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What and How We Know and A and not A
Encyclical Letter Fides et Ratio by John Paul II, (14 September 1998).
This has given rise to different forms of agnosticism and relativism which have led philosophical research to lose its way in the shifting sands of widespread scepticism. Recent times have seen the rise to prominence of various doctrines which tend to devalue even the truths which had been judged certain. A legitimate plurality of positions has yielded to an undifferentiated pluralism, based upon the assumption that all positions are equally valid, which is one of today's most widespread symptoms of the lack of confidence in truth. Even certain conceptions of life coming from the East betray this lack of confidence, denying truth its exclusive character and assuming that truth reveals itself equally in different doctrines, even if they contradict one another. On this understanding, everything is reduced to opinion; and there is a sense of being adrift. While, on the one hand, philosophical thinking has succeeded in coming closer to the reality of human life and its forms of expression, it has also tended to pursue issues—existential, hermeneutical or linguistic—which ignore the radical question of the truth about personal existence, about being and about God. Hence we see among the men and women of our time, and not just in some philosophers, attitudes of widespread distrust of the human being's great capacity for knowledge. With a false modesty, people rest content with partial and provisional truths, no longer seeking to ask radical questions about the meaning and ultimate foundation of human, personal and social existence. In short, the hope that philosophy might be able to provide definitive answers to these questions has dwindled.
The Last Word (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 4.
How is it possible that creatures like ourselves, supplied with the
contingent capacities of a biological species whose very existence
appears to be radically accidental, should have access to universally
valid methods of objective thought? It is because this question seems
unanswerable that sophisticated forms of subjectivism keep appearing in
the philosophical literature...
A Deadly Shade of Gold, 1965
I know just enough about myself to know I cannot settle for one of
those simplifications which indignant people seize upon to make
understandable a world too complex for their comprehension. Astrology,
health food, flag waving, bible thumping, Zen, nudism, nihilism — all
of these are grotesque simplifications which small dreary people adopt
in the hope of thereby finding The Answer, because the very concept
that maybe there is no answer, never has been, never will be, terrifies
them.
The Philosophical Works of Descartes, ed., tr. Elizabeth S. Haldane and GRT Ross (New York: Dover, 1955), pp. 85-86.
Philosophy has been cultivated for many centuries by the best minds
that have ever lived, and nevertheless no single thing is to be found
in it which is not a subject of dispute, and in consequence which is
not dubious...

