On philosophy and enchantment

Philosophy is the work of reason as it seeks to know the truth of what is. Philosophy begins in intuition and ends in argued conclusions. But we can know reality only after its own manner. The inner lives of human beings can only be known by their being told to us, revealed to us. All of reality...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of interdisciplinary studies
Main Author: Schall, James V. 1928- (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:English
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Published: Institute for Interdisciplinary Research [2017]
In: Journal of interdisciplinary studies
RelBib Classification:AG Religious life; material religion
NBE Anthropology
VA Philosophy
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Summary:Philosophy is the work of reason as it seeks to know the truth of what is. Philosophy begins in intuition and ends in argued conclusions. But we can know reality only after its own manner. The inner lives of human beings can only be known by their being told to us, revealed to us. All of reality bears its own fascination if we know how to see it. What life is about is seeing it, then on seeing it, living with it, or perhaps not seeing, to live without what we should have seen. Only individuals who think and who can see relationships between things can be charmed by them. They alone can see in real things intimations of more than they can grasp by themselves. The "en-chanted" world was a world in which, everywhere we looked, we found traces, footprints of the divine or at least of story, intelligence, and order. Enchantment and intelligence support each other, both are needed for a knowledge of the whole.
ISSN:0890-0132
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of interdisciplinary studies