I have arrived…
I opened my Facebook this morning to find this:

It is conceited I know. But it’s not every day one of your intellectual hero/ines is perusing your reading list. So I’ll indulge myself.
But seriously, his latest post on the nature of belief is well worth your read. It is interesting to observe how quickly a conversation, especially a theological conversation, concerning belief and the nature of one’s beliefs capitulates to what one can know with certainty — beyond the shadow of a doubt as it were — and the empirical factoids that one can observe in an ‘objective’ manner about the world. Belief is hopelessly reduced only to what one can sensibly see rather than pointing toward the incoming of a reality that, in Peter’s words, “does not yet exist,” the incoming of something wholly beyond mere fact, something wholly beyond epistemological certainty, and something wholly Other that inaugurates the very real possibility of the im/possible.
Peter draws particular attention to the absurdity of our relegating to the realm of absurdity any belief that might appear to be counter-factual. It is an important observation and one I hope we do not ignore.
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Bryan Riley
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themattscott
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UMJeremy

