Pure reason is limited. If God did not reveal himself all the way up to Jesus telling us God loves us, maybe we're still offering human sacrifices to appease the wrath of an irritable God. Who knows for sure, right? There are realities that pure reason alone won't be able to know.
And sorry for doing phenomenological reasoning in a Thomistic way, jumping to my faith in order that phenomenological reasoning might access things unexplainable by pure reason alone, so that it can access that eternal realities and be able to further the investigation of phenomenology of things it could not have even thought about. My faith is teaching my reason how to think about things. My reason then can now verify by pure reason if the path taught by faith does not fail rigorous rational criteria, making reason create new avenue it could not have explored easily, but now it has already incorporated as its own.
Because I am not a pure phenomenologist, I leave such better correct enunciation of realities I am expounding here to their criterias and evaluations.
No comments:
Post a Comment