Without Proof Or Evidence: Essays of O.K. BouwsmaUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1984 - 161 páginas In Without Proof or Evidence O. K. Bouwsma weaves through the central topics of Western religion: the rationality of religious belief, the nature of Christianity, the promise of eternal life, the definition of faith, and proofs of the existence of God. When he works with the problems of Descartes or Moore or Wittgenstein, surveying the marketplace of language in which we all have commerce, he has the familiarity of an experienced trader. But in his work with the problems of Anselm or Nietzsche or Kierkegaard, in which the Scriptures move between background and foreground, there is another dimension, a concern with whether the Scriptures have been properly understood, what such an understanding might be, and how it affects someone who so understands them. |
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Página 42
... Anselm is not , as is the congregation , making a confession of his holy and undoubted Cath- olic faith . He is not in the church , there are no candles , this is not the hour of prayer . Anselm is sitting at his desk , thinking ...
... Anselm is not , as is the congregation , making a confession of his holy and undoubted Cath- olic faith . He is not in the church , there are no candles , this is not the hour of prayer . Anselm is sitting at his desk , thinking ...
Página 43
... Anselm lift that phrase before he incorporated it as a part of the statement of belief ? I do not mean that we will ... Anselm , nor the assent of so many generations of readers of Anselm's proof . The roots of this and of this common ...
... Anselm lift that phrase before he incorporated it as a part of the statement of belief ? I do not mean that we will ... Anselm , nor the assent of so many generations of readers of Anselm's proof . The roots of this and of this common ...
Página 53
... Anselm's thoughts were at the time he was writing this piece , nor am I trying to give such an account as Anselm might have given had he come to answer questions . Anselm has himself left us a mere sketch , and that is in part what ...
... Anselm's thoughts were at the time he was writing this piece , nor am I trying to give such an account as Anselm might have given had he come to answer questions . Anselm has himself left us a mere sketch , and that is in part what ...
Contenido
The Invisible | 26 |
Anselms Argument | 40 |
Notes on Kierkegaards The Monstrous Illusion | 73 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
abominable snowman Abra accordingly Alyosha Anselm answer believe Bouwsma Brothers Karamazov bush called Christian command conceived concepts concerning course David Swensen described dummy doors enclosure eternal evidence exist explain expressions father fool understands Fyodor Dostoevsky G. E. M. Anscombe give God's greater Haran hath heard hears heaven Hera hero of faith human idea illusion immortality interest involved Ivan Jehovah Kierkegaard language of praise live look Lord meaning mind Miss Anscombe misunderstanding Moses Mount Olympus myth Nietzsche Noah notice Olympus once one's paper passage perhaps philosophical phrase picture problem promise proof psalm quake question reason regard religious remember remind revealed Saint Augustine Saint Paul Saul Scriptures seen sentence Socrates someone sort speak standing story of Abraham sublime philosophy suppose surroundings task tell thee things Thou art tion understood unto walking Wittgenstein word writing wrote Xenophaneses Zeus