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Analysis Of Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide To Contemporary Thought And Culture

557 Words3 Pages

Everyone has a worldview. All of our experiences and interactions, all of the movies, books, and music we feed ourselves with influences how we believe the world to work and how we comprehend our reality. According to Gene Edward Veith Jr., author of “Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and Culture”, “66 percent of Americans believe that ‘there is no such thing as absolute truth’”, which lines up with a Postmodern worldview (Veith 16). According to an article by ‘All About Philosophy’, a blog, Postmodernism is impossible to define because, in doing so, one would violate the postmodernists view that there are no “definite terms, boundaries, or absolute truths” (Postmodernism). Postmodernism’s “Grand Story”, or metanarrative, is to reject all Grand Stories, but if this is the case, they must reject their own metanarrative (or, as a postmodernist would say, lack thereof) – meaning they should accept other’s. Within postmodernism, no person has the authority to define a universal truth or impose their ideas of moral right and wrong upon others; however, every person has the right to define truth for themselves. It is hopelessly …show more content…

By trying to make meaning malleable and truths relative, postmodernists strip meaning of any value at all and allow morality to be defined by each individual, which negates the existence of structured societies and ultimately leads to the destruction of

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