Difference between revisions of "Reason"

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(See also)
(Christianity and reason)
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== Christianity and reason ==
 
== Christianity and reason ==
  
See also: [[Christian apologetics]] and [[Logical arguments for the existence of God]]
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See also: [[Christian apologetics]]  
  
 
[[Christian apologetics]] is the defense of the [[Christianity|Christian]] faith through logic/evidence based arguments. The term comes from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word ''apologia'', which means "defense".
 
[[Christian apologetics]] is the defense of the [[Christianity|Christian]] faith through logic/evidence based arguments. The term comes from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word ''apologia'', which means "defense".
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In addition, theists have a number of logic-based arguments for the existence of God (see: [[Logical arguments for the existence of God]] and [[Arguments for the existence of God]]).
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 14:05, December 29, 2015

Reason is the faculty by which one reaches judgment on matters of fact, and is applied through the tools of reasoning.[1] It can also mean the purpose toward which an action is performed.

  • To apply reason is to calculate, to think; to offer in statement the justification for one’s intellectual position, or a rational motive and logical defense for a course of action. Reason is what makes fact intelligible.
  • To reason is to engage in the applied effort of comprehending, inferring, and thinking in orderly, rational ways; to identify cause and effect. Reason is the power of the intellect by which man attains to truth or knowledge; the process of thinking rightly and justifiably.[2]

Christianity and reason

See also: Christian apologetics

Christian apologetics is the defense of the Christian faith through logic/evidence based arguments. The term comes from the Greek word apologia, which means "defense".

In addition, theists have a number of logic-based arguments for the existence of God (see: Logical arguments for the existence of God and Arguments for the existence of God).

See also

Notes

  1. See Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Kant's Account of Reason Consistency in observations is generally sufficient to confirm everyday knowledge claims: "the law of reason to seek unity is necessary, since without it we would have no reason, and without that, no coherent use of the understanding, and, lacking that, no sufficient mark of empirical truth…"
    See also Catholic Encyclopedia: Reason. Man is rational in the sense that he is a being who arrives at conclusions from premises. Our intellectual life is a process, a voyage of discovery; our knowledge is not a static ready-made whole; it is rather an organism instinct with life and growth. Each new conclusion becomes the basis of further inference.
  2. The War on Reason