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Overview
In the West today it appears that truth in any objective form is dead. At best it is relative and at worst it is created. Where does this leave us? If truth is dead and knowledge is only power, all that remains is a world of lies, hype, and spin. In Time for Truth Os Guinness goes far beyond well-worn attacks on "political correctness." He shows how current assaults on truth--from the president down--have grave consequences for Western civilization and human freedom. Yet Dr. Guinness also argues that truth is far from dead--not only is it alive and well, but it is undeniable and far from inconsequential. Truth matters supremely, he says, because without truth there is no freedom. In fact, truth is freedom, and the only way to live free is to become a person of truth.Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
Beloved Christian writer Guinness here bemoans current-day relativism and pleads with his readers to recognize the value of truth. We live in a new order, Guinness writes, in which "truth is dead and knowledge is only power." But this new creed will not bring about the utopia its postmodern boosters imagine. To the contrary, he contends, postmodernity, along with its cousin multiculturalism, may be the worst tragedy in all American history: if unchecked, it will end America's leadership of the West. (Clinton, "the first postmodern president," comes in for special opprobrium.) Guinness, however, is no fan of modernity, which, he says, relies too much on human reason. In place of either modernity or postmodernity, he encourages embracing the traditional religious worldview provided by Judaism and Christianity. Guinness is a lucid writer, and he presents his ideas without too much bombast (although his defense of faith is marred by a certain pro-American chauvinism). The ideas themselves are old news--which is precisely what Guinness likes about them. Unfortunately, he does not have the masterful gifts for apology of, say, G. K. Chesterton or Cornelius Van Til. In the end, even the reader who agrees with Guinness may feel that he sounds like an out-of-date grandfather arguing a case that has already been lost, with interlocutors who have already moved on to another conversation. (Feb.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|Book Details
Published
February 1, 2000
Publisher
Grand Rapids, MI : Baker Books, c2000.
Pages
128
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780801011955