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Finding Truth: 5 Principles for Unmasking Atheism, Secularism, and Other God Substitutes Kindle Edition

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 566 ratings

Don't Think, Just Believe?That's the mantra in many circles today--whether the church, the classroom, the campus, or the voting booth.

Time for a Reality CheckNancy Pearcey, bestselling and critically acclaimed author, offers fresh tools to break free from presumed certainties and test them against reality. In Finding Truth, she explains five powerful principles that penetrate to the core of any worldview--secular or religious--to uncover its deepest motivations and weigh its claims. 

A former agnostic, Pearcey demonstrates that a robust Christian worldview matches reality--that it is not only true but attractive, granting higher dignity to the human person than any alternative.  
Finding Truth displays Pearcey's well-earned reputation for clear and cogent writing. She brings themes to life with personal stories and real-world examples. The book includes a study guide shaped by questions from readers, from teens to college professors. It is ideal for individual or group study.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Nancy Pearcey at her best--totally profound, persuasive, and yet practical. Read it with your highlighter handy!"
--Lee Strobel,
New York Times Best-selling Author

"Describes my life as an atheist perfectly ... If I'd read this book as a young man, I think I would have been challenged to re-examine my views much earlier."
--J. Warner Wallace, Author,
Cold-Case Christianity

"Dismantles humanism, atheism, reductionism, and every other ism ... Pearcey's arguments combined with the Gospel of Jesus leave all other worldviews outside of Christianity without a leg to stand on."
--Phil Robertson,
Duck Dynasty

"A great book ... Nancy Pearcey has been to the church what Francis Schaeffer was to believers of his day: a cultural intellectual who provides careful, thoughtful, and well-researched critiques ... I highly recommend this delightful book."
--J.P. Moreland, Professor of Philosophy, Biola University

"Deftly exposes the inconsistencies and the failures of a host of modern idols."
--Paul Copan, Professor of Philosophy, Palm Beach Atlantic University

"We live in a culture beset by the twin dragons of modernism and postmodernism. Nancy Pearcey draws a sword and cuts their heads off ... Totally readable."
--Doug TenNapel, Creator,
Earthworm Jim

"Secular worldviews have become the intellectual fast-food of our day--nice taste, no nourishment ... This book ought to be in the survival kit of every student heading off to college."
--John R. Erickson, Author,
Hank the Cowdog

"Chock full of gems ... Pearcey has the unique ability of getting to the heart of things."
--Gregory Koukl, President, Stand to Reason

Review

“Chock full of gems … Pearcey has the unique ability of getting to the heart of things.”
            — Gregory Koukl, President, Stand to Reason -- Gregory Koukl Published On: 2015-02-11

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00QN345NG
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ David C Cook (March 1, 2015)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 1, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 3401 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 388 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 566 ratings

About the author

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Nancy Pearcey
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Nancy Pearcey was one of the hippies who stumbled across Francis Schaeffer's ministry L'Abri in Switzerland in the early 1970s and was surprised to discover that there are actually good reasons and arguments supporting Christianity. She gave up her agnosticism and ever since has been writing about Christianity as a worldview that applies to every area of life.

Pearcey is best known for her book Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from Its Cultural Captivity, which was a 2005 ECPA Gold Medallion Award winner. She co-authored Now Shall We Live? (with Harold Fickett and Chuck Colson), which was a 2000 ECPA Gold Medallion Award winner. Her latest book is Love Thy Body: Answering Hard Questions about Life and Sexuality.

Pearcey has been heralded as "America's pre-eminent evangelical Protestant female intellectual" in The Economist). She earned an MA from Covenant Theological Seminary and pursued further graduate work in History of Philosophy at the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto. Currently she is professor and scholar in residence at Houston Baptist University, as well as a fellow of the Discovery Institute and editor-at-large of The Pearcey Report. As founding editor of the radio program BreakPoint, she also coauthored a monthly column with Chuck Colson in Christianity Today.

Pearcey has contributed to several books and published more than a hundred articles. She has spoken in the US Capitol and the White House; at universities such as Princeton, Stanford, Dartmouth, and USC; to actors in Hollywood and artists in New York City; on NPR and C-SPAN. Her earlier books include The Soul of Science, Saving Leonardo, and Finding Truth: 5 Principles for Unmasking Atheism, Secularism, and Other God Substitutes.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
566 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2018
I read Nancy Pearcey’s book, Total Truth and “Finding Leonardo” last year and found them to be really compelling. Pearcey’s experience at L’Abri Fellowship with Francis Schaeffer inspired her to reclaim her Christian faith and delve into areas of Philosophy and Apologetics that are often times denigrated by evangelicals. In this follow up book to Total Truth, Pearcey wants to equip Christians with tools that combat idols. Taking a page from Romans 1, Pearcey builds her thesis on verses 16-32. Romans 1 is easily one of my most favorite chapters of scripture. She calls it a guide to apologetics.

Pearcey’s utmost concern is about worldview. She argues that Christianity is the most coherent worldview among all the philosophies of the world. This is why the Apostle Paul can say, in Romans 1:16, that he is “not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ.” It is only through the Christian worldview that men can have a dignified and complete view of humanity.

Pearcey has a 5 step guide to diminishing idols in our lives. She argues that idols don’t just have to be other gods, but an idol is defined as anything that replaces God. Therefore, philosophies can be idols because they inherently replace God with other ideas. Here is her 5 step guide summarized:

1. Identify the idol. Every worldview outside of the Christian worldview replaces God in some way. For the rationalist, they replace God with science. Postmodernist replace God with the supreme power of ideas in a community or within themselves (they alone possess the “truth”, because there are no other truths except for the truth that there are no truths). Marxists replace God with an idea of economics and distribution of wealth. The point Pearcey makes is that every philosophy fails to answer the question with any precision, why are humans unique and what makes them special? For this reason, they replace God with an idol, just as Romans 1:23 says, “[they] exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.”

2. Identify the idols reductionism. Reductionism, in its most basic sense, is the idea of extrapolating on a certain point when not considering the whole. For example, postmodernists focus in on the idea that they have a monopoly on truth. What is true for me is true for me and what is true for you is true for you. While this may work in the realm of ideas, it is less consistent in fields like engineering and math. When you pres 3+5 into a pocket calculator, it will always come up with the answer, 8. There is no relativity in that. Pearcey states that it is a lot like putting the world into a box and then lopping off whatever doesn’t fit inside the box. You have to ignore all the things that reduce your worldview to something that doesn’t make sense. Reductionism also inherently devalues humanity. In the realm of Darwinism (materialism, rationalism, determinism etc.), humanity is nothing less than a meat machine with no real purpose. Our choices and thoughts are all conditioned by our biology so that we are simply meat-computers. This does two things: 1) first it devalues humanity in the sense that your worldview has told you that we are simply acting on the basis of biology, so how does one define what is right and wrong? 2) it is reductionistic because humans have free will and the ability to make decisions that are outside of basic biology.

3. Test the idol: does it contradict what we know about the world? I have alluded to this point already, but I will flesh out some other examples. Since postmodernism has been on my mind lately, I will use this example again. Postmodernism will tell us that there is no absolute truths, that truth is relative. But as we have seen, the fundamental flaw is that no one can feasibly live by this philosophy pragmatically without running into serious problems. If you believe that murder is relative (and to define murder, this is the killing in cold blood induced by anger, not justifiable killing such as in war time), you will go on a rampage, killing everyone you don’t like or who looks at you funny. The law will eventually catch up to and put you into prison. As seen in this example, it is not really practical to believe in relativism because it translates poorly to the world in which we live. I’ve already mentioned the example of math and engineering: you don’t see engineers at NASA saying that engineering is relative so it doesn’t matter how you put together a space craft. That would be foolish and greatly endanger the lives of the astronauts, who depend on engineers to do their job so they don’t get killed in the process.

4. Test the idol: does it contradict itself? The relativist’s position really has no legs to stand on when we consider the statement that I’ve already made, “there are no truths except the truth that there are no truths.” This is, in itself, a contradiction. Rationalists commit the same error when they claim that there is no purpose to humanity. They have a bleak outlook on life which is counter to the full, rich lives that we experience. Marxism contradicts itself because it does not take into account the obvious human element of the fallen nature. Christianity is the only worldview that does not contradict itself and therefore is seen superior to all other worldviews.

5. Replace the idol. Simply: share the Gospel. Once you’ve knocked down a worldview, you need a replacement for it. Pearcey, coming from an evangelical standpoint, points out that the Christianity is the only worldview that holistically has a coherent and non-reductionistic worldview. So much so, that other philosophies have to borrow from Christianity ideals of a high view of humanity etc. For example, the founders of this nation believed that all humans have dignity and are inundated with the fact that: “…all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Notice that these rights come from a creator. Similarly, other philosophies have borrowed this idea. Postmodernists say that all truth is relative but cause a storm when the rights of the LGBT movement are squashed. How is that relativism? Christianity alone accounts for the dignity and high view of humanity that people desire.

As you can see, this is great information. I want to end my review with a conversation that I had with a relativist a couple of months ago (one that I think would make Nancy Pearcey proud). I went back and re-read what I had written to him, and it struck me that I was already employing some of the tactics outlined in this book. To have an understanding of other philosophies is really an essential for Christians in a fallen world. I hope that you will pick up this book (and Total Truth) and become familiar with what you are up against as a Christian:

“You’re reasoning in your outline contradicts what you have already said: that there are no moral absolutes. If there are no moral absolutes, how can you advocate that belief shouldn’t effect anyone around you ? Is that not an absolute ?

My point in the slavery/fascism illustration is to say that there is evil in the world, and we should oppose evil because there are moral absolutes. If something is wrong, we should stand against it. According to the Bible, homosexuality is wrong and while I think it is equally wrong to hate those people, I do believe Christians should stand in opposition to fallen humanity.

You say something very interesting too: “if anyone wants to actually see change in the human race you have to observe and accept the way it operates and act realistically.” We finally have come to common ground because I agree. But I think our common cause is again dependent upon worldview: for the Christian, understanding that man is inherently evil is acting realistically. The fact that God has put into us a conscious and the creation of the world, let alone his divinely inspired word (Romans 1:18-32), is enough to condemn us. Further we are tainted with a sin problem (Romans 3:23), making our attempts to get to a holy God futile. That is why God sent a mediator to earth, Jesus Christ, who was 100% God and 100% man (John 1:1-16); His manhood was representative of those He was on earth for and his Godhood was the only means by which one could be a suitable substitute for sin. Therefore, when he died on the cross it wasn’t for sin but the punishment for sin (Romans 3:24-26). The word “justification” describes this process in which one comes Into the courthouse and is condemned by his evil actions by the judge (God); but while he is guilty, Jesus Christ steps in to take the punishment. This is achieved “by faith” (Romans 4:3-6): faith that Jesus Christ was God, that he took upon himself the punishment for sin, and that you repent of your old way of living and conform to that of God’s. This is the Christian Gospel.

My point being understanding the evil condition of man is much more realistic than a moral fortitude that changes with popular opinion (notice that homosexuality was much more of a non-issue 20 years ago with most people against it when compared to 2015)… My goal was not to convince you that the Bible is infallible, but to demonstrate that it makes logical, coherent sense without contradiction. I hope I’ve proved not that my view is the “right” way (although I believe it is), but that to be practical relativism is not a worldview without contradiction.”
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Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2015
It just now strikes me that for a long time I've been saying systematic theologies have been negligent in not including chapters on idol worship and spiritual warfare. This total subject that Nancy Pearcey's Finding Truth is about is that missing chapter (or loci) on idol worship. And we can see that it is a big subject indeed. It is the missing subject that explained all the philosophy that we knew intuitively was inane if not worthless. I.e. not worth the time, yet in that dismissiveness also being naive to the power ideas have, including bad ideas, to influence people unknowingly. Naive to it because we didn't see the religious aspect of it. The idol worship aspect of it.

I think we have an unusual arrival in this book by Nancy Pearcey titled Finding Truth. It appears to me to be something of a consummating book. People in general, people who think about these things, have been picking up on the strongest ideas and concepts that exist in and around these worldview writings, and I've been sending some in email over recent time. Things like personalism/impersonalism, how subject and object are in sync in terms of human nature and the natural creation, the remarkable fact of the fine tuning of the universe, reductionism (I remember quoting the C. S. Lewis passage from that Louis Markhos book, C. S. Lewis, A to Z, or something like that, and how reductionism seemed a powerful, foundational element in seeing false worldviews and how they engage in reductionism) and several other things like that. She has not only gathered them all in this book, but she has brought it all together in a whole and with a purpose to create a kind of handbook on seeing faulty worldviews based on Romans 1 and 2. And to see how Christianity stands above it all and how all false worldviews have to borrow from Christianity to some extent to not give an immediate impression of comical self-refutation. It is a very powerful thing to see.

What we see in this book is really not just arguments against the philosophies of the world over time but a rather *easy* refutation of such things. I.e. things that seemingly *had power* not long ago are now seen as rather easily refuted. I'm reminded of the biblical image of Satan at the end and how he presents a rather pathetic and weak impression. I think this aspect of easy refuting of once powerful things has to do with this era having reached a point where it is now possible to no longer be so easily deluded by such things.

There's an uneasy reception of this book that I sense in some reviews by other writers and theologians, and the same with her Total Truth, that I think has this reason behind it: many people who are sympathetic to the subject matter and conclusions still feel threatened because their own body of work seems to be transcended by this totalizing approach of worldview which is now in a mature, or complete stage of presentation.

No, Finding Truth is not Phenomenology of Spirit or Critique of Pure Reason (and no it wouldn't want to be), no it's not written like such books, yes it's written for a general audience, but it is the subject matter that is powerful. Simple, yet powerful. Because you say as you read it: "Is it this easy? Is it this easy to destroy things that have captured entire eras and movements in politics and arts and social behavior and on and on?" Yes it is. Once the delusion is broken.

As the Satanic rolling thunder road show of never-dead Marxism and now ragingly alive Islamism is casting it's dark shadow over the entire world which signals a real end time environment I think we can also look for new developments that help God's remnant to get a clear view and to develop and be strong in all this lunacy, and what you see in this book is part of that. It, *as a culmination*, is something new on the scene.

One important note: The section in the book titled *The Good, the True, and the Pagan* is important to keep in mind, because it would be a shallow Christian approach to deny any truth or anything of the good, the true, and the beautiful in these other worldviews. All truth is God's truth. The problem with the non-Christian worldviews is they attempt to stuff all and everything into their little box and whatever doesn't fit they deem to be unreal or unimportant or what have you. Among the other problems they have. (But it should also be said that these worldviews are usually born from a wicked rebellion from the very Truth (God) they purport to be seeking, so the Satanic element, even if it just comes across as silly or shallow, is preeminent.)

She talks of plundering. The word was used by the ancient Christians. I think of what I use to tell myself: exploit everything, join nothing. I didn't know I was tapping into an approach that the ancient Christians had with the cultures they were coming out of and were surrounded by.
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Andreas MF
5.0 out of 5 stars A verdade não é relativa.
Reviewed in Brazil on August 15, 2018
Este livro é excelente. A autora mostra como identificarmos os ídolos que distorcem a cosmovisão das pessoas e como devemos lidar com eles através do enfrentamento pela realidade e verdade. O mundo de hoje é totalmente povoado por ídolos e distorções (como o relativismo por exemplo) e isso tem como resultado todo o caos em que vivemos. Obra imperdível.
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Voice Over Guy
5.0 out of 5 stars I got three copies of this!
Reviewed in Canada on November 3, 2015
I was introduced to Nancy Pearcey by a cover article about the new generation of Christian apologists. As a result I purchased this book as an Audible audio book to listen to on long drives. I enjoyed what I was hearing so much I purchased the physical book from a local bookstore. Now I own the eBook from Amazon. I heartily recommend it to anyone wanting an understanding of the reason why the Christian worldview is the only one that is logical and consistent with the world we live in. I love the way she teaches in a methodical and building manner which leaves you much more capable of sensing "God substitutes" in our thinking. While this book will challenge your thinking and introduce you to philosophers and ideas you may not have heard of before it's not hard to understand. If you're attending university and struggling to defend your Christian faith p,ease read this book and learn from it.
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Martin Kentish
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is an absolute must read for anyone with an intellectual enquiring mind.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 9, 2015
Read this book! If you have ever been part of a faith organisation that has discouraged you from asking some big questions, ever felt guilty for wanting to use your intellectual capacity to understand Christianity, or ever felt ill equipped to deal with the atheistic onslaught from the secular world, then this book is a must. I would also encourage and challenge any atheist to engage with what is written. I cannot recommend this book highly enough.
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Hanniel
5.0 out of 5 stars Zum Kern einer Weltsicht vordringen: Eine fünfteilige Strategie
Reviewed in Germany on September 18, 2015
Im Bestseller von 2004 legte sie dar, was es bedeutet, dass die christliche Weltsicht nicht nur auf den religiösen Bereich, sondern auf das gesamte Leben angewendet werden muss. „Finding Truth“ gibt dem Leser konkrete Instrumente an die Hand, dies umzusetzen. Auf welche Weise? Das Buch basiert auf einer fünfteiligen Strategie , die dazu ausrüsten soll, zum Kern jeder Weltsicht vorzudringen und ihre Aussagen abzuwägen. Während in anderen Büchern der Schwerpunkt eher auf der Präsenz Gottes in der Natur lag, konzentriert sich Pearcey im vorliegenden Werk auf die menschliche Natur (28).

Zielgruppe und biblische Grundlage

Das Buch für auf junge Menschen geschrieben, die ihre Fragen zu beantworten suchen, überdies für Suchende jeden Alters. Pearcey betont, in welch komplexen "Netz" einander widersprechender Weltsichten sich Heranwachsende bewegen müssen. Dies will ernst genommen sein! Die biblische Verankerung findet sich in Römer 1 – ein Abschnitt, den die Autorin als das “apologetische Trainingshandbuch” des Apostels Paulus bezeichnet (24). In der Besprechung des Bibeltextes arbeitet sie fünf Aussagen heraus:

1. Wir Menschen haben Zugang zu Beweisen für Gott durch die Schöpfung.
2. Wir alle unterdrücken diese Beweise.
3. Wir erschaffen uns Götzen an Gottes Stelle.
4. Gott gibt uns den Konsequenzen unserer Götzen hin, nämlich einem „verkehrten Sinn“ und
5. einem entehrenden Verhalten.

Die 5-Schritte-Strategie

Pearcey baut das gesamte Buch um die beispielhafte Darlegung der Fünf-Schritte-Strategie herum auf. Die einzelnen Schritte lauten:

1. Identifiziere den Götzen. Zu einem Götzen kann all das werden, auf das wir grösseres Vertrauen als auf Gott setzen bzw. von dem wir tiefere Erfüllung als von ihm erwarten (36). Das können Personen, die Natur, materielle Gegenstände oder auch Ideen sein. Götzendienst ist ein nicht sichtbarer Treiber für alle anderen Sünden. Paulus macht klar, dass alle, die den transzendenten Gott nicht ehren, einen Ersatzgott in Form einer Kraft oder eines Prinzips innerhalb des Kosmos suchen müssen (42).

2. Identifiziere den Reduktionismus dieses Götzen. Wenn ein Teil der Schöpfung absolut gesetzt wird, muss sich alles nach diesem Teilaspekt richten. Götzendienst führt deshalb zwingend zu einer herabgesetzten Sicht des menschlichen Lebens.

3. Teste den Götzen: Widerspricht er dem Wissen, das wir über die Welt haben? An bestimmten Stellen widerspricht jeder Götze der Wirklichkeit!

4. Teste den Götzen: Widerspricht er sich selbst? Götzen-zentrierte Weltsichten kollidieren nicht nur mit der externen Wirklichkeit. Sie brechen in sich zusammen, weil sie widersprüchlich sind.

5. Ersetze den Götzen: Entwirf ein Szenario für das Christentum!

Einige Kern-Überlegungen

Die Geschichte der Menschen ist eine Geschichte der Götzenfabrikation. Götzen sind menschliche Erfindungen, das Werk menschlicher Hände (Ps 115,4; 135,15; Jes 44,11). Es ist, als ob die Menschen mit einer Karte leben würden, auf der nur ein Teil der Wirklichkeit eingezeichnet ist.

Wenn sich jemand auf eine bestimmte Sicht der Realität verpflichtet hat, wird diese zur Letzterklärung für alles (63). Es gibt deshalb ein gemeinsames Merkmal für alle Weltsichten: Sie anerkennen etwas als “göttlich”, also aus sich selbst existierend und als Ursprung für alles andere. Damit wird ein Teil der Schöpfung anstelle des Schöpfers Identitäts-stiftend (98).

Mit diesem Reduktionismus zu leben bedeutet, auch den Menschen nur noch unter Teilaspekten zu sehen und ihn dementsprechend zu behandeln. Wer Menschen in seinem Denken „ent-menschlicht“, neigt dazu, ihn zu misshandeln, zu unterdrücken oder auszubeuten.

Die Unterdrückung eines Teils von Gottes Realität für zu einem tiefen Graben und einer Zweiteilung des Lebens, manchmal im Denken, jedoch zwingend in der Wirklichkeit. Ein Teil der Erfahrung, die mit der Wirklichkeit kollidiert, muss ausgeblendet werden. Das Ziel jeder Philosophie müsste jedoch darin bestehen, die Fakten der Erfahrung zu erklären anstatt sie zu leugnen.

Immer dann, wenn Götzen-zentrierte Weltsichten im politischen Bereich zur Umsetzung kommen, wird ein Teil der Menschen den neu geschaffenen Vorgaben nicht entsprechen und deshalb unterdrückt werden.

Das Leben mit einer reduktionistischen Weltsicht verzichtet auf einen Teil der Gott geschaffenen Wirklichkeit. Ein solches Leben kann mit dem Aufenthalt in einem Bunker ohne Fenster verglichen werden. Das führt zu einer Art „mentaler Schizophrenie“.

Der christliche Glaube stillt den menschlichen Hunger nach einer einheitlichen, integrierten Weltsicht. Er besitzt in sich die intellektuelle Kraft, um ein ganzheitliches, auch nach innen konsistentes Leben zu führen. Wie können wir dies am besten testen? Wenn es im „Laboratorium des normalen Lebens“ besteht. Wir müssen keinen Aspekt der Wirklichkeit ausschliessen und ihn in einen konzeptionell von der Realität abgelösten Raum verbannen.

Definition und Beurteilung einzelner Weltsichten

Pearcey kommt in der Beschreibung der einzelnen Schritte immer wieder auf einzelne Weltsichten zu sprechen und definiert sie prägnant.

◾ Wissenschaftlicher Materialismus: Der Kosmos ist alles, was je war, ist oder sein wird. Die Fakten, die durch den Materialismus unterdrückt werden, entsprechen eben den Dingen, welchen den Menschen am meisten beschäftigen: Den Bereich bewusster Erfahrung. Pantheismus: Die Welt ist keine Maschine, sie ist lebendig. Gott ist nicht so sehr ihr Schöpfer als ihre Seele und ihr Leben. Der absolute Geist aus dem Hegel’schen Pantheismus wurde im Lauf der Zeit säkularisiert und als "Zeitgeist" auf eine Metapher reduziert. In unserer Zeit führt dies zur extremen Schlussfolgerung, dass sämtliche Ideen nur soziale Konstruktionen, getrieben durch kulturelle Kräfte, darstellen. Der Materialismus behauptet, dass alles aus Materie bestehe, der Pantheismus nimmt an, dass alles aus Geistigem hervorgegangen ist. Jedes System, das von nicht-persönlichen Kräften ausgeht, endet jedoch damit, die menschliche Persönlichkeit zu unterdrücken

◾ Empirismus: Wir können uns nur auf empirische Fakten verlassen, also das, was wir sehen, fühlen, messen und wägen. Alles andere wird in den Bereich persönlicher Meinung oder Präferenz zurück verwiesen. Empirismus macht einen Götzen aus dem Bereich der menschlicher Wahrnehmung. Der Rationalismus hingegen erklärt Ideen des Geistes, erkannt durch den Verstand, zur einzigen Quelle und zum Standard von Erkenntnis. Beide Weltsichten küren den Standpunkt der ersten Person (dem Ich) als einzigen Weg zur Erkenntnis. Das Selbst ist Sitz und Richter von Erkenntnis. Beide hoffen, eine Methode gefunden zu haben, um das Individuelle zu transzendieren und von einer eingegrenzten Nische zum absoluten, gottähnlichen Wissen durchzudringen.

◾ Im Postmodernismus ist das Selbst bloss der Sitz für wechselnde Sichtweisen. Es wird von der Interpretation wechselnder Gemeinschaften absorbiert. Weil es keine objektive bzw. universelle Wahrheit gibt, wird jede Behauptung einer solchen Wahrheit als Versuch gewertet, die Sichtweise einer interpretierenden Gemeinschaft dem anderen überzustülpen.

Fazit

Der biblische Gott erweist sich als ausreichender Integrationspunkt für die Wirklichkeit (181). Pearcey rüstet uns mit einer Art von konstruktiv-kritischem Denken aus, das auch innerhalb der christlichen Gemeinde von enormer Wichtigkeit ist (52). Die meisten Philosophien sind nämlich dadurch entstanden, dass jemand über einige nicht zu leugnende Fakten gestolpert ist und diese zur letzten, unfehlbaren Grundlage aller Erkenntnis erklärt hat (80).

Pearcey strahlt durch das Buch die Zuversicht aus, dass das Christentum alle konkurrierenden Weltsichten überflügelt, weil es die höchsten Hoffnungen und Ideale des Menschen erfüllt. Dies führt jedoch nicht zu einer herablassenden, sondern im Gegenteil zu einer respektvollen Haltung, die wahre Bestandteile anderer Sichtweisen stets wertschätzt (94). Allerdings gilt es, von einer privatisierten Religion Abschied zu nehmen und zu einem Gott zurückzukehren, der sich zu erkennen gibt und dessen Gesetz der Wirklichkeit standhält.
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Duncan L McCullough
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in Australia on September 24, 2015
Very interesting and informative.
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