Questioning Our Knowledge Can We Know What We Need to Know?

Questioning Our Knowledge Can We Know What We Need to Know? by David W. Gooding, published by Myrtlefield House on May 8, 2018, is an illustrated edition comprising 412 pages. This book explores fundamental questions regarding the nature of truth and knowledge, delving into how we can discern the validity of competing worldviews. It addresses the complexities of understanding truth, its potential absoluteness, and the implications these concepts have across various fields, including science, philosophy, and ethics.
Readers will find a thorough examination of epistemology and its intersections with religion and comparative religion. Gooding and Lennox engage with profound inquiries about the recognition of truth and the foundations of knowledge, prompting reflection on how we come to know anything at all. This edition invites readers to critically assess their understanding of knowledge and truth, making it a significant contribution to discussions in philosophy and beyond.
Official synopsis Publisher
In Book 3 – Questioning Our Knowledge, Gooding and Lennox discuss how we could know whether any of these competing worldviews are true. What is truth anyway, and is it absolute? How would we recognize truth if we encountered it? Beneath these questions lies another that affects science, philosophy, ethics, literature and our everyday lives: how do we know anything at all?
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