What Can We Really Know?: The Strengths and Limits of Human Understanding

David R. Andersen
Foreword by Angus J. L. Menuge
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What Can We Really Know?: The Strengths and Limits of Human Understanding

David R. Andersen
Foreword by Angus J. L. Menuge
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Found in: Philosophy, Philosophy

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Overview

292 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Jun 13, 2023
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 292
  • Publisher: 1517 Publishing
  • ISBN: 9781956658545
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 0.96" L x 9.0" H
David R. Andersen holds a Ph.D. from Wycliffe Hall Oxford/Coventry University and has taught at several American universities. His other books include In Defense of Christian Ritual: The Case for a Biblical Pattern of Worship, Faithless to Fearless: The Event That Changed the World and Martin Luther – The Problem of Faith and Reason: A Reexamination in Light of the Epistemological and Christological Issues.

At a time when claims to know "the truth" are met with howls of dismay, and in which too many of us are being shaped by the defective knowledge communities produced by today's omnipresent social media, this book is a work of signal importance. Positioning himself between naive versions of common-sense realism and pessimistic versions of social construction, author David Andersen articulates a humble and helpful response to the title question in the form of "critical realism." Objectively, he argues, we can know much about what is "out there." At the same time, our knowledge is always shaped, for better and worse, by who and what we are as knowers. Andersen attends, that is, to the world we seek to know, but even more so to the knower him or herself. The first eight chapters offer an illuminating review of research on the latter, drawing equally on research in philosophy, biology, and the social sciences. Writing with admirable clarity, Andersen offers an even-handed presentation of the findings of contemporary research and reflection on human knowing, including such fraught issues as bias and heuristics. The final four chapters apply the results of this work to the question of belief in Christian theism generally and the resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth in particular. What is on offer here, in short, is much more than a review of old philosophical ideas about epistemology. It is a firm but appropriately cautious affirmation of the quintessentially human quest to know the world, the self, and God. Highly recommend!

 

Mickey L. Mattox, Ph.D.

Flack Family Foundation Chair and Professor of Theology

Hillsdale College

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