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What happened to christian philosophy? Did it die with the Renaissance?I'm especially thinking about epistemology.
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Largely. But there are still the Bahnsens and van Tils of the world who think they understand logic at a more fundamental level than everyone else.Kaonashi said:It got replaced with Christian Apologetics
PKJ said:What happened to christian philosophy? Did it die with the Renaissance?I'm especially thinking about epistemology.
PKJ said:What happened to christian philosophy? Did it die with the Renaissance?I'm especially thinking about epistemology.
I think the idea that God is Love and we please Him by loving our neighbor is inherently Christian.JBrian said:I don't think that one philosophy is inherently Christian. I think that some philosophies are more conducive and accurate in regards to Christian theism, but I'm not sure if there is X Phil.
elman said:I think the idea that God is Love and we please Him by loving our neighbor is inherently Christian.
But his epistemology and metaphysics were basically just expanded Aristotelism, nothing specifically Christian about them. They only become Christian with the introduction of concepts like the trinity etc, but Aquinas himself admitted this was a theological, not philosophical move.JBrian said:I think that is more theology. I can't think of a Christian form of epistemology, or metaphysics, etc. I guess Thomism could be considered so however.
Is theology god based philosophy? Does philosophy not include theology?Patzak said:But his epistemology and metaphysics were basically just expanded Aristotelism, nothing specifically Christian about them. They only become Christian with the introduction of concepts like the trinity etc, but Aquinas himself admitted this was a theological, not philosophical move.
Anyway, Heidegger once wrote that Christian philosophy was "a great misunderstanding" and I tend to agree with him. Not to disregard all the great Christian philosophers or those whose philosophies were influenced by Christianity, I just think that as soon as a philosophy embraces concepts theological enough to qualify it as Christian, it ceases being a philosophy and becomes wholly theological.
It does, but not in a religious way. There's a branch of metaphysics called natural theology (or rational theology, I'm not sure) that deals with God as he can be known through reason (and observation) alone. So, it's certainly theology, since it concerns itself with God, but I wouldn't call it religious. It is of course influenced by the philosopher's own religion (for example Christian philosophers always deal with a single God; Plato, on the other hand, talks about a Demiourgos - the creator god, a seperate Divine Mind - which holds the plan for creation, and a Chora - the infinite substance of creation) - but I wouldn't call it religious, since it actively tries to exclude faith as a guiding principle.elman said:Is theology god based philosophy? Does philosophy not include theology?
Is theology god based philosophy? Does philosophy not include theology?
It does, but not in a religious way. There's a branch of metaphysics called natural theology (or rational theology, I'm not sure) that deals with God as he can be known through reason (and observation) alone. So, it's certainly theology, since it concerns itself with God, but I wouldn't call it religious. It is of course influenced by the philosopher's own religion (for example Christian philosophers always deal with a single God; Plato, on the other hand, talks about a Demiourgos - the creator god, a seperate Divine Mind - which holds the plan for creation, and a Chora - the infinite substance of creation) - but I wouldn't call it religious, since it actively tries to exclude faith as a guiding principle.
PKJ said:What happened to christian philosophy? Did it die with the Renaissance?I'm especially thinking about epistemology.
Lifesaver said:Philosophy itself died during the Renaissance. Some good philosophical insights happened here and there, but mainly what happened in the so-called Renaissance was a huge retrocess in philosophy in all areas.
The study of formal logic, for instance, was only revived in the 20th century!
PKJ said:Because they had to re-discover Greek writers from the start, because of the Church. That took a while.
I don't see the distinction. I see faith as a part of all philosophy that deals with God or the supernatural and I see my theology being based on reason and observation. I think theology and philosophy are the same thing. Theology is just a more limted definition of a kind of philosophy that deals with the supernatural.Patzak said:It does, but not in a religious way. There's a branch of metaphysics called natural theology (or rational theology, I'm not sure) that deals with God as he can be known through reason (and observation) alone. So, it's certainly theology, since it concerns itself with God, but I wouldn't call it religious. It is of course influenced by the philosopher's own religion (for example Christian philosophers always deal with a single God; Plato, on the other hand, talks about a Demiourgos - the creator god, a seperate Divine Mind - which holds the plan for creation, and a Chora - the infinite substance of creation) - but I wouldn't call it religious, since it actively tries to exclude faith as a guiding principle.