Digital Logos Edition
For centuries, humanistic philosophers have produced an endless array of books and treatises that attempt rationalize man and his thought processes without acknowledging God, the mediatory work of Jesus, or man’s sin. God holds all such efforts in derision and subjects their authors and adherents to futility. Philosophers who rebel against God are compelled to abandon meaning itself, for they possess neither the tools nor the place to anchor it.
In The Death of Meaning, Rushdoony clearly articulates each major philosopher’s position and its implications, identifying the intellectual and moral consequences of each school of thought and tracing the dead end to which each naturally leads. This penetrating volume provides clear guidance, even for laymen unfamiliar with philosophy.
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“In contrast, the non-Christian thinker denies in principle the total meaning and rationality of the cosmos, because he denies that it is the unified work of the sovereign God; in consequence, he insists on the ultimacy of his own mind and its ability to recognize what element of meaning there may be, and he imposes his own meaning upon reality.” (Page 12)
“I think, therefore I am.’ Not even the physical universe enters into this first principle, let alone God. The mind of man reigns alone, autonomous, and supreme in this first principle.” (Page 10)
“Hume did not deny that the physical universe exists; he denied that it could be known.” (Pages 24–25)
“In reality, with Descartes, modern man began a retreat into the confines of the mind.” (Page 8)
“The principle of Kant is that only in experience is there truth.” (Page 28)