In modern times, the majority of Western people's worldview is based on,
or influenced by, a philosophy of modernism deriving from the thought
of different philosophers and movements begun in the Renaissance,
primarily with the philosopher Francis Bacon, and developed over time
with philosophers such as Kant, Nietzsche, Karl Popper, and many others.
They began and developed a worldview founded in a sense of atheism -
or, rather, a type of humanism, replacing God with man. Though some
early modernist philosophers had some form of belief in God, as Galileo
and the American Founding Fathers did, it was still a worldview centered
on man, with God as a removed entity - i.e., deism, with God being
detached from the world and simply establishing its fundamental
scientific reality. Gradually, the philosophy of modernism has become
increasingly humanistic in the sense I have defined, relegating God to
the point of non-existence.
In the Renaissance, several changes
occurred that inspired this philosophical change from the scholastic
Catholic worldview of the Middle Ages, which was based primarily on
ancient Greek and Roman philosophy in combination with Christian faith.
As the Black Plague ended, commerce grew heavily, with merchants even
replacing nobles as the leaders of nations. This increase in money
created a mindset focused on man and nature, rather than God. Art
expressed this philosophical change, and the beginning of modern
science, politics and economics drove it. Another development of the
Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation, though not usually thought of
as a Renaissance-inspired movement indeed was. The Reformation was
inspired by a sense of nationalism and rebellion against religious
authority, best expressed by Luther and Anglicanism, as well as a
puritanist moralism expressed by Calvin that also contributed to future
modernistic philosophies.
Over time, the puritan moralism evolved
into the "problem of evil", which atheists used and continue to use to
dispute God's existence by citing the existence of evil, imperfection
and suffering in the world that God does not repair instantaneously as
evidence of His impotence and/or lack of benevolance, and thus
nonexistence. They also believed that due to the many evils Christian
individuals had done over the centuries, it was morally "better" for a
society to lack religious belief, again another philosophy of modernism
that lives strongly today. Early on, beginning with Bacon, modernist
philosophers believed that humanity has the inherent capacity and in a
sense destiny for success in all his endeavors. Different thinkers
proposed different methods for the realization of this success. Bacon
believed science would certainly bring about a perfect world if we would
only hope in human scientific progress, placing our faith in it rather
than God. And, political philosophers, from Machiavelli to the Communist
theorists, believed that through the removal of economic and political
"tyrannies" such as class structure, people would automatically be good
and motivated towards success, thus denying the free will of man to
choose good or evil regardless of his situation. This removal of God and
objective morality led to the horrors of 20th century Communist and
Fascist regimes.
Though Communism was mostly defeated, modernist
philosophy made another development based in previous philosophy but
coming to fruition in the 1960s. People took on a worldview based on
dualistic concepts of tyrants and victims, oppression and freedom,
conservativism and liberalism, religion and atheist self-centered
hedonistic spirituality. In that philosophy, most people are victims of
some oppressive, tyrannical force, such as religion, business,
government, etc., and to be free one must rebel against those forces,
and must soothe the pain of their victimization by hedonistic, liberal
pleasure-seeking of whatever urge one feels, all such acts "justified"
because one is a victim. For example, because of this "tyranny", the
"victim" should smoke marijuana, have random sex, get an abortion,
abandon their religion and sing/listen to protest songs to be free and
soothe their victim wounds. This "hippie" philosophy, combined with the
earlier modernist concepts of scientific progress, human will
determinism based on life conditions, and the tyrannical nature of
religion and objective morality form the general philosophy and
worldview of modern people.
Modernist philosophy is mistaken in
many ways, and its erroneous nature has been displayed by the evils and
fallacies in its implementation. God is Love, Justice, Goodness. Without
God, none of these things can exist, and the only reason humans are
capable of realizing them and adhering to them is because of God's
existence. These traits are the highest spiritual virtues and thus
constitute the highest spiritual entity, God. Without God, these things
would not exist, and so when God was removed from people's lives, they
were left to themselves, and though their conscience and reason kept
them from (usually) becoming too far gone for any semblance of goodness,
they committed horrific acts in the name of their "progressive"
philosophy, and are continuing to do so today with atrocities such as
legalized abortion, the death penalty, widespread drug use and
pornography, taking away all dignity and even life from the human person
and life itself. This will only continue to spiral downwards, and
though the Church is a voice "of one crying in the wilderness" (Matthew
3:3), diligently and lovingly proclaiming the hope (the only real hope)
of the Gospel to the world, it is the responsibility of individuals to
choose to follow it. We can only pray that they will come to know the
love of God.
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