Are
There Any Absolutes?—part 2
Philosophy has been historically a pursuit of the systematized principles that
give a wisdom that reveals truth and a unified filed of knowledge based on
truth and error or thesis and antithesis. Somewhere in the early 20th
century many philosophers began to give up hope in a unified filed of knowledge
based on thesis (right) or antithesis (wrong). They began to believe the
philosophy of Georg Wilhelm Frederick Hegel (1770-1831). Hegel believed
that every idea belonged to an all-embracing mind in which every idea (thesis)
elicited its opposite (antithesis) and the result of these two was a unified
whole which he called synthesis. His “unified” whole was
epistemologically different since it derived “knowing” from a new synthesis
thesis. This “knowing” brought about a new truth that was always found
somewhere between truth and error.
Thought
for the Day
It is disappointing that many church
musicians now believe that the only thing they can know for sure about
religious music I that they cannot know anything for sure about it because they
are of the notion that there are no absolutes in church music.
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