Posts Tagged ‘Apologetics’

Unreasonable Faith? – Part II (with apologies to Francis Schaeffer)

A Note to the Reader:  The following is a philosophical treatise.  I do not intend for it to be easily digested.  I am far too inept as a writer to make this, in anyway, consumable for the masses.  I wish I were.  This being said, my aim is to put this in as plain a [...]

Unreasonable Faith?

The thing I miss the most about college, other than Saturdays in the fall, is the intellectual atmosphere.  The word university is very easy to break down.  Essentially, it means unity in diversity, hence uni-versity.  I loved living in a college town filled with people, students, and professors each with their own ideas and eager [...]

John Cusack and Existential Apologetics

Causality has always been a problem for my mind, and probably every other human mind on the planet. We’re never quite sure if one event caused another or vice versa, its the “chicken and egg” dilemma. It’s hard to write off coincidence. The mere fact that things coincide is a little mysterious. [...]