Redefining Religious Truth as a Challenge for Philosophy of Religion

Authors

  • Peter Jonkers Tilburg School of Catholic Theology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.v4i4.265

Abstract

One of the most important features of contemporary Western societies is the rise of (religious) pluralism. Whereas (philosophical) theism used to serve as a common ground to discuss the truth-claims of religion, this approach seems to have lost much of its plausibility. What I want to argue in this article is that philosophy of religion as a critical intellectual activity still cannot do without the notion of religious truth, but also that it needs to redefine this truth in an existential way, i.e. by interpreting religions as concrete ways of life. In this paper I develop this idea of religious truth by interpreting religions as traditions of wisdom, being a kind of truth that is able to orientate humans’ lives without being swayed by the issues of the day. In order to substantiate my interpretation I discuss three fundamental aspects of wisdom, viz. the fact that it rests on a broadened idea of reason, the way in which it discovers the universal in the particular, and the insight that all life-orientations are based on a principle that is subjectively adequate, but objectively inadequate (Kant).

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Published

2012-12-22

How to Cite

Jonkers, Peter. 2012. “Redefining Religious Truth As a Challenge for Philosophy of Religion”. European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 4 (4):139-59. https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.v4i4.265.

Issue

Section

Research Articles