The commitment in feeling absolutely safe
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Date
Authors
Kroesbergen, Hermen
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Abstract
The experience of feeling safe even in the midst of trials and temptations seems to be a central feature of the Christian faith. In this article I will try to solve some possible difficulties in understanding this kind of absolute safety by discussing some problems noted by philosophers in connection with the related statements by Socrates that a good man cannot be harmed, and by Wittgenstein that he sometimes feels absolutely safe, that nothing can injure him whatever happens. First, I will investigate whether there is an invalid prediction implied in this feeling of absolute safety: how can someone know that nothing will hurt him or her? Second, I will examine whether this experience of complete safety is dependent upon impossible requirements, such as to be a good man or an impeccable Christian. Third, I will consider the character of the people who claim absolute safety as portrayed by different philosophers: do these people really need to be so cold and inhumanly detached from the world for them to be able to say that nothing can hurt them? I will argue that if, instead of asking how someone can claim absolute safety, we ask to what someone commits him- or her-self in making this claim, these difficulties disappear.
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Keywords
Absolute safety, Peter Winch, Socrates, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Commitment
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Kroesbergen, H. The commitment in feeling absolutely safe. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion (2018) 84: 185-203. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11153-018-9680-3.