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Skepticism & Religious Relativism
Narrated by Ben Kingsley


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Confucianism and Taoism

Skepticism & Religious Relativism

In philosophical terms, religions can be understood as the search for purpose, goals, meaning, and order. It is a search for what we might call the cosmic order -- some greater structure within which human lives and societies exist. In this context, religions are systems of belief and commitment around which the faithful order their lives.

The twin pillars of Western civilization are Greek philosophy and the Judeo-Christian-Islamic religious tradition. Philosophy affirms that, in principle, all things ultimately can be explained by reason; religion, however, sees the cosmic order as mysterious and beyond human comprehension. Questions about the cosmic order include whether it is transcendent or immanent; whether the world is purposeful; the extent to which personal perspective is related to truth; the role of the state in human salvation; and what kinds of knowledge (reason or faith) are most reliable.

Although skepticism is an ancient part of the Western intellectual tradition, the conflict between reason and faith may be said to have become a "crisis" only in the modern age. The responses to this "crisis" may be organized into six types:

  • Retaining the classical view that the cosmic order is found in the structure of the external physical world, which might be either transendent or immanent. (Held by Augustine & Aquinas.)
  • The view that humans internally perceive the purposeful cosmic order because of an external, transcendent Being who acts through our will. (Montaigne, Pascal, Luther, Calvin, Kierkegaard)
  • The view that humans internally perceive the purposeful cosmic order because of an external, transcendent Being who acts through our Intellect. (Descartes)
  • The affirmation of a transcendental order - that is, a practical and moral cosmic order related to our mental framework, which we project on the external world in the act of perceiving it. (Kant)
  • The scientific and secular view that natural physical laws control the mind and its perception of order. (Spinoza, Comte, Helvetius)
  • The belief that the mind internally produces only an illusion (or a created idea) that there is a cosmic order at all. (Freud, Sartre, Camus)
Item # 10463 Price: $17.95

On two audiotapes - about three hours in length.
Narrator: Ben Kingsley
Author: Dr. Nicholas Capaldi
Editor: Professor Walter Harrelson

Publisher: Knowledge Products, Inc.

This title is part of the Audio Classics Series by Knowledge Products. Knowledge Products publishes a variety of audio presentations on the great ideas and events of history.

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