Archive for the ‘ Logic ’ Category
Fantastic post by Justin Holcomb on some Van Tillian presuppositional thought: BORROWED ELEMENTS? The non-Christian account of science falters under the weight of numerous internal contradictions. It should be remembered that non-Christians do science (and usually do so very well), but they cannot give an account for the very science they are doing without relying [ READ MORE ]
I am so incredibly thankful for @justinholcomb posting this on The Resurgence. If you are interested in a better understanding of faith, logic, worldviews and reasoning then you need to listen to this debate. This is the very debate that sparked an interest in apologetics and ethics in me. This will also come in very [ READ MORE ]
From our friends at Mediachange.org Have you ever wondered what you would have done had you been alive in 1940 and was one of those who knew about the Holocaust? Would you have been a person of action or a person of silence? It is perhaps one of the most important issues to wrestle with. [ READ MORE ]
The classic… must read (or listen)… thanks to “the domain for truth[ READ MORE ]
Very helpful post from our friends at the, “Domain for Truth.” SESSION FOUR: THE AUTHORITY OF THE BIBLE: THE SELF-AUTHORIZING SCRIPTURE I. The Concept of Authority a. Definition i. “Authority itself means that right or power to command action or compliance, or to determine belief or custom, expecting obedience from those under authority, and in turn giving responsible account [ READ MORE ]
Timmy Brister has some great great posts for Christian’s wanting to engage culture: Part 1: Summary/Overview Part 2: The Three Tiers Part 3: Situational, Existential, Normative Part 4: Creation and Fall[ READ MORE ]
If you want a good analysis of Peter Enns theological method from a presuppositional perspective or a breakdown of logical fallacies check out my friend Jim’s posts. Here – theological method behind the formulation of his bibliology Here – Enn’s fallacies Enjoy[ READ MORE ]
Our friend Steve at Triablogue shared this on his blog: A friend of mine, who used to be one of Frame’s TAs, and is currently teaching at SEBTS, shared this with me: In any case of knowledge there is going to be: – belief. But this is an existential matter, and subject to various subjective, [ READ MORE ]
Introduction to Logic, John Robbins (18 lectures) Introduction to Logic Definition of Terms Logic and Theology: The Westminster Confession Informal Fallacies, Part 1 Informal Fallacies, Part 2 Logic and Theology: Christ’s Use of Logic Definitions Formal Logic Logic and Theology: Paul’s Use of Logic Categorical Forms Immediate Inference, Validity, Euler Circles Logic and Theology: Empirical [ READ MORE ]
Some notes from Peter Kreeft’s Socratic Logic (pp. 28-33): There are three kinds of thoughts, or three acts of the mind: Simple apprehension [understanding a simple term--e.g., "man"] Judging [relating two concepts by predicating one term of the other--e.g., "man is mortal"] Reasoning [relating two or more judgments with a conclusion--e.g., "man is mortal; I'm a man; [ READ MORE ]
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