Philosophy versus Revelation: which is real, which is false?

Philosophy versus Revelation: which is real, which is false?

Philosophy versus Revelation: which is actual, which is false?


Philosophy is the product of man's own imaginative thinking, the aroma of its conjecture. Religion is a divine, presumably, believed.


Each philosophy and religion deal with all aspects of what the human thoughts can envisage. Both predict a planet-view and a universal outlook. Each deal with explanations of what we observe and what we are in a position to think upon.


Each are theoretical frameworks that do not deliver proof nor evidence for their proclamation. Both philosophy and religion present man an insight into items, objects and phenomena. Each call on logic to persuade the thoughts and the heart to think and accept what they assume.


Where philosophy and religion component provider is in the origin of the proclamations and premises they proclaim. This origin is man in philosophy and God in revelation. If you do not happen to think in God then you would think of religion as a product of man. The great majority of human beings believe it is the product of man's personal thinking and imagination.


While philosophy attempts to draw out for you a cornerstone of thought embedded, irrespective of whether in materialism or in metaphysics, religion asserts that God is the only cornerstone for every little thing.


Philosophy delivers you an explanation of the universe and religion sends the universe to its creator God. Philosophy may possibly or may not believe in God for it is the product of humans and these are prone to belief and disbelief, even though religion's only thesis is God is.


From Platonic believed to Nietzschean believed and to Bertrand Russell thought and Jean Paul Sartre, we have presumptions that God does not exist. From Aristotle to Leibniz, Kant and Kierkegaard God is an absolute necessity needed by the necessity of the mind and moral necessity.


So right here you are faced with two categories of thinkers who assume about the very same thing, and take for their thinking the similar phenomenon, but have two opposite points of view and opposite beliefs.


Religion, all religions, the concept of the divine is important. While some religions think in polytheism, like Hindus, or Sikh, and monotheistic religions believe in the oneness of God, like Judaism, Christianity and Islam, although Christianity think in a Trinity of God the son, God the father and the Holy ghost. Islam and Judaism believe in the indivisible a single God, the eternal, who does not beget and is not begotten.


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