1. Gregg, Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization (13 Jan 2025 – reread)

A hallmark of Western civilization is reasoned inquiry in pursuit of permanent knowledge (truth), Gregg writes in the Thomist tradition. Unaided reason degenerates into mere empiricism, sidelining the benefits of Christian logos while engendering pathologies such as social engineering, scientism, nihilistic skepticism, and relativism (i.e., reason reaching non-empirical truths).

Reason is not equivalent to the scientific method, for the premises of an argument may be self-evident: deductive reason follows a logical path. Judaism had separated human reason from mythology, and St. Paul is a key source of natural law, that which all men can discern (regardless of religion); however, Christian religion is not based on Mosaic law but first-hand witness of the miraculous – the resurrection is a historical event. Christianity’s contribution to rationality originates in God’s rational nature (logos).

Epistemological arguments, including the empiricism of Locke, encourage a view of religion as superstition and further that men are entirely shapeable (tabula rasa). This gave rise tot Prometheanism, but Western institution often reflect the truths of unchanging human nature. Islamic belief that only God establishes truth is despotic: the people cannot reason but only follow interpretation.

6. Gregg, Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization (25 Mar 2021)

Liberty, which has been vital to the West, derives from social commitment to search for truth and justice. Limiting reason to scientistic basis cripples that search, leading to pathologies such as promethean Marxism (social engineering), utilitarianism (undefined material progress), and Nietzschean will to power. Whereas the concept of logos, man’s foundational ability to reason deriving from supernatural rationality, connects reason with faith. The Greek concept, along with Jewish liberation of reason from myth and nature worship and Christian doctrines of God’s rational nature, natural law discernible to men, and human freedom to choose goodness and truth (plus universal brotherhood), form the basis of reason’s integration in the West. But from Bacon forward, faith was severed from reason and cast as superstition, while Locke asserted the human mind is shaped only by senses — there are no innate ideas. Scientism, core to radical empiricism, led to 19th-century ‘faiths of destruction’: the aforementioned Marxism, utilitarianism, and will to power (which exhibits skepticism’s flaw, the claim to be strictly empirical, but whose first principle is itself groundless). The consequent ‘dictatorship of relativism’ – the collapse of confidence in reason to determine non-empirical truths – is a persistent threat. Islamic voluntarism – truth solely from revelation – and specifically terrorism cannot be contested by a liberalism enervated by flight from reason. Newman was the first to counter scientism; Benedict XVI is the author’s modern hero; logos is to be recovered.