000 03036nam a2200241Ia 4500
003 OSt
005 20230719201236.0
008 180524s2004 CNT 000 0 und d
020 _a988-97451-2-7
040 _cNew Zealand National Baha'i Reference Library
100 _aWilliam S. Hatcher
_92102
245 1 0 _aMinimalism : A Bridge between Classical Philosophy and the Bahá'í Revelation
250 _a1st ed. 2002, 2nd ed. 2004
260 _aHong Kong
_bJuxta Publishing Ltd
_c2002
300 _a128 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
440 _aBooks for the World
_92073
500 _aDuring the axial period of classical Greek philosophy (roughly 500-200 B.C.E.), philosophers posed virtually every question that it is possible to ask concerning the world, humanity, God, and the meaning of life. Different schools of philosophy gave different answers to these questions. Some of these answers have proved wrong (e.g., Aristotle’s contention that rest is the natural state of motion of a physical body), some have proved true (e.g., Archimedes’ principle) and some remain speculative (e.g., whether or not matter is infinitely divisible). In the modern period, beginning with Descartes and his method, empirical investigation of the world replaced rational speculation about the world as the “prime mover” of philosophical (including scientific) thought. Empirical science is “bottom up,” beginning with concrete observation and then moving inductively to general, abstract laws and principles, whereas classical philosophy and metaphysics are typically “top down,” starting with certain abstract, general principles and then moving deductively towards application to the concrete. However, empirical science has been increasingly mathematized, especially after the 19th-20th century discovery of the new and powerful logic of relations (classical, Aristotlean logic was only attributional, not relational). This highly mathematized empirical science now finds itself facing the same questions posed by classical philosophy. Minimalism is the name given by Professor Hatcher to his method of applying modern relational logic retroactively to problems in classical philosophy such as the existence and nature of God. The answers obtained by a persistent application of this method are seen to coincide remarkably with the answers to these same questions found in the Sacred Scriptures of the Baha’i Faith. Thus, with respect to fundamental issues of philosophy, Hatcher’s minimalism seems to constitute an empirical/logical approach parallel and complementary to the exegetical study of the Baha’i Writings themselves.
650 0 _aPhilosophy
_vBaha'i Faith
_9798
650 0 _aPhilosophy of Religion
_vBaha'i Faith
_9123
650 0 _aPhilosophy of Science
_vBaha'i Faith
_9200
856 4 1 _3PDF
_aMinimalism : A Bridge between Classical Philosophy and the Bahá'í Revelation 2.0
_uhttps://library.abs.org.nz/cgi-bin/koha/opac-retrieve-file.pl?id=ae7d85572f1d9e7fc2469e81cee26f31
942 _2ddc
_cCHAPTER
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