Re: Another epistemic conundrum?
Re: Another epistemic conundrum?
Hi Jim,
Originally posted by Hilston
That's false. Christian Theism establishes objective reality on the basis of objective truth that reflects the nature and characteristics of God.
The true nature about the material world itself is though that it is an objective reality, providing us the possibility to exist as subjective entities, having free will, intend and purpose.
Christian theism reflect on the nature of God as a subjective and consciouss entity, which has a will, purpose, intend.
Such characteristics are however not attributable to the material world itself. It is perhaps a human way of thinking, to attribute to matter things like consciousness, will and intend, and reflect on matter as if it is something personal and as if we have a personal relationship with matter. These attributes are just human projections. The concept of God is defining matter in human terms and personalize it. But since those viewpoints are alien to the material reality itself, we better abstain from these kind of viewpoints.
You have an epistemological dilemma on your hands. How do you, with your subjective conscious, ascertain objective reality? Is your claim about the difference between objective matter and subjective consciousness an objective claim? Or is it subjective?
I think I have explained that. I state from my own consciousness, that that what exists outside, apart and independend from my consciousness as the objective material world.
We are able of knowing the world, although we can never know the world in total.
I would not see this as a dilemma. Knowing the fact that consciousness is in an essential way subjective (we have a viewpoint, an identity, a goal, will, intend and purpose) does not contradict the fact the the material world has no such viewpoint, identity, intend, will or purpose. We can never claim objectivity for our selves, although we can approximate it, without reaching it.
What about the dillema's that accompany Christian theisms?
Do you think that Christian theism goes without dilemma's?
Just shortly I saw a documentary on christians, who struggle for bringing their christian worldview in accordance with objective reality, with the results of science and evolution theory.
They struggle with a lot of facts that science presents, since they conflict with their worldview.
Some of them, the fundamentalists/creationists, desperately try to refute all of these science facts, and hold on the literal interpretation of the Bible.
I think the dilemma's that accompany the christian worldview, are much more severe then for materialists.
Science in the last couple of hundreds of years has only confirmed that materialism is more fruitfull approach towards reality.
And I am convinced, that new science developments, only will confirm it even more.
Honestly, how do you think that the Christian worldview, given the development of science and the influence on society, could overcome these dillemma's? Would Christianity be able to adapt itself to this, bringing belief in accordance with science?
I have. Is that your view? Do you line up with Engels and Marx on this, or have you modified it to accommodate your own subjective consciousness?
Thanks,
Jim
Marx and Engels have prodived a profound system of thought, grounded on philosophical materialism, and developed this into dialectical and historical materialism, and which are, together with the critique on the capitalist economy and the theory of the class struggle, intergral parts of what is known as Marxism, of which they were founders. Worth mentioning also is the contribution of Lenin (state and revolution) to Marxism.
I have not read all the works of Marx and Engels.
It is noteworthy that marxism as a philosophical outlook, in particular as a critique on the capitalist economy, still inspirers many who seek for a more just social/political order, and that the mechanism on which the capitalist economy works and brings forth economic crisis, is still a basically correct outlook, and valid up to today (we are in the middle of one such crisis; the war on Iraq stands in connection to this crisis).
I don't think one needs to accomodate marxism for one's own subjective outlooks, but can learn a great deal when studying the works of marx and engels on how social development take place.