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2016 | 5 | 1 | 33-53

Article title

Redpath on the Nature of Philosophy

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
In this article the author discusses Peter A. Redpath’s understanding of the nature of philosophy and his account of how erroneous understandings of philosophy have led to the decline of the West and to the separation of philosophy from modern science and modern science from wisdom. Following Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas, Redpath argues that philosophy is a sense realism because it begins in wonder about real things known through the senses. Philosophy presupposes pre-philosophical knowledge, common sense, which consists of principles rooted in sensation that make human experience, sense wonder, and philosophy possible. Philosophy is certain knowledge demonstrated through causes and thus philosophy is the same as science. Redpath understands science as a habit that we acquire through repeated practice. More precisely, a scientific habit is a simple quality of the intellect that enables us to demonstrate (prove) the necessary properties of a genus through their causes or principles. In this way, science is the study of the one and the many. Redpath argues that metaphysics is the final cause of the arts and sciences, providing the foundation for all of the arts and sciences and justifying their principles. Finally, he argues that with modernity’s loss of belief in God and its rejection of metaphysics as a science, utopian socialism has become an historical/political substitute for metaphysics.

Year

Volume

5

Issue

1

Pages

33-53

Physical description

Dates

published
2016-03-30

Contributors

  • St. John’s University, Staten Island, NY, USA

References

Notes

EN
Guest Editor of the Issue: Piotr Jaroszyński

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

ISSN
2300-0066

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-58d3b7d2-fad4-4fbb-8ffd-185eb1f99996
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