Go home!


Go register!
RECENT ENTRIES
-Extinction of Europe?
-Testing Jesus
-Roman Patronage
-Genetic Platonism
-Sermon notes, Sunday after Epiphany
-Eucharistic Meditation, Second Sunday After Christmas
-Exhortation, Second Sunday After Christmas
-Transsiberian
-Persian chivalry
-Burckhardt’s style
-Afterlife of Baal
-Dutch Isis
-Pagan Stylites
-Fasting and pleasure
-Ashes and Dust
-Idolatry and culture
-Reformed fasting
-Greek and ANE
-The City
-Time and Incarnation
CATEGORY ARCHIVES
  • LINKS
    - Biblical Horizons
    - Covenant Worldview Institute
    - Theologia
    FEED

    CONTACT

    Comments:
    leithart@leithart.com

    Problems:
    webmaster@leithart.com





    « Previous Post | Next Post »
    « Previous post in category | Next post in category »

    Philosophy: Temporality of truth

    [Print] | [Email]

    Hamann agreed with Mendelssohn that there are “no eternal truths save as incessant temporality,” and in this he locates the difference between Judaism and Christianity: “it is solely a matter of temporal truths of history, which occurred once and never come again - of facts which have become true at one point in time and place through a coherence of causes and effects, and which, therefore, can only be conceived as true in respect to that point in time and space, and must be confirmed by authority.”  Authority, he recognizes, can suppress reason, but he adds, again following Mendelssohn, that “without authority the truth of history vanishes along with the event itself.”

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Saturday, September 27, 2008 at 8:39 am