moral Character: Neo-Confucianism and Moral Psychology

PHIL 480: Seminar in the History of Philosophy Building Moral Character: Neo-Confucianism and Moral Psychology PHIL 480: Seminar in the History of Philosophy Building Moral Character: Neo-Confucianism and Moral Psychology Spring 2013 Professor JeeLoo Liu [Handout #12] Jonathan Haidt, The Emotional Dog and Its Rational

More information

Evidence and Transcendence

Evidence and Transcendence Evidence and Transcendence Religious Epistemology and the God-World Relationship Anne E. Inman University of Notre Dame Press Notre Dame, Indiana Copyright 2008 by University of Notre Dame Notre Dame,

More information

First Principles. Principles of Reality. Undeniability.

First Principles. Principles of Reality. Undeniability. First Principles. First principles are the foundation of knowledge. Without them nothing could be known (see FOUNDATIONALISM). Even coherentism uses the first principle of noncontradiction to test the

More information

[JGRChJ 9 (2013) R28-R32] BOOK REVIEW

[JGRChJ 9 (2013) R28-R32] BOOK REVIEW [JGRChJ 9 (2013) R28-R32] BOOK REVIEW Craig S. Keener, Miracles: The Credibility of the New Testament Accounts (2 vols.; Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011). xxxviii + 1172 pp. Hbk. US$59.99. Craig Keener

More information

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics Exploring Approaches to Apologetics CA513 LESSON 20 of 24 Gordon Lewis, Ph.D. Experience: Senior Professor of Christian and Historical Theology, Denver Seminary, Colorado. Pilate asked Jesus a very famous

More information

A Wesleyan Approach to Knowledge

A Wesleyan Approach to Knowledge Olivet Nazarene University Digital Commons @ Olivet Faculty Scholarship - Theology Theology 9-24-2012 A Wesleyan Approach to Knowledge Kevin Twain Lowery Olivet Nazarene University, klowery@olivet.edu

More information

Yong, Amos. Beyond the Impasse: Toward a Pneumatological Theology of Religion. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, ISBN #

Yong, Amos. Beyond the Impasse: Toward a Pneumatological Theology of Religion. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, ISBN # Yong, Amos. Beyond the Impasse: Toward a Pneumatological Theology of Religion. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, 2003. ISBN # 0801026121 Amos Yong s Beyond the Impasse: Toward an Pneumatological Theology of

More information

Lecture 18: Rationalism

Lecture 18: Rationalism Lecture 18: Rationalism I. INTRODUCTION A. Introduction Descartes notion of innate ideas is consistent with rationalism Rationalism is a view appealing to reason as a source of knowledge or justification.

More information

Common Misunderstandings of Van Til s Apologetics. by Dr. Richard L. Pratt, Jr. Part 2 of 2

Common Misunderstandings of Van Til s Apologetics. by Dr. Richard L. Pratt, Jr. Part 2 of 2 Common Misunderstandings of Van Til s Apologetics by Dr. Richard L. Pratt, Jr. Part 2 of 2 Misconception #5: Van Til rejected the importance of logic, including the law of noncontradiction. Van Til never

More information

Chapter Summaries: A Christian View of Men and Things by Clark, Chapter 1

Chapter Summaries: A Christian View of Men and Things by Clark, Chapter 1 Chapter Summaries: A Christian View of Men and Things by Clark, Chapter 1 Chapter 1 is an introduction to the book. Clark intends to accomplish three things in this book: In the first place, although a

More information

The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition

The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition Preamble: Changing Lives with Christ s Changeless Truth We are a fellowship of Christians convinced that personal ministry centered on Jesus

More information

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO APOLOGETICS

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO APOLOGETICS #331 Theology 5: Apologetics and Ethics Western Reformed Seminary (www.wrs.edu) John A. Battle, Th.D. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO APOLOGETICS Apologetics defined English dictionary definition (Webster) Apology...

More information

Philosophy Epistemology. Topic 3 - Skepticism

Philosophy Epistemology. Topic 3 - Skepticism Michael Huemer on Skepticism Philosophy 3340 - Epistemology Topic 3 - Skepticism Chapter II. The Lure of Radical Skepticism 1. Mike Huemer defines radical skepticism as follows: Philosophical skeptics

More information

A PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION. for the CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

A PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION. for the CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE A PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION for the CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Prepared by: THE COMMISSION ON EDUCATION Adopted by: THE GENERAL BOARD June 20, 1952 A PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION (Detailed Statement) Any philosophy

More information

VERIFICATION AND METAPHYSICS

VERIFICATION AND METAPHYSICS Michael Lacewing The project of logical positivism VERIFICATION AND METAPHYSICS In the 1930s, a school of philosophy arose called logical positivism. Like much philosophy, it was concerned with the foundations

More information

Thaddeus M. Maharaj: Cornelius Van Til The Grandfather of Presuppositional Apologetics

Thaddeus M. Maharaj: Cornelius Van Til The Grandfather of Presuppositional Apologetics Christian apologetics (the reasoned defense of our faith) can seem like a daunting and complicated task. There are so many arguments, methodologies and facts to master it is enough to drive many to frustration

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 Existence of God

The Existence of God The Existence of God Introduction Richard G. Howe, Ph.D. Professor Emeritus, Southern Evangelical Seminary Past President, International Society of Christian Apologetics 1 Some Terms 2 Theism from the

More information

Notes on Bertrand Russell s The Problems of Philosophy (Hackett 1990 reprint of the 1912 Oxford edition, Chapters XII, XIII, XIV, )

Notes on Bertrand Russell s The Problems of Philosophy (Hackett 1990 reprint of the 1912 Oxford edition, Chapters XII, XIII, XIV, ) Notes on Bertrand Russell s The Problems of Philosophy (Hackett 1990 reprint of the 1912 Oxford edition, Chapters XII, XIII, XIV, 119-152) Chapter XII Truth and Falsehood [pp. 119-130] Russell begins here

More information

IDHEF Chapter 2 Why Should Anyone Believe Anything At All?

IDHEF Chapter 2 Why Should Anyone Believe Anything At All? IDHEF Chapter 2 Why Should Anyone Believe Anything At All? -You might have heard someone say, It doesn t really matter what you believe, as long as you believe something. While many people think this is

More information

Christians in the World

Christians in the World Christians in the World Introduction Have you ever heard a sermon that tried to convince you that our earthly possessions should be looked at more like a hotel room rather than a permanent home? The point

More information

I. THE PHILOSOPHY OF DIALOGUE A. Philosophy in General

I. THE PHILOSOPHY OF DIALOGUE A. Philosophy in General 16 Martin Buber these dialogues are continuations of personal dialogues of long standing, like those with Hugo Bergmann and Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy; one is directly taken from a "trialogue" of correspondence

More information

TYPES OF APOLOGETICS. Psalms 19; Romans 1

TYPES OF APOLOGETICS. Psalms 19; Romans 1 TYPES OF APOLOGETICS Psalms 19; Romans 1 WAYS GOD REVEALS HIMSELF! General Revelation Creation - Psalms 19; Romans 1 Conscience - Romans 2:12-16 Why do so many reject this message? (Romans 1:21-ff) Imaginations

More information

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics

Exploring Approaches to Apologetics Exploring Approaches to Apologetics CA513 LESSON 13 of 24 Gordon Lewis, Ph.D. Experience: Senior Professor of Christian and Historical Theology, Denver Seminary, Colorado. After the last lecture s brief

More information

In Epistemic Relativism, Mark Kalderon defends a view that has become

In Epistemic Relativism, Mark Kalderon defends a view that has become Aporia vol. 24 no. 1 2014 Incoherence in Epistemic Relativism I. Introduction In Epistemic Relativism, Mark Kalderon defends a view that has become increasingly popular across various academic disciplines.

More information

Miracles. Miracles: What Are They?

Miracles. Miracles: What Are They? Miracles Miracles: What Are They? Have you noticed how often the word miracle is used these days? Skin creams that make us look younger; computer technology; the transition of a nation from oppression

More information

THE LIFE KEY POINTS IN THIS LESSON YOU WILL STUDY THESE QUESTIONS:

THE LIFE KEY POINTS IN THIS LESSON YOU WILL STUDY THESE QUESTIONS: 6 THE LIFE KEY POINTS 1. If Jesus Christ DID NOT rise from the dead, He is not the Truth and He is not the Way. 2. If Jesus Christ DID rise from the dead, He is truly the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

More information

Logic, Truth & Epistemology. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology

Logic, Truth & Epistemology. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology Logic, Truth & Epistemology Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology Philosophical Theology 1 (TH5) Aug. 15 Intro to Philosophical Theology; Logic Aug. 22 Truth & Epistemology Aug. 29 Metaphysics

More information

The Problem of Induction and Popper s Deductivism

The Problem of Induction and Popper s Deductivism The Problem of Induction and Popper s Deductivism Issues: I. Problem of Induction II. Popper s rejection of induction III. Salmon s critique of deductivism 2 I. The problem of induction 1. Inductive vs.

More information

Jesus Alone. Session 6 1 JOHN 5:1-12

Jesus Alone. Session 6 1 JOHN 5:1-12 Session 6 Jesus Alone Only by trusting the Savior Jesus Christ can one be freed from the bondage of sin and death, and be brought into eternal life with God. 1 JOHN 5:1-12 1 Everyone who believes that

More information

WORLDVIEWS DEFINITIONS

WORLDVIEWS DEFINITIONS WORLDVIEWS An effective method of presenting the Christian faith in a rational way is to explain the Christian worldview. We can compare and contrast our worldviews with other worldviews, to see which

More information

Facing Tough Questions: Defending the Faith

Facing Tough Questions: Defending the Faith CPC School of Discipleship Fall 2018, Missionary Encounters with Our Neighbors Week 5 Facing Tough Questions: Defending the Faith Opening Questions When do you feel the most insecure about talking about

More information

is the edification of Christians. Clark asks some very penetrating questions, such as: Is it necessary to have saving faith?

is the edification of Christians. Clark asks some very penetrating questions, such as: Is it necessary to have saving faith? Book Report: Faith and Saving Faith by Gordon H. Clark Gordon Clark s book Faith and Saving Faith, is a short monograph on a topic that is as pertinent now as it was when Clark wrote it. The motivation

More information

Understanding Truth Scott Soames Précis Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Volume LXV, No. 2, 2002

Understanding Truth Scott Soames Précis Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Volume LXV, No. 2, 2002 1 Symposium on Understanding Truth By Scott Soames Précis Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Volume LXV, No. 2, 2002 2 Precis of Understanding Truth Scott Soames Understanding Truth aims to illuminate

More information

Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000)

Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000) Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000) One of the advantages traditionally claimed for direct realist theories of perception over indirect realist theories is that the

More information

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10.

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10. Introduction This book seeks to provide a metaethical analysis of the responsibility ethics of two of its prominent defenders: H. Richard Niebuhr and Emmanuel Levinas. In any ethical writings, some use

More information

DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE

DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE BY MARK BOONE DALLAS, TEXAS APRIL 3, 2004 I. Introduction Soren

More information

Investigating the concept of despair and its relation with sin in Kierkegaard's view

Investigating the concept of despair and its relation with sin in Kierkegaard's view International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences Online: 2015-01-03 ISSN: 2300-2697, Vol. 45, pp 55-60 doi:10.18052/www.scipress.com/ilshs.45.55 2015 SciPress Ltd., Switzerland Investigating the

More information

WEEK 4: APOLOGETICS AS PROOF

WEEK 4: APOLOGETICS AS PROOF WEEK 4: APOLOGETICS AS PROOF 301 CLASS: PRESUPPOSITIONAL APOLOGETICS BY PROFESSOR JOE WYROSTEK 1 Corinthians 1:10-17 (NIV), 10 I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,

More information

STATEMENT OF EXPECTATION FOR GRAND CANYON UNIVERSITY FACULTY

STATEMENT OF EXPECTATION FOR GRAND CANYON UNIVERSITY FACULTY STATEMENT OF EXPECTATION FOR GRAND CANYON UNIVERSITY FACULTY Grand Canyon University takes a missional approach to its operation as a Christian university. In order to ensure a clear understanding of GCU

More information

The Human Science Debate: Positivist, Anti-Positivist, and Postpositivist Inquiry. By Rebecca Joy Norlander. November 20, 2007

The Human Science Debate: Positivist, Anti-Positivist, and Postpositivist Inquiry. By Rebecca Joy Norlander. November 20, 2007 The Human Science Debate: Positivist, Anti-Positivist, and Postpositivist Inquiry By Rebecca Joy Norlander November 20, 2007 2 What is knowledge and how is it acquired through the process of inquiry? Is

More information

Part I: The Structure of Philosophy

Part I: The Structure of Philosophy Revised, 8/30/08 Part I: The Structure of Philosophy Philosophy as the love of wisdom The basic questions and branches of philosophy The branches of the branches and the many philosophical questions that

More information

From the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy

From the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy From the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Epistemology Peter D. Klein Philosophical Concept Epistemology is one of the core areas of philosophy. It is concerned with the nature, sources and limits

More information

Common Misunderstandings of Van Til s Apologetics. by Dr. Richard L. Pratt, Jr. Part 1 of 2

Common Misunderstandings of Van Til s Apologetics. by Dr. Richard L. Pratt, Jr. Part 1 of 2 Common Misunderstandings of Van Til s Apologetics by Dr. Richard L. Pratt, Jr. Part 1 of 2 Every family counselor would agree that family members must understand each other before they can resolve conflict.

More information

Relativism and Indeterminacy of Meaning (Quine) Indeterminacy of Translation

Relativism and Indeterminacy of Meaning (Quine) Indeterminacy of Translation Relativism and Indeterminacy of Meaning (Quine) Indeterminacy of Translation Owen Griffiths oeg21@cam.ac.uk Churchill and Newnham, Cambridge 9/10/18 Talk outline Quine Radical Translation Indeterminacy

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

Chapter Summaries: Introduction to Christian Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1

Chapter Summaries: Introduction to Christian Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1 Chapter Summaries: Introduction to Christian Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1 In chapter 1, Clark reviews the purpose of Christian apologetics, and then proceeds to briefly review the failures of secular

More information

Review of Ronald Dworkin s Religion without God. Mark Satta Ph.D. student, Purdue University

Review of Ronald Dworkin s Religion without God. Mark Satta Ph.D. student, Purdue University CJR: Volume 3, Issue 1 155 Review of Ronald Dworkin s Religion without God Mark Satta Ph.D. student, Purdue University Religion without God by Ronald Dworkin. Pages: 192. Harvard University Press, 2013.

More information

Karl Barth on Creation

Karl Barth on Creation Martin D. Henry (ITQ, vol. 69/3, 2004, 219 23) Karl Barth on Creation It is no secret that Karl Barth s theological star has waned in recent decades. But even currently invisible stars may, in principle,

More information

Thursday, November 30, 17. Hegel s Idealism

Thursday, November 30, 17. Hegel s Idealism Hegel s Idealism G. W. F. Hegel Hegel Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) was perhaps the last great philosophical system builder. His distinctively dynamic form of idealism set the stage for other

More information

Moral Objectivism. RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary

Moral Objectivism. RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary Moral Objectivism RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary The possibility, let alone the actuality, of an objective morality has intrigued philosophers for well over two millennia. Though much discussed,

More information

Philosophical Ethics. Distinctions and Categories

Philosophical Ethics. Distinctions and Categories Philosophical Ethics Distinctions and Categories Ethics Remember we have discussed how ethics fits into philosophy We have also, as a 1 st approximation, defined ethics as philosophical thinking about

More information

What Does Academic Skepticism Presuppose? Arcesilaus, Carneades, and the Argument with Stoic Epistemology

What Does Academic Skepticism Presuppose? Arcesilaus, Carneades, and the Argument with Stoic Epistemology Arcesilaus, Carneades, and the Argument with Stoic Epistemology David Johnson Although some have seen the skepticism of Arcesilaus and Carneades, the two foremost representatives of Academic philosophy,

More information

In our global milieu, we live in a world of religions, and increasingly, Christians are confronted

In our global milieu, we live in a world of religions, and increasingly, Christians are confronted Book Review/Response: The Bible and Other Faiths In our global milieu, we live in a world of religions, and increasingly, Christians are confronted with how to relate to these religions. Ida Glaser approaches

More information

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies ST503 LESSON 16 of 24 John S. Feinberg, Ph.D. Experience: Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. At

More information

The Philosophical Review, Vol. 100, No. 3. (Jul., 1991), pp

The Philosophical Review, Vol. 100, No. 3. (Jul., 1991), pp Review: [Untitled] Reviewed Work(s): Judgment and Justification by William G. Lycan Lynne Rudder Baker The Philosophical Review, Vol. 100, No. 3. (Jul., 1991), pp. 481-484. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8108%28199107%29100%3a3%3c481%3ajaj%3e2.0.co%3b2-n

More information

Ivan and Zosima: Existential Atheism vs. Existential Theism

Ivan and Zosima: Existential Atheism vs. Existential Theism Ivan and Zosima: Existential Atheism vs. Existential Theism Fyodor Dostoevsky, a Russian novelist, was very prolific in his time. He explored different philosophical voices that presented arguments and

More information

Choosing Rationally and Choosing Correctly *

Choosing Rationally and Choosing Correctly * Choosing Rationally and Choosing Correctly * Ralph Wedgwood 1 Two views of practical reason Suppose that you are faced with several different options (that is, several ways in which you might act in a

More information

Tuesday, November 11, Hegel s Idealism

Tuesday, November 11, Hegel s Idealism Hegel s Idealism G. W. F. Hegel Hegel Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) was perhaps the last great philosophical system builder. His distinctively dynamic form of idealism set the stage for other

More information

BIBLICAL INTEGRATION IN SCIENCE AND MATH. September 29m 2016

BIBLICAL INTEGRATION IN SCIENCE AND MATH. September 29m 2016 BIBLICAL INTEGRATION IN SCIENCE AND MATH September 29m 2016 REFLECTIONS OF GOD IN SCIENCE God s wisdom is displayed in the marvelously contrived design of the universe and its parts. God s omnipotence

More information

J. L. Mackie The Subjectivity of Values

J. L. Mackie The Subjectivity of Values J. L. Mackie The Subjectivity of Values The following excerpt is from Mackie s The Subjectivity of Values, originally published in 1977 as the first chapter in his book, Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong.

More information

The Roman Road. by Elder Tim Binion

The Roman Road. by Elder Tim Binion The Roman Road by Elder Tim Binion The Book of Romans is the most fundamental, vital, logical, profound, and systematic discussion of the whole plan of salvation in all the literature of the word. Yet,

More information

Utilitarianism: For and Against (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973), pp Reprinted in Moral Luck (CUP, 1981).

Utilitarianism: For and Against (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973), pp Reprinted in Moral Luck (CUP, 1981). Draft of 3-21- 13 PHIL 202: Core Ethics; Winter 2013 Core Sequence in the History of Ethics, 2011-2013 IV: 19 th and 20 th Century Moral Philosophy David O. Brink Handout #14: Williams, Internalism, and

More information

The Advancement: A Book Review

The Advancement: A Book Review From the SelectedWorks of Gary E. Silvers Ph.D. 2014 The Advancement: A Book Review Gary E. Silvers, Ph.D. Available at: https://works.bepress.com/dr_gary_silvers/2/ The Advancement: Keeping the Faith

More information