1. "Philosophy of Religion" and "Theology" both refer to logically consistent inquiries, which usually take the form of arguments.
2. The subject of the inquiries of both "Philosophy of Religion" and "Theology" is the same: divinity. This is, …show more content…
As the subject of both inquiries is the same, the differentiating factor must lie in the form of the inquiry itself.
4. Inquiries can only prove the veracity of their conclusions if the negation of the conclusion yields a contradiction.
5. The only truths philosophy has available are those which are tautologically true-- that is, true by nature of their logical form. The proposition, (a) or [not (a)], is true by nature of its form. Yes, this seems to entail classical logic, although the truth is that it need not. Roll with me, here.
6. Theology has all philosophical truths available to it (that is, theology does not embrace contradictory claims).
7. The truthfulness of premises in a philosophical argument can only be evaluated in terms of their internal/external logical consistency.
8. Here's where the difference lies: Theological claims can also form inquiries where the truthfulness of a premise is not determined simply by logical consistency.
By now, you're saying... "Zach, this is too much. Break it down for me". To quote Dale Cooper... "Okay."
1. All arguments that are sound in the philosophy of religion are sound in theology.
2. Not all arguments that are sound in theology are sound in the philosophy of