Title

Truth, contemporary philosophy, and the postmodern turn

School/Department

Talbot School of Theology

Publication Date

3-2005

Abstract

It is difficult to think of a topic of greater concern than the nature of truth. Indeed, truth and the knowledge thereof are the very rails upon which people ought to live their lives. And over the centuries, the classic correspondence theory of truth has outlived most of its critics. But these are postmodern times, or so we are often told, and the classic model, once ensconced deeply in the Western psyche, must now be replaced by a neo-pragmatist or some other anti-realist model of truth, at least for those concerned with the rampant victimization raging all around us. Thus, "we hold these truths to be self evident" now reads "our socially constructed selves arbitrarily agree that certain chunks of language are to be esteemed in our linguistic community." Something has gone wrong here, and paraphrasing the words of Mad magazine's Alfred E. Newman, "We came, we saw, and we conked out!"

Keywords

Postmodernism; Knowledge, Theory of (Religion)

Publication Title

Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society

Volume

48

Issue

1

First Page

77

Last Page

88

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