Worldview Seven Questions
Worldview Seven Questions
Worldview Seven Questions
2. What is the nature of external reality, that is, the world around us?
“Here,” writes Sire, “our answers point to whether we see the world as created or
autonomous, as chaotic or orderly, as matter or spirit; or whether we emphasize our
subjective, personal relationship to the world or its objectivity apart from us.” The
question is fairly self-explanatory, and answers to it stem from our answer to the first
question. If we believe in the Bible’s description of God, for example, then we are far more
likely to view the world around us as created, orderly, made of matter (i.e., there is no
pantheistic spirit that indwells all things), and objective.
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Conversations in 20th Century Literature
Worldview - The Seven Basic Questions
Question 6 is a question about morality, about how we view right and wrong. Sire gives
some possible answers: “Again, perhaps we are made in the image of a God whose
character is good, or right and wrong are determined by human choice alone or what feels
good, or the notions simply developed under an impetus towards cultural or physical
survival.”
2. What is the nature of external reality, that is, the world around us?
“God created the universe out of nothing and made it in such a way that it operates with a
uniformity of cause and effect in an open system.” (Note that the phrase “open system”
means that God is able to work miracles in the created order, which would override the
normal operation of cause and effect.)
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Conversations in 20th Century Literature
Worldview - The Seven Basic Questions
“The realm of ethics (right and wrong) is based on the character of God as good (both just
and loving).”
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