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Saturday, March 16, 2019

Greek and Christian Models of the Truth Essay -- Philosophy Religion E

Greek and Christian Models of the TruthIn his philosophic Fragments, Sren Kierkegaard, writing under the pseudonym of Johannes Climacus, poses the question, How far does the Truth guard of being learned? (154). A more direct and succinct aspect of Climacus question is How is the Truth learned? since his question does not concern the goal of human knowledge, which How far implies, scarcely the possible modes through which one comes, or may come, to know the Truth. For Climacus, there are two possible modes of conditioned, or two theories of how one comes to know the Truth the Greek and the Christian. Both of these modes introduce one not to truths, but to the Truth Climacus concern is not with those modes of erudite that yield particular truths about the world and humans, as in science, but with those modes that yield ultimate Truth, that highest and purest dream of philosophy. The central purpose of this deliberation on the two modes of knowing the Truth, according to Niels T hulstrup, is to point out the deep congenital difference surrounded by Platonism and Christianity because of the fact of the incarnation (lxxxvii). Climacus wants to demonstrate that the Greek, Platonic, or Socratic mode of knowing the Truth contradicts the Christian mode of knowing the truth. Many theologians and philosophers hold that Climacus succeeds in his demonstration and therefore extol the mentality of Kierkegaard. My reading of Climacus Project of Thought is also that he succeeds, but that his supremacy is a fundamental failure. For even though Climacus indicates an essential difference between the Greek mode of knowing the Truth and the Christian, he does not in full recognize that his whole thought-project is itself Greek, and that it puts a q... ... method does more, however, than simply put a question to Christianity which it does not and cannot answer By generating an answer from a read of Christian revelation, Climacus distorts the nature of Christianity and C hristian revelation.Works CitedEllul, Jacques. The Subversion of Christianity. Trans. Geoffrey W. Bromiley. Grand Rapids Eerdmans, 1986.Kierkegaard, Soren. philosophical Fragments. A Kierkegaard Anthology. Ed. Robert Bretall. Princeton Princeton University Press, 1946. 153-171.Nielsen, H.A. Where the Passion Is A Reading of Kierkegaards philosophical Fragements. Tallahassee University Presses of Florida, 1983.Thulstrup, Niels. Commentators Introduction. Philosophical Fragments. Princeton Princeton University Press, 1962. xlv-xcii.Tillich, Paul. A History of Christian Thought. New York Simon and Schuster, 1968.

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