My essay affirms
a very orthodox view of Rabbinical Judaism, as our Chukat Olam (eternal law).
Not exact matches
He explains how the
orthodox view amongst theoretical physicists is that there is, «out there,» a perfect, unified law — it is the
very goal of the sort of «grand unified theory» that many physicists are aiming at.
Since it has always been a main contention of
orthodox religion that God represents the
very standard and meaning of morality, it comes as a shock to confront a
view in which God and morals seem to fail apart and to be separate.
Many
orthodox Protestants have
very similar
views of God as the Augustinians and Thomists, for example, the Princeton Theologians including the two Hedges and B. B. Warfield.
Rather than saying that Whitehead was
very deficiently Christian by
orthodox standards, Morris B. Cohen and Bertrand Russell complained that he was excessively Christian, or at least too Christian to be a rational philosopher.7 Whitehead, from a purely rational point of
view, was, as Pascal and James before him, a defender of emotion and feeling, or in Biblical terms, a defender of the heart, the raison.