Thoughts

Trying to answer the question "why" is an exciting and difficult task.  What is the meaning of life?  Of course, no answer is possible without a discussion of epistemology--the study of knowledge.  How can we know anything?  Thus the greatest enemy of philosophy is the present skepticism in thought, which suggests that no one can really know anything.  That means that all discussion is by people who know nothing and are talking about what they do not know.  I admit that that is true about quite a few people, and there is no point in talking to such admitted know-nothings, but I do not believe that it is true about most people. I have written a paper on the foundation of knowledge, which has been published on-line by Faculty Dialogue.  Give it a try.

I have written a book on philosophy, but it needs to be rewritten.  It is in dialog format, where three people argue with each other over various philosophical issues from three different perspectives.  It was modeled after the dialogues of Plato, but Plato was fortunate to write in the days when people appreciated that approach.  I don't think he would get published these days if he didn't already have a name.  Someday, when I have time, I'll rewrite my book--maybe.  I've been reading a little modern philosophy, and you would think that, if that stuff can get published, anything can.  But the publishing world doesn't work that way, I've found.  Once I thought that solid reason would rise to the top, like cream goes to the top of milk.  I never was an Idealist (a little philosophical humor, there), but now I have lost my idealism.

Skepticism (and its derivative, moral relativism) is destroying philosophy, and indeed, thought itself.  That is because it has no anchor, and floats where the wind takes it--wherever the Zeitgeist blows.  Without a metaphysical basis, philosophy becomes just one opinion against another.  One person says that one thing is the most important principle and another person says that another thing is, and there is no way to settle the matter.  Metaphysics must be the first part of philosophy, and yet it is ignored.  Why?  Because the supposed "philosophers" are afraid of it.  They say the puzzle of metaphysics cannot be solved.  Everyone who has tried has failed.  But that is not true.  Everyone they have listened to has failed.  But they have closed their ears, so they have no right to speak.

The central issue of metaphysics is the problem of the One and the Many.  How can there be Oneness, and at the same time Manyness?  The ancient Hindu mystics tried to solve it, and failed.  Plato tried, and failed.  Kant also tried, and also failed.  But I have solved it.  And from the solution comes the answers to the riddles of freedom and determinism, and of history, and of ethics.  Without the solution, there is no solid ground to stand upon.

Do I have any right to speak about philosophy?  I am a Doctor of Philosophy, with much philosophy in my doctoral program, lots of apologetics in my seminary program, and lots of philosophy courses as an undergraduate.  It is not likely, however, that I will ever have the time to finish my philosophy book.

           

Political philosophy is also fascinating.  Realism is crucial to politics, and is too often ignored by the competing positions.  It is nice to have ideals, but if they are not tempered by a sense of realism, they easily lead us astray.  People who pretend that they can remake human nature and re-form society into any shape they please are the great fools--the radicals who ignore the truth and whose ignorance leads us closer and closer to tyranny.  On the other hand, the reactionaries who refuse to change what must be changed merely spur on the radicals and their march to destruction.

It is hard to balance between these two failed ways unless you have a clear sense of what is right and wrong.  Justice itself cannot even be defined without that.  A fundamental dictum comes from Lord Acton, who said that power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.  From this comes the concept of political liberty--a liberty from corrupt tyrants.  Liberty is not a freedom from responsibility, nor is it license, but rather freedom from tyranny.  Government must control the society enough to prevent wickedness, but the society must control government enough to prevent wickedness in government.  Without this circular flow, with each nourishing and disciplining the other, the free and just society collapses, and becomes unfree and unjust.  When people stop caring about preventing wickedness, then all they care about is power.

I have written a book on politics, but it too is a dialogue between three positions.  I have begun rewriting it, but the political scene is so discouraging and so irrational that I doubt that my efforts would do much good.  I can show with perfect and indisputable logic that a government and nation must be committed to God in order to survive, but the supposed intellectual elites refuse to hear that--regardless of its truth or falsity.  They refuse also to recognize how important the traditional family is to the survival of the nation. These are the terrible errors of the radicals.  The reactionaries tend to focus on the economic wellbeing of the nation.  But  modern economic theory is dominated by the idea that free markets will automatically lead us to heaven on earth.  That theory is based on the assumption that the customer is always right--i.e., that the customer is a "rational person" and always knows what is best, at least in the aggregate.  Unfortunately, people are not always rational, and that may distort a market. Look at illicit drugs, for example. 

What too many theories, economic and political, ignore is the weaknesses of human beings.  Ignorance of the weaknesses of human beings leads to policies which result in "unintended consequences."  Look at the disastrous effects of our present welfare system upon the people of our society, including both the people receiving welfare benefits and also people who are not receiving welfare benefits.  The need in politics is to structure policy for real people in real situations.  That is why communism, with its fictitious good guy (worker) versus bad guy (capitalist) black-and-white dichotomy, is such a disaster wherever in real life it is tried.

Do I have a right to speak about politics?  I am a Certified Public Accountant with auditing experience and a specialization in internal controls--those techniques that keep people from doing what they are not supposed to do in an organization.  Even law is not a better background than that.

           

Theology is, in the end, the most important of all.  I have written a book on theology also, and again it was three people in dialogue, so it needs to be rewritten.  But it will almost certainly never be published because some of its positions will delight some people and some of its positions will anger those very same people.  Sometimes I wish that I had learned how to just stay in line. 

The book shows that the Scriptures must be the inspired and infallible Word of God, but it also shows that--like the parables--it often deliberately hides the truth and misleads those who are not really seeking the truth.  It shows that God will ultimately save everyone, but that there is an "eternal" Hell for those refuse to believe in the Messiah, unending until they do believe.  It shows that the death of Christ saves us from our sins, but not as a substitutionary atonement.  It shows that salvation is not escaping the consequences of sin, but is receiving the power to avoid sin through the indwelling of the Spirit of God.  It shows that the real mission of a Christian is to be like Christ--especially in His suffering and dying for the sins of others.  It shows that attempts to predict the end times from the Scripture are nonsense, but that there will be a resurrection from death to a glorified physical body living on a glorified physical earth forever. 

It is obvious that there is enough in just that one paragraph to offend almost everyone.  And that is enough to keep any publisher from publishing such a book. 

Do I have a right to speak about theology?  I graduated cum laude (when and where that was a serious honor) from a three-year master of divinity program at Westminster Theological Seminary.  Westminster was started when a group of conservative Princeton Seminary professors left Princeton to establish their own seminary--essentially a conservative Princeton Seminary.

           

Finally, I have written a poetic gospel.  Actually, it was the first of all the books I have written.  It was what I considered most important.  It was inspired by the concept of Biblical Theology (begun by Vos), which used the imagery of the Old Testament to help us see Christ more clearly--or at least more vividly.  Pictures and images filled my head, and came out in a poetic style.  But poetry is not read by anyone anymore, and there are a few revelations in the book that will shock the faithful.  So, it too will not likely ever be published. 

The music is Pachelbel's Canon in D Major.

The themed background is by Classic Themes