On the Very Idea of Theological Knowledge:
A Comparison of Theology and Science
Presented
to the Fourth Peking Symposium in Philosophy & Religious Studies
Peking
University, October 20-24, 1998
Publication
summary published in Chinese, in a volume edited by Mel Stewart and Zhao
Dunhua, from Peking University Press.
Alan G. Padgett
Azusa Pacific University
[now at Luther Seminary. Email: apadgett@luthersem.edu]
Return to Alan Padgett’s Home Page
It is an honor and a pleasure to
return to Beijing for yet a third time.
Once again we are all in debt to the symposium organizers, Mel Stewart,
William Hasker, Zhao Dunhua and Liu Zongkun.
The hospitality of the Departments of Religious Studies and Philosophy
at Peking University has been most kind.
I was privileged to speak twice
before at Peking University on topics relating religion and science. This present essay continues that series,
but with a particular focus. In
“Religion and Science in Christian Perspective” I argued that natural science
cannot replace theology.[1] On the contrary, science and technology need
the values of religious wisdom in our time more than ever! My second paper rejected the Western,
Enlightenment goal of “neutrality” and “value-free” inquiry in religious
studies and in science. Against the
myth of neutrality, I urged that religious wisdom can provide virtues and
guidance which help us in the quest to know about this world (science) and to
know about the Supreme Ultimate reality (theology).[2] In the present essay, I consider further the
nature and character of theological knowledge, compared to scientific
knowledge. Against the philosophers who
would question the very idea of theological knowledge, especially Lao Tzu,
Heidegger and Wittgenstein, I argue that such knowledge is possible for human
beings in this world.
My favorite classical Chinese text
is the Tao Te Ching. The famous
beginning of this beautiful work is this:
The Tao
which can be uttered (tao-ed) is not the eternal Tao;
The
name which can be named is not the eternal Name;
The
Nameless was the beginning of heaven and earth.
Here
we find Lao Tzu denying even the possibility of what I am going to call
"theological knowledge." We
simply cannot know true propositions about Ultimate Reality (the Tao). The Tao transcends any and all attempts to
express itself in propositions. For the
purposes of this present paper, let us agree to use the term "Tao" to
stand for Ultimate Reality as various religions understand it (God,
Nothingness, Brahman, etc.) This is the
same Reality that Zhao Dunhua calls “the religious Gegenstand” in his
contribution to our Symposium.[3]
What counts, then, as knowledge of
the Tao? What then is theological
knowledge? It is first of all not
knowledge about a religion. Knowledge
about religions is certainly possible, for religion is a human institution with
history, texts and artifacts. No one
should deny that we can have knowledge about religion – otherwise the
Department of Religious Studies at Peking University would be out a job! What I mean by theological knowledge is
knowledge of the Ultimate Reality (Tao) which religious faith is about. Theology, as I use the term, is the
conceptual, abstract dimension of a religious tradition. In this sense there is Muslim, Hindu,
Christian and even Taoist "theology." In Western religious terms,
theological knowledge is knowledge about God, and not about religion, human
religious experience, nor religious faith.
Theological knowledge may come through a religious tradition,
religious experience, or religious faith, but these items are not what
theological knowedge is about.
Theology, after all, is the study of God or the Tao. Theology therefore should not be confused
with religious studies, even though it often is. Religious studies is the study of religion; theology is the study
of the Tao.
In his recent, excellent volume on Religion
and Revelation, Prof. Keith Ward of Oxford University sets forth a program
of “comparative theology” which is not part of any religious tradition.[4] Ward wants to study God from the perspective
of any and all religious traditions, scriptures and experiences. While this is certainly a valuable project,
I would myself call his inquiry “philosophy of religion” rather than
theology. I would like to reserve the
term “theology” for a study advanced from within a particular religious
worldview.
What, then, is theological knowledge? Ward wants to move us away from the older concept of theological knowledge as doctrine, that is, as assured propositional knowledge. “The propositions of theology are concerned to articulate and express, always provisionally and indirectly, such disclosures and forms of commitment [within a religion], rather than to define a set of truths which are directly and precisely descriptive of suprasensory reality” (29f.) Ward rightly insists that the communal and traditioned project of knowing God is best understood as modest, provisional, dialectical and open to revision. Even conceived in such modest terms, however, is theology possible? Can we have conceptual, propositional knowledge of the Tao? My thesis in this essay is yes, theological knowledge is possible. After a brief examination of some objections to theology, I will compare theological to scientific knowledge in order to better understand the differences between natural science and theology. I then set forth six criteria for theological knowledge in a pluralistic community of inquiry.
"One who speaks does not know;
one who knows does not speak."
Thus speaks Lao Tzu (Tao Te Ching, chapter 56, line 128). Like the Old Teacher (lao tzu) I must risk speaking about the Great
Ultimate (Tao, the religious Gegenstand), thus showing myself to be one who
does not know! But then theology is
always paradoxical. I have no quarrel
with those who think that theological knowledge is paradoxical, difficult, or
can never arrive at the full truth. My
complaint is against those who argue that theology per se is impossible,
or who misrepresent the object of theological study.
The two most important Western philosophers of our century are Martin
Heidegger and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Both
were very interested in religion, and passed through periods of genuine Christian
faith. Both respected religion,
religious faith and the religious way of life.
But alas for my project here, both were dead set against theological
knowledge! I can only briefly respond
here to their criticisms of the theological enterprise.
Heidegger began his academic studies
in theology, and tells us that theological studies brought him to an interest
in hermeneutics and phenomenology.[5] He published two essays on the relationship
between theology and philosophy, which have become famous.[6]
In this book, Heidegger correctly sees that theology is a "positive
science," that is, an area of knowledge with an object of study. So far we
are in agreement. But Heidegger
wrongly attributes to theology the study of faith (that is, "die
Christlichkeit" or Christian-ness) rather than the study of God. Heidegger claims that the “given” or basic
data of theological science is Christian faith and practise. “Thus we maintain that what is given for
theology (its positum) is Christianness. . . What does ‘Christianness’
mean? We call faith Christian. The essence of faith can formally be
sketched as a mode of human existence. . .” (9). Christianness, then, is the life of faith. And this faith is the basis of theology as a
positive science.
Heidegger is mistaken in his grasp of the purpose of theology as a positive science. I do believe that theology is a positive science, but with a different purpose. The purpose of theology is to understand the Tao. In this quest, of course, theology can and should make sense of the way of life within a particular religion. But this is not the only, nor the chief, purpose of theology. Rather, theology is the science of God, or the Tao. In making this mistake, of course, Heidegger is in good company! The problem with this common view is, in the end it collapses theology into religious studies (a collapse I am trying to avoid). This is so even when Heidegger allows that theology must also study “that which is revealed in faith” (9). For such a study can also be merely descriptive (for example, "Christians believe that God is so-and-so"). This is clear when, in another essay, Heidegger states: “Above all else one must determine what theology, as a mode of thinking and speaking, is to place in discussion. That is the Christian faith, and what is believed therein.” (22). On the contrary, if theology is a discipline at all (a "positive science") it must have the Tao as its object of study. What theology “places into discussion” is God, therefore, and not “faith.”
The other great philosopher of our
century, Ludwig Wittgenstein, had very different problems with theological
knowledge. He believed that a religious
way of life was a noble one, and should be pursued with the utmost
seriousness. His questions had to do
with the validity of religious language.
Religious language is legitimate, for Wittgenstein, when this
"language game" is grounded in a genuine religious form of life. Both Wittgenstein and Heidegger, then, see
theology as grounded in the way of life of a particular religion. And this is a valid insight. "Practise
gives [theological] words their sense" Wittgenstein tells us in some
illuminating passages from Culture and Value.[7] What is key to a right understanding of
religious language, then, is the way of life – and of suffering – that it flows
from. Wittgenstein rejected any notion
of theology that would make it like an explanation of something, or like a
scientific hypothesis.
There is clearly something right
here in Wittgenstein’s remarks. People
do not often come to religious faith because of some academic exercise proving
the existence of God. Religious faith
does not normally come about because of data, evidence and argument of a
scientific or empirical sort. Religious
belief is not a scientific hypothesis.
I also agree with the explicit insight of Wittgenstein, that we must
take particular care to examine the form of life which gives religious language
its sense. But against Wittgenstein and
his followers, on the other hand, religious beliefs and thoughts — once
entered into — can and do provide some blocks for building an
explanation. For example, the doctrine
of karma can be used to explain things.
Why are certain people born into great suffering and others into
relative ease and comfort? Karma is one
answer. To pretend otherwise, as
Wittgenstein and his followers do, is to distort religious language. The total separation of religious belief
from explanation and propositional knowledge is a confusion, and a
misrepresentation of religious belief.
Of course, the meaning of some religious language just is the way of
life it engenders. But to absolutize
this — to insist that this is true of all religious language and belief
— is a blunder in the philosophy of religion.
The most natural and faithful
understanding of religious faith (at least in the religions I have studied) is
to allow that religion does have an explanatory dimension to it. You can explain things in the world using
theological doctrines. Such
explanations are put forward in all of the world religions I am aware of,
within the history of their own theological developments. But Wittgenstein is surely right to
distinguish such "explanations" from natural science.
Finally, if we return to the Tao
Te Ching, critics in East and West have insisted that theological knowledge
is not possible because of the Mystery of the Tao. God cannot be grasped in human words, both Lao Tzu and Dionysius
the Areopagite (Greek theologian, ca. 500 AD) would agree.[8]
I agree also, with the main point. The
Tao cannot be fully grasped in language. Words are a poor instrument, but the only one we have. While the meaning of ordinary words comes
from ordinary life, language can be stretched to describe extraordinary
things. A good example of this is the
language of modern physics.
In contemporary physics, the matter and energy of the physical universe
are understood to be made up of very small, sub-atomic particles. Light, for example, is made up of photons,
and electricity of electrons. While
scientists call these things “particles” they are not like particles we know in
the normal world of our human environment.
These particles behave like waves of energy, too. But a particle and a wave are very different
things in our normal, everyday world!
The strange and fascinating sub-atomic world of quantum mechanics
demands a stretching and bending of our ordinary words and concepts, in order
to describe it. The same thing is true
in theology. The Tao is so far beyond
our ordinary world, that everyday terms and concepts must be stretched beyond
their literal use. But surely we can
refer to the Tao with metaphor and figurative language, even when our
descriptions of the Tao will always be less than fully adequate. The Tao Te Ching, after all, is
filled with just such metaphoric and poetic descriptions of the Tao. While a naïve realism for religious language
must be rejected, at the same time we can assume that metaphor, simile, figure
(and sometime even literal language) can and do refer to the Tao.[9]
I have argued against some
philosophers, that we can have knowledge of God or the Tao, the subject and
object of religious faith. If this is
so, the next question is: under what circumstances can religious language
qualify as knowledge? There are three
areas or “grounds” within which the believer can make a claim to
knowledge. My interest at this point is
not focused upon whether the believer does know something in any sense of the
word “know,” but rather upon the claim to know something made in a community of
inquiry.
My own epistemology has been influenced by philosophers of science,
especially C. S. Peirce, Michael Polanyi, and Imre Lakatos (as well as
Wittgenstein). For some years now, I
have been involved in the dialogue between religion and science. In the community of scholars interested in
this topic, upon what grounds can a theologian claim to know something about
the Tao? Both theology and science, in
my view, are rational disciplines, what Heidegger called “positive
science.” A reasoned and disciplined
inquiry into knowledge takes place within a community of inquiry (Peirce,
Polanyi), and within a tradition of scientific research or “research program”
(Lakatos).[10] The meaning of a word is its use in a
particular way of life, and in a given “language game” (Wittgenstein).[11] Within a reasoned, disciplined inquiry into
knowledge, the claim to know something means that we have reasons or
grounds to back-up our claim. These grounds or reasons are ones which are
taught and accepted within a particular tradition of inquiry. [12] Of course, in everyday life it would be
absurd to insist on these same standards.
For example, if I say that every American participant in this conference
had toast and coffee for breakfast at the hotel, in an ordinary conversation a
demand for evidence to back up this claim would be both rude and absurd. Even if, in the give and take of
conversation, some reason for doubting this claim were to come up, my appeal to
direct observation and memory would be sufficient to ground my claim to
know. As many contemporary philosophers
of religion insist, not all of our beliefs need to be grounded in evidence, in
order for our belief to be “properly basic.”[13]
However, I wish here to pursue the question of knowledge beyond what is
merely “properly basic” for a given individual. In a cross-cultural and pluralistic inquiry into the truth about
religion, that is, within a disciplined and comparative philosophy of religion,
on what grounds can and should a theologian or philosopher claim to know
something about the Tao? Especially
within the current dialogue between religion and science, what claims are
implicitly made when a philosopher or theologian says they know something about
the Tao? As a way of beginning to
answer this question, let us compare and contrast theology and natural science.
With respect to their similarities, both scientific and theological
knowledge make sense within (and come out of) a tradition of inquiry. Both are expressed in human languages which
are always understood to be less than adequate as tools for describing reality.
Both mean to refer to reality, and should be interested in the truth for its
own sake. Both contain theories, and
are interested in the evidence and arguments for and against such theories
(especially rival theories).
However, the differences between
scientific and theological knowledge are as important as the similarities! Theology comes out of a religious tradition,
and is based on faith. Natural science
comes from scientific traditions of inquiry, and is based upon pre-suppositions
(which can only loosely be called "faith"). Natural science arises from experimental evidence and observational
data, although its theories often go beyond what can be proven strictly from
evidence. The scientific attitude is
nevertheless to believe only so far as reason and evidence allow. Theological knowledge goes beyond what can
be well confirmed through reason and public evidence, and seeks only to be supported
by common reason and public evidence (not based upon it). Finally, the subject of study in natural
science is physical reality, but the subject of study in theology is the Tao.
Since theology is based upon faith
and goes beyond what is available through public evidence, when can we call
such belief "knowledge"? What
criteria can there be for a religious belief or doctrine to qualify as
knowledge within the debate between religion and science? The context for a claim to knowledge I have
in mind is what Ward calls “comparative theology,” that is, international and
intercultural philosophy of religion.
This is the kind of community of inquiry represented by the Peking
Symposia, for example. The same sort of
criteria will also work for the contemporary religion and science
dialogue. Let us examine, then, two
ways in which theologians have grounded their claims to know: revelation and
love.
Revelation. One quite good source for the knowledge of
the Tao is direct revelation, mystical insight, or immediate
enlightenment. Karl Barth, the most
important Christian theologian of the 20th century, insisted on this
point. Theology is grounded upon
revelation from God through Jesus Christ, and on nothing else. “According to Holy Scriptures God’s revelation
is a ground which has no higher or deeper ground above or below it but is an
absolute ground in itself, and therefore for us a court from which there can be
no possible appeal to a higher court.
Its reality and truth do not rest on a superior reality and truth.”[14] For a church theologian writing a Church Dogmatics, I believe this assertion is
fully warranted. Within a particular
tradition, any claim to knowledge can and must be based upon the religious
insights and traditioned reasoning which that community of faith has developed
over the years, centuries or millennia.
For Christians, this just is Jesus Christ as the incarnate Word of God,
the Holy Bible (as the Book of Christ), and the classical, orthodox consensus
found in creeds, commentaries and other texts.
If there is a true revelation from the Tao, then there is knowledge of
the Tao. This much is clear. But that is a big “if” at the start of the
sentence!
Keith Ward points to the fact that many religions claim revelation or special enlightenment. “It is useless to say that God makes his revelation self-authenticating; for Muslims and Jews say that as well as Christians, and they cannot all be right, since their alleged revelations disagree” (7). While such facts do undermine any direct claim to revelation, Ward goes too far in claiming that self-authentication is “useless.” It can be quite useful and appropriate in certain contexts. Even in the dialogue between religion and science, or between various religions and philosophies, it can serve a useful purpose. True and full knowledge of Christ, or Allah, or the Buddha is based upon religious experience, sacred writings or wisdom, and religious practise. To know these things it is necessary to experience them oneself, and such experiences are “self-authenticating.”
Even when we grant this point, however, we have not arrived at a sufficient criterion for knowledge claims about the Tao within a pluralistic, academic community of inquiry. Given the importance of revelation, however, the following criteria are necessary (but not sufficient) for a doctrine to count as “knowledge” within a broader academic community:
1. the doctrine
arises out of a religious tradition and community;
2. there is
sufficient warrant within the religious tradition for this doctrine, given what
counts as wisdom, insight, revelation and/or religious truth for that
community.
Reasons of the Heart. Within the Christian religion, there is a
long and illustrious tradition of epistemology based upon having the proper
virtues of the soul or mind. In order
to know God, it is necessary to have
faith in God and to come to love God.
Without honesty, humility, and love, any hope for a knowledge of God is
impossible. This viewpoint is in fact
the human side of the previous insistence that God is only known in God’s own
self-revelation. This tradition in
religious epistemology goes back to the Christian Bible. For example, the Apostle Paul wrote to the
Corinthian Christians:
Yet among the mature we do impart wisdom, althought it is not a wisdom of this age nor of the rulers of this age, who are doomed to pass away. But we impart a secret and hidden wisdom of God, which God decreed before the ages for our glorification . . . And we impart this in words not taught by human wisdom, but by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual things to spiritual people. . . But I, brother and sisters, could not address you as spiritual people, but only as people of the “flesh” (1 Corinthians 2:6, 13 and 3:1).
For Paul, the “flesh” here is a moral category, as the context of his letter makes clear. Because of the strife, envy, hatred and division among the Corinthians he was not able to impart any deeper wisdom, any fuller revelation of God. Spiritual truths can only be revealed to spiritual people. Within the development of Christian theology, Augustine, Aquinas, Pascal among many others have likewise insisted that true knowledge of God is based upon a right relationship with God, especially faith and love.
What are the implications of
this for our problem? First of all, if
Paul, Pascal, Augustine and Aquinas are right (and I think they are),[15]
then the quest for knowledge of God is not merely an empirical, logical and
scientific quest. The quest for
knowledge of the Tao is just as much a spiritual and moral quest. This has implications for comparative
philosophy of religion, and the religion-science dialogue.
If the quest for knowledge of
the Tao always takes place within a community of inquiry, given certain traditioned and communal norms and
virtues, there is still no reason in priciple why an academic community might
not agree on basic virtues and goals in the quest for religious knowledge. There is no reason in principle why some
values and affections might not be accepted by that community in its quest for
knowledge. In terms of the
religion-science dialogue, for example, the scientific community has developed
several intellectual virtues that can and should be part of any quest for
religious knowledge, too. John
Templeton and the Templeton Foundation, for example, are dedicated to bringing
the intellectual virtues of natural science into the theological domain, under
the rubric of “humility theology.”[16] Some of these virtues include intellectual
humility, a quest for truth, honesty and openness to the evidence. These virtues and goals should, in
principle, be acceptable to any serious academic community.
We could also include the
concept of a “rationality of communication” which seeks understanding, as
opposed to a rationality of success which seeks victory in argument. Jürgen Habermas, one of the most important
philosophers writing in German today,
has used the idea of a rationality of communication as a basis for
developing an ethics of communication.[17] A rationality of communication seeks to
understand one’s colleagues, and to be understood by them. Open and free dialogue is key to
communicative action, according to Habermas, rather than manipulation or
coercion. Again, these are values
which, in principle, should be acceptable to any community of inquiry.
In my own modest essay on
“Ethical Values through Religious Studies” I discovered in both the Christian
and Confucian tradition some intellectual virtues and values which I believe
can and should guide any comparative philosophy of religion, as well as the
dialogue between religion and science.[18] Besides the values and virtues already
mentioned in the previous paragraphs, a key principle is the desire for
knowledge to be in service to love and justice, that is, to human
flourishing. Knowledge sought only for
its own sake may be destructive, as the legend of Dr. Faust makes clear.
Even if, however, these values
and virtues become accepted within a particular community of inquiry into the
truth about the Tao, there is one virtue which cannot be settled upon:
faith. Faith is traditionally
understood to be required in the quest to know and love God. For example, the New Testament teaches that
“without faith it is impossible to please him.
For whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists, and that
he rewards those who seek him” (Hebrews 11:6).
However, if a community of inquiry is inter-religious, how can we demand
any particular religious faith for its members? Such a demand would exclude anyone who did
not share the same religion, and this would undercut the very purpose of the
dialogue. There is a possible solution
here, which is to seek to be open to belief in whatever truths and
experiences concerning the Tao manifest themselves. If members of our community of inquiry are open to belief, and
interested in learning from our own faith and its tradition, this is surely all
we can ask to begin with. In fact, this
would be an improvement upon the manner in which too many professors of philosophy
or religion approach faith, namely, as skeptics. A skeptical attitude will not advance the quest for truth about
religion, and should be abandoned.
Reflecting on the role of faith and virtue leads us to some further
necessary criteria for knowledge in comparative philosophy of religion:
3. it is a
sincerely held belief or doctrine, part of a theology which profoundly shapes
the believer's life.
4. the doctrine
is in consonance with human flourishing, and with good moral values and
virtues.
The affective, moral and spiritual dimensions of the quest for truth about the Tao demand at least this much, I believe. The word “consonance” is simply meant to indicate a vague agreement, and has no strict logical meaning (in includes non-contradiction, of course, but suggests more than that).
Reason, Evidence and
Argument. While we can and should
abandon a skeptical attitude toward religion and toward faith, a scientific
attitude is welcome (and these should not be confused). Any academic quest for truth can and should
respect whatever evidence, reason and good argument can provide. But as Richard Swinburne has noted in his
book, Faith and Reason, there are no universally agreed upon standards
of logic.[19] Alisdair MacIntyre makes this same point at
length in his excellent and influential work, Whose Justice?, Which
Rationality?.[20] What counts as reason, data, and “good”
argument are contested judgements, not matters of universal reason. While this fact is widely accepted, a
particularly important point is often overlooked. The debate about what counts as rational is distinct from, and
need not be bound up with, the debate about religious truths. In the actual, messy affair of human
history, of course, these two issues often come together. Take for example the reception of Aristotle
into Jewish, Islamic and Christian theology in the Middle Ages. Here the heated debates between various
sides included topics that were at bottom theological (such as the nature of
God), and also ones that were properly logical (such as the status of
universals). It is certainly true that
within the histories of religion and philosophy, theological and logical
debates have been closely intertwined.
My point is that this close connection is not necessary.
It is possible to establish,
independent of any religious disputes, agreed upon standards of rationality in
comparative philosophy of religion.
This same possibility is open in the dialogue with religion and science. One main thesis of MacIntyre’s work is that
our view of what is rational is part of a tradition of inquiry which also
includes a theory of the ultimate Good.
I believe that MacIntyre presses this point too far. We can (again in principle) agree on proximate
goods for human flourishing. It is true
that these proximate goods will be informed by varying conceptions of the
ultimate Good, which can find no agreed consensus. The agreement will also exclude many proximate goods which cannot
be agreed upon, even ones which particular religions or worldviews may find extremely
important. One the basis of agreed upon
proximate goods, we can then agree upon certain values and moral principles
which can then inform criteria for rationality. This, I believe, has been demonstrated by Habermas. On the other hand, we must reject the claim
of Keith Ward, that these universal principles of reason already exist. “There are some very basic rational criteria
which can be brought to bear upon all claims to truth, in religion as
elsewhere” (319). This is simply not
the case, as Swinburne and MacIntyre alike point out. There are no universal criteria for rationality. But based upon certain agreed upon proximate
goods, and upon a universal but vague “common sense” (which I believe Ward is
pointing to), it should be possible to develop agreed upon criteria for
rationality independent of any religious commitments. This is a point which must be pressed
against MacIntyre, at least in comparative philosophy of religion and the
religion-science dialogue (I yield to MacIntyre in the area of moral
philosophy).
Consideration of a scientific
attitude in the quest for truth about the Tao, therefore, lead us to some final
criteria for religious knowledge:
5. given our best standards of
reasonableness, and all available relevant evidence, the doctrine is at
least as reasonable as rival interpretations, explanations or theories put
forth by other religions and philosophies.
6. the doctrine is true (or at least not
falsified by all available rele+vant evidence).
Not many religious doctrines
will satisfy all six of these criteria.
The Christian doctrine that God is a Trinity, for example, does not,
since it does not satisfy criterion 5.
Remember, the “we” in criterion 5 refers to a pluralistic, academic
community: not the Church. It will also
come to pass that contradictory doctrines from different religions may both
satisfy all these criteria. One such
doctrinal debate would be the question of whether the Tao is personal, or
transcends the categories of personal and impersonal. In such cases, only one (or perhaps none!) of these doctrines
will in the end be "knowledge" (see criterion 6). We want our doctrines to be true, to count
as knowledge. But it is not possible to
know in advance what the truth is, in science or religion. We must settle for not falsified, and well
suppored, by all available evidence.
Resolving such doctrinal debates may have to await judgement of the
future. For now, within our time and
place, within a specific academic community, the theologian can be justified is
saying that she knows things about the Tao, and not simply that she believes
them. In any case, the very idea of
theological knowledge should no longer be denied.
[1] Published in English in Mel Stewart and Zang
Zhigang, eds., The Symposium of Chinese-American Philosophy and Religious
Studies (San Francisco: International Scholars Pub., 1998), 63-74.
[2] “Ethical Values through Religious Studies,” published in Chinese in Mel Stewart and Zang Zhigang, eds., East and West: Religious Ethics and Other Essays (Beijing: Central Compilation and Translation Press, 1997).
[3] Symposium papers are forthcoming in Chinese from Peking University Press, ed. Mel Stewart and Zhao Dunhua.
[4] Oxford: Oxford Univ. Pr., 1994. This is the first book in a multi-volumed work in comparative theology.
[5] This is disclosed in a dialogue Heidegger had with a Japanese philosopher, published in On the Way to Language, tr. P. D. Hertz (New York: Harper & Row, 1971), 9-10.
[6] These are collected in his book, Phänomenologie und Theologie (Frankfurt a/M: Klostermann, 1970), and published in English in The Piety of Thinking, tr. J. G. Hart and J. C. Maraldo (Bloomington: Indiana Univ. Pr., 1976). My references are to the English translation.
[7] Ed. G. H. von Wright with Heikki Nyman (Oxford: Blackwell, 1980), 85.
[8] See Pseudo-Dionysius: The Complete Works, tr. Colm Luibheid (New York: Paulist Pr., 1988).
[9] See the studies by Ian T. Ramsey, Models and Mystery (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Pr., 1963), Ian G. Barbour, Myths, Models and Paradigms (New York: Harper & Row, 1974), Richard Swinburne, The Coherence of Theism (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Pr., 1977), and Janet M. Soskice, Metaphor and Religious Language (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Pr., 1985).
[10] See C. S. Peirce, “Some Consequences of Four Incapacities” and “Truth” in Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 5, ed. Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ. Pr., 1965), especially paragraphs 311, 565-570; Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge (Chicago: Univ. of Chiago Pr., 1962); and Imre Lakatos, The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Pr., 1980).
[11] Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations (Oxford: Blackwell, 1958), paragraphs 7-21.
[12] See Jürgen Habermas, Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action, tr. C. Lenhardt and S. W. Nicholsen (Cambridge, MA: MIT Pr., 1990), 136-137 and throughout.
[13] The reference here is to Alvin Plantinga, in particular. See the essay by Kelly James Clark in this volume, for an introduction in Chinese. See further Plantinga, “Reason and Belief in God,” in Faith and Rationality, ed. A. Plantinga and N. Wolterstorff (Notre Dame: Univ. of Notre Dame Pr., 1983).
[14] Church Dogmatics, vol, I part 1 (Edinburgh: T & T. Clark, 1975), 305.
[15] See my essay, “Ethical Values through Religious Studies,” and the essay by William Wainwright, “Reason, Passion and Proper Function”, both in Chinese, in Stewart and Zhang , East and West, op. cit. In English, see William Wainwright, Reason and the Heart (Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univ. Pr., 1995); Linda Zagaebski, Virtues of the Mind (New York: Cambridge Univ. Pr., 1996) and W. Jay Wood, Epistemology (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Pr., 1998).
[16] See, for example, the book The Humble Approach.(1981; rev. ed., New York: Continuum, 1995).
[17] See his central work on this topic, A Theory of Communicative Action, 2 vols. (Boston: Beacon Pr., 1984-1987).
[18] Art. cit., note 2.
[19] Oxford: Oxford Univ. Pr., 1981, 33-45.
[20] Univ. of Notre Dame Pr., 1988.