Colossians 3:2

Posts Tagged ‘philosophy’

[musing on government]

In philosophy, politics, worldview on December.3.2008 at 10:41 pm

John Mark Reynolds has written this pleasant, thoughtful, and wise little musing on government. Enjoy it.

[reasonable faith]

In Christian life, apologetics, orthodoxy, philosophy, vocality, warfare, worldview on October.1.2008 at 10:43 am

Dr. William Lane Craig, a brilliant Christian philosopher and apologist, has some great resources at reasonablefaith.org. I don’t agree with him on all points, particularly the way he conceptualizes divine sovereignty, but these Q&A’s on the witness of the Holy Spirit I find extremely helpful.

The Witness of the Holy Spirit

Counterfeit Claims of the Spirit’s Witness

[notes toward a theory of art]

In art, calvinism, culture, dooyeweerd, education, kuyperian, philosophy, worldview on August.9.2008 at 9:37 am

Metaphysics Chart:
(in other words, a chart representing what is)

Creation // God
||
The World // Man
||
Nature // Culture

[wolf // dog]

[forest // park]

[landscape // landscaping, landscape painting]

Where “// ” represents an antithesis,  “||” represents a subdivision, and what is in brackets “[]” is a concrete example. In sentence form:
Whatever is not God is Creation; whatever in Creation is not Man is The World; whatever in The World is not Culture is Nature. God is distinguished from Creation by His aseity and its contingency; Man is distinguished from The World by the imago Dei; Culture is distinguished from Nature by Man’s creative action upon the stuff of Nature.

I believe this consideration of what exists undermines “Art” as an ontological category. To divide artifacts of Culture into “Art” and “Non-art” is a spurious distinction. The artist and the engineer are both culture-makers, and airplanes may have beauty just as sculptures may have function. The Aesthetic is rather a hermeneutical-ethical aspect, a set of lenses through which we perceive an object to determine a specific meaning and value. Every piece of culture, from a rubbish bin to the Mona Lisa, has an aesthetic meaning and value, but some objects have more aesthetic value than others. Aesthetic meaning and value are based on the criteria of harmony (relation of parts to whole and form to content) and surprise (or nuance). For these criteria I am indebted to Herman Dooyeweerd’s Theory of Modal Aspects in his New Critique of Theoretical Thought, and I am generally indebted to Henry Van Til for his Calvinistic Concept of Culture.

[tractatus, wordled]

In fun, philosophy on July.14.2008 at 4:10 am

Check out this Wordle I’ve made of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.

Wordle is so cool… I foresee a lot of homework-dodging on this site. :)