History of Philosophy and Christian Thought
Overview
This course is a basic introduction to the history of philosophy and Christian thought. These lectures were given for Biblical Training in Orlando, Florida during the fall semester of 2001.
Recommended Reading
Nash, Life's Ultimate Questions: An Introduction to Philosophy
Nash, The Word of God and the Mind of Man
Nash, The Gospel and the Greeks
Class Outline
| Worldviews | |
| Worldviews |
Dr. Nash covers the objectives to the lectures, reading material, and discusses the five major beliefs that make up a worldview |
| Naturalism | |
| Naturalism |
A discussion of naturalism, what it teaches, two major exponents of naturalism (Lamont, Russell), and why it is wrong |
| Plato: Introduction and Summary | |
| Plato: Introduction and Summary |
Theories opposed by Plato ("Hermman"), his significance, his three forms of dualism, and Plato's basic teaching on "forms" |
| Plato: Theory of Knowledge | |
| Plato: Theory of Knowledge |
Plato's doctrine of the immortality of the soul, his understanding of knowledge (argued against by Augustine and Plotinus), and a discussion of rationalism vs. empiricism |
| Aristotle, Plotinus, and Aquinas | |
| Aristotle, Plotinus, and Aquinas |
The contributions of Aristotle (the law of non-contradiction; the difference between essential and non-essential properties), Plotinus, and Aquinas |
| The Case against Open Theism | |
| The Case Against Open Theism |
Open theism is the belief that God does not know the future; otherwise, we would not be free in our decisions. Nash discusses the teachings of God's omniscience and human free will, and the logical implications of this teaching. |
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