Studies in Bahá’í Epistemology

Essays and Commentary
In modern times and, more specifically, since the appearance in 1781 of Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, epistemological issues acquired a special significance in philosophical studies. With the rise of Biblical criticism, Christian scriptural philosophy had lost its momentum, and nineteenth and twentieth-century thinkers focused on sense perception and reason as the two primary sources of human cognition.

A recently conceived and developed religious movement, the Bahá’í faith reintroduces the scriptural mode of thinking into philosophical inquiries. Its scriptural texts are well preserved and authenticated. Many of the writings by the founding figures of the faith explicitly address critical philosophical problems. They also employ the Aristotelian technical vocabulary with occasional addition of neo-Platonic terms.

In the West, epistemological studies from a Bahá’í perspective started in 1978 with the publication of Jack McLean’s essay The Knowledge of God: An Essay on Bahá’í Epistemology. Since then, Bahá’í thinkers have addressed different aspects of epistemological...Show More

In modern times and, more specifically, since the appearance in 1781 of Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, epistemological issues acquired a special significance in philosophical studies. With the rise of Biblical criticism, Christian scriptural philosophy had lost its momentum, and nineteenth and twentieth-century thinkers focused on sense perception and reason as the two primary sources of human cognition.

A recently conceived and developed religious movement, the Bahá’í faith reintroduces the scriptural mode of thinking into philosophical inquiries. Its scriptural texts are well preserved and authenticated. Many of the writings by the founding figures of the faith explicitly address critical philosophical problems. They also employ the Aristotelian technical vocabulary with occasional addition of neo-Platonic terms.

In the West, epistemological studies from a Bahá’í perspective started in 1978 with the publication of Jack McLean’s essay The Knowledge of God: An Essay on Bahá’í Epistemology. Since then, Bahá’í thinkers have addressed different aspects of epistemological research. They discussed the independent search for truth, the standards of knowledge, the problems of certainty and relativity, infallibility, and interpretation, as well as mystical experience. All those topics are explored in-depth in corresponding chapters of the book.

This volume includes contributions by Michael Karlberg, Jean-Marc Lepain, Jack McLean, Julio Savi, Mikhail Sergeev, Todd Smith, Peter Terry, and the late William Hatcher.

The Tractatus by Jean-Marc Lepain, which had appeared in its earlier versions in the Bahá’í Library Online, has been revised, enlarged, and edited for publication in its updated and final form in the book.
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Categories:
Philosophy
  • Contributors:: Mikhail Sergeev (Editor)
  • Format: Softcover book | 362 pages
  • Dimensions: 135 x 205 x 18 mm | 430 g
  • Publisher: M-Graphics Publishing, 2021
  • Language: English
  • SKU: BKS-PER-P.0515

About Mikhail Sergeev

Mikhail Sergeev holds a PhD. in philosophy of religion (1997, Temple University, Philadelphia, USA) and is an adjunct professor of the history of religions, philosophy, and contemporary art at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. He has served as (co-)chair of the department of religion, philosophy, and theology at Wilmette Institute (2017–21).

Titles by Mikhail Sergeev