Lord God of truth and Concerning the teacher /

In Lord God of Truth, Dr. Clark examines four major problems in the philosophy of Empiricism: sensation, causality, imagination, and induction. He concludes that Empiricism fails to solve all four problems, but that Biblical Christianity either avoids or can solve the problems that stymie the... Full description

Main Author: Clark, Gordon H.
Other Authors: Augustine, Aurelius.
Published: Hobbs, New Mexico : Trinity Foundation, 1994
Edition: 2nd edition
Series: Trinity Paper,
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Table of Contents:
  • Lord God of Truth. Introduction
  • John Locke
  • Thomas Aquinas
  • Augustinianism
  • Sensation
  • Causality and Causation
  • Imagination
  • Induction
  • Lord God of Truth
  • Concerning the Teacher. The Purpose of Speech
  • Man Shows the Meaning of Words only through Words
  • Whether Anything Can Be shown without a Sign
  • Whether Signs Are Shown by Signs
  • Reciprocal Signs
  • Signs which Signify Themselves
  • Conclusion of the Preceding Chapters
  • These Arguments Are not in Vain
  • Whether All things, and also the Cognition of Them, Should be Preferred to their Signs
  • Whether Certain Things Can Be Taught without Signs
  • We Do not Learn Through Words which Sound Outwardly
  • Christ the Truth Teaches Within
  • The Power of Words Does not even Reveal the Mind of the Speaker
  • Christ Teaches within, Man Reminds by Means of Words Spoken Outwardly.

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