Positivism and christianity : a study of theism and verifiability

Bibliographic Information

Positivism and christianity : a study of theism and verifiability

by Kenneth H. Klein

Nijhoff, 1974

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Note

Bibliography: p. [175]-179

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This essay is conceived as a critical exposition of the central issues that figure in the ongoing conversation between Logical Positivists and neo Positivists on the one hand and Christian apologists on the other. My expository aim is to isolate and to describe the main issues that have emer ged in the extended discussion between men of Positivistic turn of mind and men sympathetic to the claims of Christianity. My critical aim is to select typical, influential stands that have been taken on each of these issues, to assess their viability, and to isolate certain dilemmas which discussion of these issues has generated. I am convinced that the now commonly rejected verifiability theory of meaning is very commonly misunderstood and has been rejected by and large for the wrong reasons. Before it is cast off-if it is to be cast off-what is needed is a reconsideration of that theory and of the objections that its several formulations have elicited. Furthermore, at least partially because of a misconstruing of the verifiability doctrine, there have been some interesting-though in my opinion unsuccessful-claims advanced about the testability-status of sentences expressive of Christian belief. Moreover, in their haste to vindicate Christianity, some apologists have been fairly cavalier, in my opinion, about what "Christianity" involves. This volume offers what I hope will be a clear statement and analysis of the principle points at issue between Positivism and Christianity, together with my own assessment of where the argument stands now.

Table of Contents

I. Statement of the Issues.- A. Overview of the Positivist stand upon theism.- B. Exposition of the Positivist stand on the issues.- 1. "The statement that God exists is, at least putatively, a statement of fact".- 2. "A necessary condition of a genuine statement of fact is that it must be Verifiable".- 3. "The statement that God exists is not Verifiable".- Retrospect.- C. Appendix: Unintelligible words and unintelligible sentences.- II. Theism without belief in God.- A. Religious belief construed as a moral commitment.- B. Religious belief construed as "slanting".- C. Religious belief construed as the contemplating of a "symbol picture".- Discussion.- Transition to Chapters III and IV.- III. Testability and Factual Significance.- A. The search for a criterion of factual significance.- B. Formulations and difficulties.- 1. The paradigm case: The criterion of verifiability.- 2. The criterion of verifiability in principle.- 3. The extended criterion of verifiability in principle.- 4. The criterion of falsifiability in principle.- 5. The criterion of partial verifiability.- 6. The criterion of Verifiability.- C. Further problems.- 1. Statements about other minds.- 2. Statements about "unobservables" in science.- Retrospect.- IV. Are Theological Sentences Testable?.- A. Terrestrial falsifiability.- B. Eschatological verifiability.- C. Terrestrial verifiability.- Retrospect.- V. Dilemmas.- A. Summary of the argument.- B. Objections and dilemmas.- 1. Conclusive Verifiability.- 2. Verifiability in principle.- 3. Ad hoc exceptions.- 4. The translatability criterion.- 5. Falsifiability and theological statements.- 6. The transcendence of God.- Selected bibliography.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA03872019
  • ISBN
    • 9024715814
  • LCCN
    74196351
  • Country Code
    ne
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    The Hague
  • Pages/Volumes
    xi, 183 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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