Unifying Knowledge –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 (“the both and belief system”).
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. In my opinion Hegel’s “somewhere in the middle”
synthesis laid the groundwork for pluralism.
Before
Hegelian synthesis thought, the Scripture in I John 2:15, “Love not the world”,
meant just that, don’t love the world or become controlled by the system of
“this present age”. After acceptance of
Hegelian synthesis thought, it became acceptable to be a Christian whose
thought patterns were conformed to the fashion of this world... Those who accepted this viewpoint no longer
believed the Bible when it said that if you loved the world, the love of the
father was not in you. Under this
autonomous philosophy you could love the world, think like the world, and act
like the world and love the Lord at the same time.
Thought for the Day
The
simplest way to justify what you are doing musically is to change your epistemology. Then You can change your music methodology.
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