Tag Archives: grace

How is God the God of all Grace?

By contrast, the postulates of God and Immortality are rooted in the highest good. Kant’s doctrine of the highest good is the foundation of his positive philosophy of religion. Some scholars hold that we should mostly ignore what Kant has to say about the postulates, and, consequently, the positive part of his religious philosophy. The collective impact of these developments-the localization of religious institutions and imams, the concomitant loosening of state control over the religious sphere, mainly outside Syria’s larger cities, and the arrival of Salafi influences from the Gulf-all contributed to a more decentralized Islam after 2000. This permitted a more conservative interpretation of Islam to take hold at the local level, due to the relative decline in the influence of state-sponsored Islam and, therefore, the ability of the state to push back against doctrines it considered threatening. Over time, science gives us more and more answers. People are more into reading the things that appear on their mobile phone screens than anything else.

In this manner, things that can easily be explained using empirical evidence tend to trump explanations that are based on evidence we can’t sense. 311. Later he says, “In the United States even the religion of most of the citizens is republican, since it submits the truths of the other world to private judgment, as in politics the care of their temporal interests is abandoned to the good sense of the people. Thus every man is allowed freely to take that road which he thinks will lead him to heaven, just as the law permits every citizen to have the right of choosing his own government” (p. God, in himself, is immune from temporal measure. Every religion has got its own method or ritual that is to be performed when trying to make contact to your “God, Spiritual Being, angels” etc. In some of these religions they talk about meditation. Although Kant enumerates three postulates, freedom, God, and immortality, their etiologies differ. Chignell and Pasternack develop their interpretations primarily by way of an analysis of texts where Kant discusses the relationship between belief, knowledge and opinion. Note that while there are a considerable number of texts where Kant endorses the need for religious assent, we may nevertheless distinguish between a number of positions.

What is emphasized among these interpreters is the moral significance of religious assent rather than ontological commitment. AK 20:299. Note further that the spirit behind the “as if” attitude may be reemerging in a new form within the recent interest in Kant’s conception of moral hope. Kant further describes hope in relation to our interest in happiness (A805/B833). In the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant presents two distinct arguments for it. Kant then presents the highest good as a synthesis of morality and happiness in order to meet the axiological principles of supremacy and completeness. Kant, follows its traditional tripartite model as justified-true-belief, and if there is neither experience nor rational proof of any supersensible claim, no such claim can meet with suitable justification. Thus, it is not merely that we cannot prove whether or not God exists, but the concept of God itself, like all other concepts of supersensible entities and properties, (allegedly) cannot even have meaning for us. Most “pagans” are leftists who like “paganism” because they hate God and nature and morality and imagine that pagans were demented sexual perverts like they are. While the Critique of Pure Reason shows some sympathy for the Argument from Design, Kant remarks that it can only get us to a “Wise Author of Nature”, a being who is responsible for the order of nature, rather than a creator, a being with infinite capacities, or a moral being.

You will find that God is merciful, forgiving and takes delight in every sinner who turns to God for salvation and never turns anyone away. This being must further have the cognitive powers necessary to judge or moral worth, and, presumably, a will aligned with morality. Such may be taken as the spirit of Kant’s comment that “I must not even say ‘It is morally certain that there is a God’, but rather ‘I am morally certain’” (A829/B857). Even if we experience some event whose cause is supersensible, we have no way whatsoever to establish that this is so, and have nothing to guide our hypotheses about how to test for miracles or how they come to be. Even in other countries. In other words, while theoretical reason on its own ventures into this field without any valid warrants, the needs of practical reason, from which we form both our concepts of the postulates and the basis for our assent, is, Kant maintains, the sole basis by which we may extend our cognition (i.e., valid construction of concepts) into the supersensible.