rusmeister,
Not sure why you think one must be religious in order to study theology. Last I heard one is not required to be an adherent to learn about a discipline.
To be sure, Catholic theology is not done solely by Catholics. But theology is undoubtedly done from a religious paradigm. This is what I mean by a flagrant bias. A Catholic theologian works within a certain framework that favors the fundamental tenets of Catholic theology, to whatever degree. In other words, have you ever read an atheist theologian? Theology is a field that works to defend and prove itself. This isn't disinterested scholarship. It's polemicism.
If you mean "what a lot of people like" then again, clear.
Yeah, that is what I meant, and of course include myself in that lot of people.
In short, "relevance" here is a rhetorical weapon with no ammo.
I said nothing about truth. You did. I said that theology is culturally irrelevant. It is. Your constant assertion of truth doesn't have much ammo from my perspective, either.
Just so we acknowledge that radical agendas can exist among the proudly irreligious as well.
I do indeed acknowledge that. Also I thought you were Russian, hence my comments about American academia above. My bad.
If you take a posit and develop ramifications from it, which describes how traditional thought and philosophy developed, then you have a valid field of study.
That's precisely why I don't think theology is valid. It takes as its presupposition a wildly controversial and far from
a priori truth: God exists. No one who has set out to prove God's existence - from Anselm, to Aquinas, to Descartes - has started with the presupposition that maybe God
doesn't exist. It's often a hidden presupposition, but take a look at their proofs. It's there. Particularly in, say, Anselm's conception of God's attributes, or Aquinas's irrational assumption that there is a unitary God. Those are just quick examples.
By now you might have picked up that I get a kick out of busting on terms like "contemporary" or "modern", both of which merely mean "that which is now" - and since now is an ever-changing term, it can have no meaning of lasting value. It effectively means "temporary" but few people think that far, imo.
I don't think "contemporary" or "modernism" are inherently valuable concepts. But I do believe in progress, and I believe I see progress in Western thought today, towards a more thoughtful, reasoned, nuanced, and at times beautiful conception of reality that always leaves room for faith, for spirituality, and for science. Not necessarily for religion.
To say that "religion and philosophy have diverged" is merely to say that there has been a growth in philosophy that rejects religion.
Yes. That's exactly what I meant. I think, then, that your prediction that philosophy will be left in the dust as religion has been is a
non sequitur, because the two fields aren't even all that similar any longer. Philosophy, after all, was one of the fields that abandoned religion in the first place. To take an example of that, check my induction thread. (Good stuff, btw. Just sayin'.) Epistemology in the time of Descartes used God's existence and/or intervention to explain certain disparities or inconsistencies like the ones being discussed in that thread. Not so much anymore. God isn't even in the epistemological formula anymore.