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1
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- A look at key points of James Sire’s
- The Universe Next Door
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2
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- Outline basic worldviews that underlie the way we think
- Trace historically how these worldviews developed
- Show postmodernism’s twist
- Understand ourselves and others so we can genuinely communicate
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3
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- "A world view is a set of presuppositions (assumptions which may be
true, partially true or entirely false) which we hold (consciously or
subconsciously, consistently or inconsistently) about the basic make-up
of our world." -- Sire
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4
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5
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- One’s worldview determines how the events and circumstances of life will
be understood . . .
- accepted . . .
- and acted upon.
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6
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- What is prime reality?
- What is the nature of external reality, the world around us?
- What is a human being?
- What happens at death?
- Why is it possible to know anything?
- How do we know what is right and wrong?
- What is meaning of human history?
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7
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- “Theology is not simply a system of beliefs to be added alongside the
others. Theology is the master
blueprint on which all other blueprints are mapped”
- -- Paul Hiebert, missionary
anthropologist
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8
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- Knowledge, death, reality, ethics, history, and the realness of human
beings are all focused on God.
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9
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10
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- God
- is distant:
- an intellect to be recognized
- not a person to be worshipped
- is an architect; not a lover or judge
- Cosmos is not fallen or abnormal
- John Locke, Buckmeister Fuller, Voltaire, Albert Einstein
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11
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- Cosmos is a closed, linear cause and effect system
- “Clockwork universe” -- God simply left it to run on its own
- God, as the First Cause, never intervenes
- Miracles are not possible
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12
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- Dialectical materialism / secular humanism
- God is removed: history was self-activating
- Human personality is only an interrelation of chemical properties
- Values are manmade
- Bertrand Russell, Astrophysicist Carl Sagan
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13
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- “Free will as it is traditionally conceived …simply does not exist….
There is no way that the evolutionary process as it is currently
conceived can produce a being that is truly free to make choices” –
William Provine, naturalistic, atheistic biologist at Cornell University
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14
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- C.S. Lewis in his book Miracles – Naturalism is self-refuting because it
is inconsistent with the validity of reasoning.
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15
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- Extreme pessimism / skepticism
- Nothing has meaning, value, significance, dignity or worth
- Human beings are conscious machines with no ability to effect their
destiny
- Human animal only invents values
- B.F. Skinner
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16
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- Humanity is central: people make themselves who they are
- Knowledge is subjective
- No absolute moral values
- History is uncertain and even unimportant
- Supernatural is brushed aside
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17
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18
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- Even the theistic version says that the Bible, though “religiously
true,” is historically
untrustworthy.
- Tillich, Sartre, Camus
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19
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- Many (if not all) roads lead to the One
- Ideas are not really important
- Time is unreal
- History is cyclical
- Desire to enter the undifferentiated One; in one sense, each person is
God
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20
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- “Core” experience is cosmic consciousness
- No personal God; only a mysterious Force; no Lord of the Universe unless
it be us
- Borrows heavily from animism
- Actress Shirley McClaine
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21
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- The invisible universe is accessible through altered states of
consciousness
- Drugs used to enhance human consciousness
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22
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- All stories equally valid
- Focus changes from being to knowing
- Paradoxically, reality is forever hidden
- Any story but my own is oppressive
- Social good = whatever society takes it to be at the moment
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23
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- The postmodernist stares blankly at any claims to truth and shrugs: “Okay if it works for you.”
- “There are many kinds of truths and consequently, there is no truth” --
Nietzsche
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24
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25
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- “Truth is what one’s peers let one get away with” -- Richard Rorty
- “Postmodern ethics inevitably slides in the direction of nihilism,
holding that since nothing is really true, nothing is necessarily good”
-- Gerard Reed
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26
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- A topic not dealt with specifically in Sire
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27
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- They live without a daily awareness of or reference to God and His
church
- They think God and His people are irrelevant
- To them Christianity is boring and perhaps even untrue
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28
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- They may look and sound religious . . . Their gods are things like
money, sex, materialism, success, power,
social acceptance or some philosophical system
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29
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- A look at James Sire’s
- The Universe Next Door
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