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Philosophy leads to the Cross

Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 6:20 am
by PaulSacramento
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/unequallyy ... ortal.html


A snippet:
I was ready to admit that there were parts of Christianity and Catholicism that seemed like a pretty good match for the bits of my moral system that I was most sure of, while meanwhile my own philosophy was pretty kludged together and not particularly satisfactory. But I couldn’t pick consistency over my construction project as long as I didn’t believe it was true.

While I kept working, I tried to keep my eyes open for ways I could test which world I was in, but a lot of the evidence for Christianity was only compelling to me if I at least presupposed Deism. Meanwhile, on the other side, I kept running into moral philosophers who seemed really helpful, until I discovered that their study of virtue ethics has led them to take a tumble into the Tiber. (I’m looking at you, MacIntyre!).

Then, the night before Palm Sunday (I have excellent liturgical timing), I was up at my alma mater for an alumni debate. I had another round of translating a lot of principles out of Catholic in order to use them in my speech, which prompted the now traditional heckling from my friends. After the debate, I buttonholed a Christian friend for another argument. During the discussion, he prodded me on where I thought moral law came from in my metaphysics. I talked about morality as though it were some kind of Platonic form, remote from the plane that humans existed on. He wanted to know where the connection was.

I could hypothesize how a Forms-material world link would work in the case of mathematics (a little long and off topic for this post, but pretty much the canonical idea of recognizing Two-ness as the quality that’s shared by two chairs and two houses, etc. Once you get the natural numbers, the rest of mathematics is in your grasp). But I didn’t have an analogue for how humans got bootstrap up to get even a partial understanding of objective moral law.

I’ve heard some explanations that try to bake morality into the natural world by reaching for evolutionary psychology. They argue that moral dispositions are evolutionarily triumphant over selfishness, or they talk about group selection, or something else. Usually, these proposed solutions radically misunderstand a) evolution b) moral philosophy or c) both. I didn’t think the answer was there. My friend pressed me to stop beating up on other people’s explanations and offer one of my own.... It turns out I did.

I believed that the Moral Law wasn’t just a Platonic truth, abstract and distant. It turns out I actually believed it was some kind of Person, as well as Truth. And there was one religion that seemed like the most promising way to reach back to that living Truth.

Re: Philosophy leads to the Cross

Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 9:30 pm
by Tevko
I read this article, definitely an awesome path to finding the real truth!

Re: Philosophy leads to the Cross

Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 6:23 am
by PaulSacramento
Tevko wrote:I read this article, definitely an awesome path to finding the real truth!
Many an atheist has turned to God through reason and intellect and philosophy.
Of course many a Christian has became atheist the same way.
The difference?
IMHO:
Where you start from.
If a person is looking for answers and seeking truth and is honest with themselves, they will get to a certain place.
If a person is looking NOT to believe ( or TO Believe), then they will find what they are looking for.

Re: Philosophy leads to the Cross

Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 9:16 am
by Beanybag
PaulSacramento wrote:
Tevko wrote:I read this article, definitely an awesome path to finding the real truth!
Many an atheist has turned to God through reason and intellect and philosophy.
Of course many a Christian has became atheist the same way.
The difference?
IMHO:
Where you start from.
If a person is looking for answers and seeking truth and is honest with themselves, they will get to a certain place.
If a person is looking NOT to believe ( or TO Believe), then they will find what they are looking for.
I search for truth, but perhaps I am too skeptical. I find myself not being able to be certain of most things. It's hard to balance skepticism with practical belief. Although, I'm skeptical of people who tell me to be less skeptical. :P

I would be someone who has lost any semblance of faith through philosophy, but I also feel as if I have become a much more moral person. Who know, maybe I stumbled on to something without knowing what it was. I liked your blog, by the way. :]

Re: Philosophy leads to the Cross

Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 9:31 am
by PaulSacramento
Beanybag wrote:
PaulSacramento wrote:
Tevko wrote:I read this article, definitely an awesome path to finding the real truth!
Many an atheist has turned to God through reason and intellect and philosophy.
Of course many a Christian has became atheist the same way.
The difference?
IMHO:
Where you start from.
If a person is looking for answers and seeking truth and is honest with themselves, they will get to a certain place.
If a person is looking NOT to believe ( or TO Believe), then they will find what they are looking for.
I search for truth, but perhaps I am too skeptical. I find myself not being able to be certain of most things. It's hard to balance skepticism with practical belief. Although, I'm skeptical of people who tell me to be less skeptical. :P

I would be someone who has lost any semblance of faith through philosophy, but I also feel as if I have become a much more moral person. Who know, maybe I stumbled on to something without knowing what it was. I liked your blog, by the way. :]
That wasn't my blog my friend, sorry if I gave that impression.
The bible teaches us to "test everything".
Good advice of course, BUT one needs to be honest and truthful with oneself as to WHY one is questioning and testing.