"Word", Words, and World: How a Wittgensteinian Perspective on Metaphor-Making Reveals the Theo-Logic of Reality
Synopsis
The question this book aims to address is: how do we take on board post-modern insights regarding the relationship between language and world without losing our grip on theological truth? Employing the linguistic philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein as 'philosophical hand-maid' (as opposed to 'metaphysical gate-keeper', which has tended to be the case), it subjects to critique both traditional realist and post-modern constructivist perspectives as it examines how the nature and role of metaphor-making at the creative edge of language casts light on the God-language-world relationship. It concludes that a Wittgensteinian understanding of the relationship between language and world is not only compatible with a 'theistic-realist' doctrine of God but that the shape of this doctrine is inescapably Trinitarian.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
- ISBN: 9783034302302
- Number of pages: 260
- Dimensions: 151 x 225 x 14 mm
- Weight: 380g
- Languages: English
