Story‚ Dan. Defending Your Faith. Grand Rapids‚ MI: Kregel Publications‚ 1997. Story‚ Dan. Engaging the Closed Minded: Presenting Your Faith to the Confirmed Unbeliever. Grand Rapids‚ MI: Kregel Publications‚ 1999. Sudduth‚ Michael. "Reformed epistemology and Christian apologetics." Religious Studies 39:3 (2003)‚ http://search.proquest.com.ezproxy.liberty.edu:2048/docview/197230405/abstract?accountid=12085 (accessed January 18‚ 2013). Walvoord‚ John F.‚ Roy B. Zuck‚ and Dallas Theological Seminary
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parable itself is highly symbolic and asserts that any knowledge gained through perceptual awareness is an illusion and are mere reflections of the highest truths. This allegory can be interpreted in many ways; however in the context of platonic epistemology it flawlessly conveys Plato’s “Theory of forms” of an immaterial realm of abstractions considered to be the highest reality in which upon all natural phenomenon is based on. The difference between truth and knowledge itself moreover is a much
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“In the beginning” the declaration that announces the start of creation we find the avowal that “God created the heavens [plural] and the earth” (Genesis 1:1‚ Holman Christian Study Bible). Therefore‚ as I need not belabor the obviousness of beginning‚ I will offer this as a point of agreement. This essay will promote the theory of Creation with an Intelligent Design as an explanation of how it all began. The Cause for Intelligent Design The Bible decrees that God was the intelligence that brought
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Part I. INTRODUCTION CONCEPTS Definition. What is Philosophy? There are a number of definitions of philosophy given by many thinkers and they vary according to their interests and orientations. Generally‚ philosophy is regarded as perhaps the most obstruse and abstract of all subjects that seems apart from ordinary life. Although quiet a number of people may think of it as a being remote from every normal interest‚ it may be inferred that all of us have some philosophical views‚ whether we are
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John Locke (1632 – 1704)‚ a philosopher and a scientist‚ contributed much to the realms of philosophy‚ law‚ and politics. He put into question the idea of innatism and whether people were truly born with some basic knowledge. He strongly believed in the innate goodness of humans and the right to freedom and property of the people. Both Innate ideas and Empiricism will be further analyzed‚ and whether Locke’s ‘children and idiots’ argument against innate ideas is sound. Locke believes that people
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Plato Plato’s theory of forms was the cornerstone of most of his reasoning‚ an essential part in his entire philosophy and we can see its influence in all of his philosophy‚ no matter if his thought is concerned with metaphysics‚ epistemology or aesthetics. His the existence of forms was obvious for him. He gives various evidence to support his theory in his dialogs. Plato did provide reasoning to support the existence of the forms. For instance‚ in one of his dialogues he claims that when he view
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dualist‚ giving way to accepting a clear partition between mind or soul and body. He believed that the body was like a well-oiled machine and the mind could have a direct influence on it. John Locke followed Descartes in 1632. He wanted to take epistemology‚ the study of human knowledge and obtaining it‚ to a more experimental based group of discipline. Locke spurned the idea of innate ideas‚ only “faculties”. Some ideas appeared so early in life that they used to believe they were innate but Locke
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Descartes VS Hume René Descartes and David Hume touched upon epistemology on the same question‚ “where does human knowledge come from?” They both came to very different conclusions. Descartes claimed that our knowledge came from human reasoning alone and this is an absolute certainty principle. This faculty of reasoning is innate tool that came with human species. He called this tool‚ “mind‚” which is separated from our body. Hume on the other hand‚ claimed that human learned from observing the
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The virtue of taking responsibility. Educational Philosophy and Theory‚ 34(1)‚ 25-35. Schocken‚ S. (Performer) (2012). Shimon schocken: The self-organizing computer course [Web] St. Pierre‚ E. (2006). Scientifically based research in education: Epistemology and ethics. (4 ed.‚’ Vol
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the historical context of its uprising. The foundations of Scepticism can be credited back to the early works of Pyrho of Ellis (360-272 BC) and Sextus Empiricus (2nd and 3rd Century AD). Largely in response to the dogmatic philosophies and the epistemologies of certain philosophies‚ I.e. Aristotelian‚ Epicurean and stocicim ( William 1999)‚ philosophical skepticism aimed to study the nature of knowledge by asking questions such as how can one know? Of what can be One certain? (Kubitz 1939). Knowledge
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