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Worldview

A worldview or a world-view or Weltanschauung is the fundamental cognitive orientation of an individual or society encompassing the whole of the individual's or society's knowledge, culture, and point of view.[1] A worldview can include natural philosophy; fundamental, existential, and normative postulates; or themes, values, emotions, and ethics.[2]

Religious practices will tie closely to a religion's worldview.

Etymology Edit

The term worldview is a calque of the German word Weltanschauung [ˈvɛltʔanˌʃaʊ.ʊŋ] , composed of Welt ('world') and Anschauung ('perception' or 'view').[3] The German word is also used in English. It is a concept fundamental to German philosophy, especially epistemology and refers to a wide world perception. Additionally, it refers to the framework of ideas and beliefs forming a global description through which an individual, group or culture watches and interprets the world and interacts with it as a social reality.

Weltanschauung and cognitive philosophy Edit

Within cognitive philosophy and the cognitive sciences is the German concept of Weltanschauung. This expression is used to refer to the "wide worldview" or "wide world perception" of a people, family, or person. The Weltanschauung of a people originates from the unique world experience of a people, which they experience over several millennia. The language of a people reflects the Weltanschauung of that people in the form of its syntactic structures and untranslatable connotations and its denotations.[4][5]

The term Weltanschauung is often wrongly attributed to Wilhelm von Humboldt, the founder of German ethnolinguistics. However, Humboldt's key concept was Weltansicht.[6] Weltansicht was used by Humboldt to refer to the overarching conceptual and sensorial apprehension of reality shared by a linguistic community (Nation). On the other hand, Weltanschauung, first used by Immanuel Kant and later popularized by Hegel, was always used in German and later in English to refer more to philosophies, ideologies and cultural or religious perspectives, than to linguistic communities and their mode of apprehending reality.

In 1911, the German philosopher Wilhelm Dilthey published an essay entitled "The Types of Worldview (Weltanschauung) and their Development in Metaphysics" that became quite influential. Dilthey characterized worldviews as providing a perspective on life that encompasses the cognitive, evaluative, and volitional aspects of human experience. Although worldviews have always been expressed in literature and religion, philosophers have attempted to give them conceptual definition in their metaphysical systems. On that basis, Dilthey found it possible to distinguish three general recurring types of worldview. The first of these he called naturalism because it gives priority to the perceptual and experimental determination of what is and allows contingency to influence how we evaluate and respond to reality. Naturalism can be found in Democritus, Hobbes, Hume and many other modern philosophers. The second type of worldview is called the idealism of freedom and is represented by Plato, Descartes, Kant, and Bergson among others. It is dualistic and gives primacy to the freedom of the will. The organizational order of our world is structured by our mind and the will to know. The third type is called objective idealism and Dilthey sees it in Heraclitus, Parmenides, Spinoza, Leibniz and Hegel. In objective idealism the ideal does not hover above what is actual but inheres in it. This third type of worldview is ultimately monistic and seeks to discern the inner coherence and harmony among all things. Dilthey thought it impossible to come up with a universally valid metaphysical or systematic formulation of any of these worldviews, but regarded them as useful schema for his own more reflective kind of life philosophy. See Makkreel and Rodi, Wilhelm Dilthey, Selected Works, volume 6, 2019.

Anthropologically, worldviews can be expressed as the "fundamental cognitive, affective, and evaluative presuppositions a group of people make about the nature of things, and which they use to order their lives."[7]

If it were possible to draw a map of the world on the basis of Weltanschauung,[8] it would probably be seen to cross political borders—Weltanschauung is the product of political borders and common experiences of a people from a geographical region,[8] environmental-climatic conditions, the economic resources available, socio-cultural systems, and the language family.[8] (The work of the population geneticist Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza aims to show the gene-linguistic co-evolution of people).

According to James W. Underhill, worldview can periodically be used very differently by certain linguists and sociologists. It is for this reason that Underhill, and those who influenced him, attempted to wed metaphor in, for example, the sociology of religion, with discourse analysis. Underhill also proposed five subcategories for the study of worldview: world-perceiving, world-conceiving, cultural mindset, personal world, and perspective.[6][9][10]

Comparison of worldviews Edit

One can think of a worldview as comprising a number of basic beliefs which are philosophically equivalent to the axioms of the worldview considered as a logical or consistent theory. These basic beliefs cannot, by definition, be proven (in the logical sense) within the worldview – precisely because they are axioms, and are typically argued from rather than argued for.[11] However their coherence can be explored philosophically and logically.

If two different worldviews have sufficient common beliefs it may be possible to have a constructive dialogue between them.[12]

On the other hand, if different worldviews are held to be basically incommensurate and irreconcilable, then the situation is one of cultural relativism and would therefore incur the standard criticisms from philosophical realists.[13][14] Additionally, religious believers might not wish to see their beliefs relativized into something that is only "true for them".[15][16]Subjective logic is a belief-reasoning formalism where beliefs explicitly are subjectively held by individuals but where a consensus between different worldviews can be achieved.[17]

A third alternative sees the worldview approach as only a methodological relativism, as a suspension of judgment about the truth of various belief systems but not a declaration that there is no global truth. For instance, the religious philosopher Ninian Smart begins his Worldviews: Cross-cultural Explorations of Human Beliefs with "Exploring Religions and Analysing Worldviews" and argues for "the neutral, dispassionate study of different religious and secular systems—a process I call worldview analysis."[18]

The comparison of religious, philosophical or scientific worldviews is a delicate endeavor, because such worldviews start from different presuppositions and cognitive values.[19] Clément Vidal has proposed metaphilosophical criteria for the comparison of worldviews, classifying them in three broad categories:

  1. objective: objective consistency, scientificity, scope
  2. subjective: subjective consistency, personal utility, emotionality
  3. intersubjective: intersubjective consistency, collective utility, narrativity

Characteristics Edit

While Leo Apostel and his followers clearly hold that individuals can construct worldviews, other writers regard worldviews as operating at a community level, or in an unconscious way. For instance, if one's worldview is fixed by one's language, as according to a strong version of the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, one would have to learn or invent a new language in order to construct a new worldview.

According to Apostel,[20] a worldview is an ontology, or a descriptive model of the world. It should comprise these six elements:

  1. An explanation of the world
  2. A futurology, answering the question "Where are we heading?"
  3. Values, answers to ethical questions: "What should we do?"
  4. A praxeology, or methodology, or theory of action: "How should we attain our goals?"
  5. An epistemology, or theory of knowledge: "What is true and false?"
  6. An etiology. A constructed world-view should contain an account of its own "building blocks", its origins and construction.

Terror management theory Edit

 
In terror management theory, one's worldview helps to alleviate the anxiety caused by awareness of one's own mortality.

A worldview, according to terror management theory (TMT), serves as a buffer against death anxiety.[21] It is theorized that living up to the ideals of one's worldview provides a sense of self-esteem which provides a sense of transcending the limits of human life (e.g. literally, as in religious belief in immortality; symbolically, as in art works or children to live on after one's death, or in contributions to one's culture).[21] Evidence in support of terror management theory includes a series of experiments by Jeff Schimel and colleagues in which a group of Canadians found to score highly on a measure of patriotism were asked to read an essay attacking the dominant Canadian worldview.[21]

Using a test of death-thought accessibility (DTA), involving an ambiguous word completion test (e.g. "COFF__" could either be completed as either "COFFEE" or "COFFIN" or "COFFER"), participants who had read the essay attacking their worldview were found to have a significantly higher level of DTA than the control group, who read a similar essay attacking Australian cultural values. Mood was also measured following the worldview threat, to test whether the increase in death thoughts following worldview threat were due to other causes, for example, anger at the attack on one's cultural worldview.[21] No significant changes on mood scales were found immediately following the worldview threat.[21]

To test the generalisability of these findings to groups and worldviews other than those of nationalistic Canadians, Schimel et al conducted a similar experiment on a group of religious individuals whose worldview included that of creationism.[21] Participants were asked to read an essay which argued in support of the theory of evolution, following which the same measure of DTA was taken as for the Canadian group.[21] Religious participants with a creationist worldview were found to have a significantly higher level of death-thought accessibility than those of the control group.[21]

Goldenberg et al found that highlighting the similarities between humans and other animals increases death-thought accessibility, as does attention to the physical rather than meaningful qualities of sex.[22]

Religion Edit

Nishida Kitaro wrote extensively on "the Religious Worldview" in exploring the philosophical significance of Eastern religions.[23]

According to Neo-Calvinist David Naugle's World view: The History of a Concept, "Conceiving of Christianity as a worldview has been one of the most significant developments in the recent history of the church."[24]

The Christian thinker James W. Sire defines a worldview as "a commitment, a fundamental orientation of the heart, that can be expressed as a story or in a set of presuppositions (assumptions which may be true, partially true, or entirely false) which we hold (consciously or subconsciously, consistently or inconsistently) about the basic construction of reality, and that provides the foundation on which we live and move and have our being." He suggests that "we should all think in terms of worldviews, that is, with a consciousness not only of our own way of thought but also that of other people, so that we can first understand and then genuinely communicate with others in our pluralistic society."[25]

The commitment mentioned by James W. Sire can be extended further. The worldview increases the commitment to serve the world. With the change of a person's view towards the world, he/she can be motivated to serve the world. This serving attitude has been illustrated by Tareq M Zayed as the 'Emancipatory Worldview' in his writing "History of emancipatory worldview of Muslim learners".[26]

In the context of religious Islamic terrorist presumed socio-political and socio-cultural Islamic Weltanschauung, Carsten Bockstette defines Weltanschauung (German) literally meaning “world picture” as a believe based comprehensive philosophical conception of the world and of jihadist’s relation to it (believe-system).”[27]

David Bell has also raised questions on religious worldviews for the designers of superintelligences – machines much smarter than humans.[28]

References Edit

  1. ^ Funk, Ken (21 March 2001). "What is a Worldview?". Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  2. ^ Palmer, Gary B. (1996). Toward A Theory of Cultural Linguistics. University of Texas Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-292-76569-6.
  3. ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary". Etymonline.com. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  4. ^ "Weltanschauung – Definition of Weltanschauung by Merriam-Webster". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  5. ^ "Worldview (philosophy) – Encyclopedia.com". Encyclopedia.com. 14 December 2019. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  6. ^ a b Underhill, James W. (2009). Humboldt, Worldview and Language (Transferred to digital print. ed.). Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0748638420.
  7. ^ Hiebert, Paul G. Transforming Worldviews: an anthropological understanding of how people change. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Academic, 2008[page needed]
  8. ^ a b c Whorf, Benjamin Lee (1964) [1st pub. 1956]. Carroll, John Bissell (ed.). Language, Thought, and Reality. Selected Writings of Benjamin Lee Whorf. Cambridge, Mass.: Technology Press of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ISBN 978-0-262-73006-8. Pp. 25, 36, 29-30, 242, 248.
  9. ^ Underhill, James W. (2011). Creating worldviews : metaphor, ideology and language. Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0748679096.
  10. ^ Underhill, James W. (2012). Ethnolinguistics and Cultural Concepts: truth, love, hate & war. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107532847.
  11. ^ See for example Daniel Hill and Randal Rauser: Christian Philosophy A–Z Edinburgh University Press (2006) ISBN 978-0-7486-2152-1 p200
  12. ^ In the Christian tradition this goes back at least to Justin Martyr's Dialogues with Trypho, A Jew, and has roots in the debates recorded in the New Testament For a discussion of the long history of religious dialogue in India, see Amartya Sen's The Argumentative Indian
  13. ^ Cognitive Relativism, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  14. ^ The problem of self-refutation is quite general. It arises whether truth is relativized to a framework of concepts, of beliefs, of standards, of practices.Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  15. ^ Pope Benedict warns against relativism
  16. ^ Ratzinger, J. Relativism, the Central Problem for Faith Today
  17. ^ Jøsang, Audun (21 November 2011). "A Logic For Uncertain Probabilities" (PDF). International Journal of Uncertainty, Fuzziness and Knowledge-Based Systems. 09 (3): 279–311. doi:10.1142/S0218488501000831.
  18. ^ Ninian Smart Worldviews: Crosscultural Explorations of Human Beliefs (3rd Edition) ISBN 0-13-020980-5 p14
  19. ^ Vidal, Clément (April 2012). "Metaphilosophical Criteria for Worldview Comparison". Metaphilosophy. 43 (3): 306–347. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.508.631. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9973.2012.01749.x.
  20. ^ Diederik Aerts, Leo Apostel, Bart de Moor, Staf Hellemans, Edel Maex, Hubert van Belle & Jan van der Veken (1994). "World views. From Fragmentation to Integration". VUB Press. Translation of Apostel and Van der Veken 1991 with some additions. – The basic book of World Views, from the Center Leo Apostel.[page needed]
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h Schimel, Jeff; Hayes, Joseph; Williams, Todd; Jahrig, Jesse (2007). "Is death really the worm at the core? Converging evidence that worldview threat increases death-thought accessibility". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 92 (5): 789–803. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.92.5.789. PMID 17484605.
  22. ^ Goldenberg, Jamie L.; Cox, Cathy R.; Pyszczynski, Tom; Greenberg, Jeff; Solomon, Sheldon (November 2002). "Understanding human ambivalence about sex: The effects of stripping sex of meaning". Journal of Sex Research. 39 (4): 310–320. doi:10.1080/00224490209552155. PMID 12545414. S2CID 24419836.
  23. ^ Indeed Kitaro's final book is Last Writings: Nothingness and the Religious Worldview
  24. ^ David K. Naugle Worldview: The History of a Concept ISBN 0-8028-4761-7 page 4
  25. ^ James W. Sire The Universe Next Door: A Basic World view Catalog pp. 15–16 (text readable at Amazon.com)
  26. ^ Zayed, Tareq M. "History of emancipatory worldview of Muslim learners". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ Bockstette, Carsten (2023). Jihadist Realism: Countering Al-Qaeda’s and the Islamic State’s Communication Strategy. Dr. Kovač Verlag. p. 32. ISBN 978-3-339-13732-6.
  28. ^ Bell, David (2016). Superintelligence and World-views: Putting the Spotlight on Some Important Issues. Guildford, Surrey, UK: Grosvenor House Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781786237668. OCLC 962016344.[page needed]

External links Edit

  • Wikibook:The scientific world view
  • Wiki Worldview Themes: A Structure for Characterizing and Analyzing Worldviews includes links to roughly 1000 Wikipedia articles
  • (PDF). Archived from the original on 20 September 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (5.15 MB) – a 2002 essay on research in linguistic relativity (Lera Boroditsky)
  • (PDF). Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (50.3 KB)
  • inTERRAgation.com—A documentary project. Collecting and evaluating answers to "the meaning of life" from around the world.
  • The God Contention—Comparing various worldviews, faiths, and religions through the eyes of their advocates.
  • Cole, Graham A., Do Christians have a Worldview? A paper examining the concept of worldview as it relates to and has been used by Christianity. Contains a helpful annotated bibliography.
  • World View article on the Principia Cybernetica Project
  • Pogorskiy, E. (2015). Using personalisation to improve the effectiveness of global educational projects. E-Learning and Digital Media, 12(1), 57–67.
  • Worldviews – An Introduction from Project Worldview
  • "Studies on World Views Related to Science" (list of suggested books and resources) from the American Scientific Affiliation (a Christian perspective)
  • Eugene Webb, Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 2009.
  • Benjamin Gal-Or, Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy, Springer Verlag, 1981, 1983, 1987, ISBN 0-387-90581-2, ISBN 0-387-96526-2.

worldview, this, article, about, concept, worldview, satellite, class, digitalglobe, world, view, near, space, balloon, technology, world, view, enterprises, public, television, network, owned, networks, networks, worldview, world, view, weltanschauung, fundam. This article is about the concept For the WorldView satellite class see DigitalGlobe For the World View near space balloon technology see World View Enterprises For the Worldview public television network owned by MHz Networks see MHz Networks MHz Worldview A worldview or a world view or Weltanschauung is the fundamental cognitive orientation of an individual or society encompassing the whole of the individual s or society s knowledge culture and point of view 1 A worldview can include natural philosophy fundamental existential and normative postulates or themes values emotions and ethics 2 Religious practices will tie closely to a religion s worldview Contents 1 Etymology 2 Weltanschauung and cognitive philosophy 3 Comparison of worldviews 3 1 Characteristics 4 Terror management theory 5 Religion 6 References 7 External linksEtymology EditThe term worldview is a calque of the German word Weltanschauung ˈvɛltʔanˌʃaʊ ʊŋ composed of Welt world and Anschauung perception or view 3 The German word is also used in English It is a concept fundamental to German philosophy especially epistemology and refers to a wide world perception Additionally it refers to the framework of ideas and beliefs forming a global description through which an individual group or culture watches and interprets the world and interacts with it as a social reality Weltanschauung and cognitive philosophy EditWithin cognitive philosophy and the cognitive sciences is the German concept of Weltanschauung This expression is used to refer to the wide worldview or wide world perception of a people family or person The Weltanschauung of a people originates from the unique world experience of a people which they experience over several millennia The language of a people reflects the Weltanschauung of that people in the form of its syntactic structures and untranslatable connotations and its denotations 4 5 The term Weltanschauung is often wrongly attributed to Wilhelm von Humboldt the founder of German ethnolinguistics However Humboldt s key concept was Weltansicht 6 Weltansicht was used by Humboldt to refer to the overarching conceptual and sensorial apprehension of reality shared by a linguistic community Nation On the other hand Weltanschauung first used by Immanuel Kant and later popularized by Hegel was always used in German and later in English to refer more to philosophies ideologies and cultural or religious perspectives than to linguistic communities and their mode of apprehending reality In 1911 the German philosopher Wilhelm Dilthey published an essay entitled The Types of Worldview Weltanschauung and their Development in Metaphysics that became quite influential Dilthey characterized worldviews as providing a perspective on life that encompasses the cognitive evaluative and volitional aspects of human experience Although worldviews have always been expressed in literature and religion philosophers have attempted to give them conceptual definition in their metaphysical systems On that basis Dilthey found it possible to distinguish three general recurring types of worldview The first of these he called naturalism because it gives priority to the perceptual and experimental determination of what is and allows contingency to influence how we evaluate and respond to reality Naturalism can be found in Democritus Hobbes Hume and many other modern philosophers The second type of worldview is called the idealism of freedom and is represented by Plato Descartes Kant and Bergson among others It is dualistic and gives primacy to the freedom of the will The organizational order of our world is structured by our mind and the will to know The third type is called objective idealism and Dilthey sees it in Heraclitus Parmenides Spinoza Leibniz and Hegel In objective idealism the ideal does not hover above what is actual but inheres in it This third type of worldview is ultimately monistic and seeks to discern the inner coherence and harmony among all things Dilthey thought it impossible to come up with a universally valid metaphysical or systematic formulation of any of these worldviews but regarded them as useful schema for his own more reflective kind of life philosophy See Makkreel and Rodi Wilhelm Dilthey Selected Works volume 6 2019 Anthropologically worldviews can be expressed as the fundamental cognitive affective and evaluative presuppositions a group of people make about the nature of things and which they use to order their lives 7 If it were possible to draw a map of the world on the basis of Weltanschauung 8 it would probably be seen to cross political borders Weltanschauung is the product of political borders and common experiences of a people from a geographical region 8 environmental climatic conditions the economic resources available socio cultural systems and the language family 8 The work of the population geneticist Luigi Luca Cavalli Sforza aims to show the gene linguistic co evolution of people According to James W Underhill worldview can periodically be used very differently by certain linguists and sociologists It is for this reason that Underhill and those who influenced him attempted to wed metaphor in for example the sociology of religion with discourse analysis Underhill also proposed five subcategories for the study of worldview world perceiving world conceiving cultural mindset personal world and perspective 6 9 10 Comparison of worldviews EditSee also Social Axioms Survey One can think of a worldview as comprising a number of basic beliefs which are philosophically equivalent to the axioms of the worldview considered as a logical or consistent theory These basic beliefs cannot by definition be proven in the logical sense within the worldview precisely because they are axioms and are typically argued from rather than argued for 11 However their coherence can be explored philosophically and logically If two different worldviews have sufficient common beliefs it may be possible to have a constructive dialogue between them 12 On the other hand if different worldviews are held to be basically incommensurate and irreconcilable then the situation is one of cultural relativism and would therefore incur the standard criticisms from philosophical realists 13 14 Additionally religious believers might not wish to see their beliefs relativized into something that is only true for them 15 16 Subjective logic is a belief reasoning formalism where beliefs explicitly are subjectively held by individuals but where a consensus between different worldviews can be achieved 17 A third alternative sees the worldview approach as only a methodological relativism as a suspension of judgment about the truth of various belief systems but not a declaration that there is no global truth For instance the religious philosopher Ninian Smart begins his Worldviews Cross cultural Explorations of Human Beliefs with Exploring Religions and Analysing Worldviews and argues for the neutral dispassionate study of different religious and secular systems a process I call worldview analysis 18 The comparison of religious philosophical or scientific worldviews is a delicate endeavor because such worldviews start from different presuppositions and cognitive values 19 Clement Vidal has proposed metaphilosophical criteria for the comparison of worldviews classifying them in three broad categories objective objective consistency scientificity scope subjective subjective consistency personal utility emotionality intersubjective intersubjective consistency collective utility narrativityCharacteristics Edit While Leo Apostel and his followers clearly hold that individuals can construct worldviews other writers regard worldviews as operating at a community level or in an unconscious way For instance if one s worldview is fixed by one s language as according to a strong version of the Sapir Whorf hypothesis one would have to learn or invent a new language in order to construct a new worldview According to Apostel 20 a worldview is an ontology or a descriptive model of the world It should comprise these six elements An explanation of the world A futurology answering the question Where are we heading Values answers to ethical questions What should we do A praxeology or methodology or theory of action How should we attain our goals An epistemology or theory of knowledge What is true and false An etiology A constructed world view should contain an account of its own building blocks its origins and construction Terror management theory EditMain article Terror management theory nbsp In terror management theory one s worldview helps to alleviate the anxiety caused by awareness of one s own mortality A worldview according to terror management theory TMT serves as a buffer against death anxiety 21 It is theorized that living up to the ideals of one s worldview provides a sense of self esteem which provides a sense of transcending the limits of human life e g literally as in religious belief in immortality symbolically as in art works or children to live on after one s death or in contributions to one s culture 21 Evidence in support of terror management theory includes a series of experiments by Jeff Schimel and colleagues in which a group of Canadians found to score highly on a measure of patriotism were asked to read an essay attacking the dominant Canadian worldview 21 Using a test of death thought accessibility DTA involving an ambiguous word completion test e g COFF could either be completed as either COFFEE or COFFIN or COFFER participants who had read the essay attacking their worldview were found to have a significantly higher level of DTA than the control group who read a similar essay attacking Australian cultural values Mood was also measured following the worldview threat to test whether the increase in death thoughts following worldview threat were due to other causes for example anger at the attack on one s cultural worldview 21 No significant changes on mood scales were found immediately following the worldview threat 21 To test the generalisability of these findings to groups and worldviews other than those of nationalistic Canadians Schimel et al conducted a similar experiment on a group of religious individuals whose worldview included that of creationism 21 Participants were asked to read an essay which argued in support of the theory of evolution following which the same measure of DTA was taken as for the Canadian group 21 Religious participants with a creationist worldview were found to have a significantly higher level of death thought accessibility than those of the control group 21 Goldenberg et al found that highlighting the similarities between humans and other animals increases death thought accessibility as does attention to the physical rather than meaningful qualities of sex 22 Religion EditNishida Kitaro wrote extensively on the Religious Worldview in exploring the philosophical significance of Eastern religions 23 According to Neo Calvinist David Naugle s World view The History of a Concept Conceiving of Christianity as a worldview has been one of the most significant developments in the recent history of the church 24 The Christian thinker James W Sire defines a worldview as a commitment a fundamental orientation of the heart that can be expressed as a story or in a set of presuppositions assumptions which may be true partially true or entirely false which we hold consciously or subconsciously consistently or inconsistently about the basic construction of reality and that provides the foundation on which we live and move and have our being He suggests that we should all think in terms of worldviews that is with a consciousness not only of our own way of thought but also that of other people so that we can first understand and then genuinely communicate with others in our pluralistic society 25 The commitment mentioned by James W Sire can be extended further The worldview increases the commitment to serve the world With the change of a person s view towards the world he she can be motivated to serve the world This serving attitude has been illustrated by Tareq M Zayed as the Emancipatory Worldview in his writing History of emancipatory worldview of Muslim learners 26 In the context of religious Islamic terrorist presumed socio political and socio cultural Islamic Weltanschauung Carsten Bockstette defines Weltanschauung German literally meaning world picture as a believe based comprehensive philosophical conception of the world and of jihadist s relation to it believe system 27 David Bell has also raised questions on religious worldviews for the designers of superintelligences machines much smarter than humans 28 References Edit Funk Ken 21 March 2001 What is a Worldview Retrieved 10 December 2019 Palmer Gary B 1996 Toward A Theory of Cultural Linguistics University of Texas Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 292 76569 6 Online Etymology Dictionary Etymonline com Retrieved 2 December 2019 Weltanschauung Definition of Weltanschauung by Merriam Webster Merriam Webster Retrieved 17 December 2019 Worldview philosophy Encyclopedia com Encyclopedia com 14 December 2019 Retrieved 17 December 2019 a b Underhill James W 2009 Humboldt Worldview and Language Transferred to digital print ed Edinburgh Scotland Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0748638420 Hiebert Paul G Transforming Worldviews an anthropological understanding of how people change Grand Rapids Mich Baker Academic 2008 page needed a b c Whorf Benjamin Lee 1964 1st pub 1956 Carroll John Bissell ed Language Thought and Reality Selected Writings of Benjamin Lee Whorf Cambridge Mass Technology Press of Massachusetts Institute of Technology ISBN 978 0 262 73006 8 Pp 25 36 29 30 242 248 Underhill James W 2011 Creating worldviews metaphor ideology and language Edinburgh Scotland Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0748679096 Underhill James W 2012 Ethnolinguistics and Cultural Concepts truth love hate amp war Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107532847 See for example Daniel Hill and Randal Rauser Christian Philosophy A Z Edinburgh University Press 2006 ISBN 978 0 7486 2152 1 p200 In the Christian tradition this goes back at least to Justin Martyr s Dialogues with Trypho A Jew and has roots in the debates recorded in the New Testament For a discussion of the long history of religious dialogue in India see Amartya Sen s The Argumentative Indian Cognitive Relativism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy The problem of self refutation is quite general It arises whether truth is relativized to a framework of concepts of beliefs of standards of practices Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Pope Benedict warns against relativism Ratzinger J Relativism the Central Problem for Faith Today Josang Audun 21 November 2011 A Logic For Uncertain Probabilities PDF International Journal of Uncertainty Fuzziness and Knowledge Based Systems 09 3 279 311 doi 10 1142 S0218488501000831 Ninian Smart Worldviews Crosscultural Explorations of Human Beliefs 3rd Edition ISBN 0 13 020980 5 p14 Vidal Clement April 2012 Metaphilosophical Criteria for Worldview Comparison Metaphilosophy 43 3 306 347 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 508 631 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9973 2012 01749 x Diederik Aerts Leo Apostel Bart de Moor Staf Hellemans Edel Maex Hubert van Belle amp Jan van der Veken 1994 World views From Fragmentation to Integration VUB Press Translation of Apostel and Van der Veken 1991 with some additions The basic book of World Views from the Center Leo Apostel page needed a b c d e f g h Schimel Jeff Hayes Joseph Williams Todd Jahrig Jesse 2007 Is death really the worm at the core Converging evidence that worldview threat increases death thought accessibility Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 92 5 789 803 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 92 5 789 PMID 17484605 Goldenberg Jamie L Cox Cathy R Pyszczynski Tom Greenberg Jeff Solomon Sheldon November 2002 Understanding human ambivalence about sex The effects of stripping sex of meaning Journal of Sex Research 39 4 310 320 doi 10 1080 00224490209552155 PMID 12545414 S2CID 24419836 Indeed Kitaro s final book is Last Writings Nothingness and the Religious Worldview David K Naugle Worldview The History of a Concept ISBN 0 8028 4761 7 page 4 James W Sire The Universe Next Door A Basic World view Catalog pp 15 16 text readable at Amazon com Zayed Tareq M History of emancipatory worldview of Muslim learners a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bockstette Carsten 2023 Jihadist Realism Countering Al Qaeda s and the Islamic State s Communication Strategy Dr Kovac Verlag p 32 ISBN 978 3 339 13732 6 Bell David 2016 Superintelligence and World views Putting the Spotlight on Some Important Issues Guildford Surrey UK Grosvenor House Publishing Limited ISBN 9781786237668 OCLC 962016344 page needed External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Worldview nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Exploring Worldviews Wikibook The scientific world view Wiki Worldview Themes A Structure for Characterizing and Analyzing Worldviews includes links to roughly 1000 Wikipedia articles You are what you speak PDF Archived from the original on 20 September 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 5 15 MB a 2002 essay on research in linguistic relativity Lera Boroditsky Cobern W World View Metaphysics and Epistemology PDF Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 50 3 KB inTERRAgation com A documentary project Collecting and evaluating answers to the meaning of life from around the world The God Contention Comparing various worldviews faiths and religions through the eyes of their advocates Cole Graham A Do Christians have a Worldview A paper examining the concept of worldview as it relates to and has been used by Christianity Contains a helpful annotated bibliography World View article on the Principia Cybernetica Project Pogorskiy E 2015 Using personalisation to improve the effectiveness of global educational projects E Learning and Digital Media 12 1 57 67 Worldviews An Introduction from Project Worldview Studies on World Views Related to Science list of suggested books and resources from the American Scientific Affiliation a Christian perspective Eugene Webb Worldview and Mind Religious Thought and Psychological Development Columbia MO University of Missouri Press 2009 Benjamin Gal Or Cosmology Physics and Philosophy Springer Verlag 1981 1983 1987 ISBN 0 387 90581 2 ISBN 0 387 96526 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Worldview amp oldid 1176955669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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