|
|
|
|
PROLOGUE FROM time to time men find themselves forced to reconsider current and inherited beliefs and ideas, to gain some harmony between present and past experience, and to reach a position which shall satisfy the demands of feeling and reflexion and give confidence for facing the future. If, at the present day, religion, as a subject of critical or scientific inquiry, of both practical and theoretical significance has attracted increasing attention, this can be ascribed to: (a) the rapid progress of scientific
knowledge and thought; Whenever the ethical or moral value of activities or conditions is questioned, the value of religion is involved; and all deep- stirring experiences invariably compel a reconsideration of the most fundamental ideas, whether they are explicitly religious or not. Ultimately there arise problems of justice, human destiny, God, and the universe; and these in turn involve problems of the relation between ' religious ' and other ideas, the validity of ordinary knowledge, and practicable conceptions of 'experience' and 'reality.'
|
|
Last modified: July 05, 2000 Send e-mail to info@saxakali.com
with questions or comments about this web site. |