Some reflections on a lecture by Mitch Stokes, a new fellow at NSA, concerning the differences between philosophy and theology.
Ultimately, I don't believe there is any room for an absolute distinction of theology and philosophy. This is what Stokes said: He defined both theology and "philosophy broadly construed" in Framean terms as "the application of Scripture to all of life." I agree with that, and would be happy to see philosophy departments admit defeat and close down. I don't have any desire to defend modern disciplinary boundaries.
In practice there is at least a relative difference between the two. How to characterize that? Mitch offered a definition of "philosophy narrowly construed" as well, suggesting, among other things, that theology tends to be more directly derived from special revelation than philosophy.
But here are some alternative characterizations that occurred to me:
1) It seems preferable to describe the differences in diachronic, historical terms, rather than in synchronic, spatialized terms. That is, theology and philosophy differ as two traditions of intellectual inquiry. Attempting to draw boundary lines, whether in terms of subject matter, method, or purpose, seems to lead to insoluable difficulties.
2) The difference is a choice of interlocutors. The theologian and Christian philosopher are both attempting to articulate what Scripture says, but they have chosen to do that with a different set of conversation partners. Theologians decide they want to spend time in the company of Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin, Luther, Barth, while philosophers (for inexplicable reasons) prefer the company of Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, Wittgenstein.
3) The difference is a choice of idiom or literary genre. Doing philosophy is like learning a new language, or like learning to write sonnets.
posted by Peter J. Leithart on Saturday, October 01, 2005 at 06:22 AM
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