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WACANA POSTMODERNISME: ANALISIS DIALEKTIK TERDAHAP BUDAYA, FILSAFAT DAN MANIFESTASINYA PADA TEOLOGI KONTEMPORER Belay, Yosep; Simanjuntak, Ferry; Bin Nidin, Solihin; Setiawan, Susan
Manna Rafflesia Vol. 9 No. 2 (2023): April
Publisher : Sekolah Tinggi Teologi Arastamar Bengkulu

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.38091/man_raf.v9i2.296

Abstract

Human culture and its components move dynamically according to the trend of philosophical ideas that drive it. The existence of the church, which is also the subject and object of culture, is also conditioned on it. In the present context, postmodern philosophy and culture pose severe challenges to the church in two categories: it's cultural product components and philosophical ideas. These two issues are the subject of research that the author examines in this article to describe the challenges of postmodern culture and philosophy for the church. The research method used by the author is descriptive qualitative, with the study of primary and secondary data sources using literature studies and phenomenal hermeneutics. The results of this study indicate that postmodern philosophy and culture have seriously impacted the church today. Postmodern philosophical ideas radically reject claims of absolute truth and challenge the nature of language and the principles of traditional Christian hermeneutics. Meanwhile, its cultural products affect the practical application of church services to the lifestyle of God's people, both positively and negatively.
Makna Kebebasan Dalam Filsafat Klasik Dan Relevansinya Bagi Kebebasan Manusia Modern Deak, Victor; Suwandi, Markus; Bin Nidin, Solihin
Jurnal Ilmu Sosial dan Humaniora Vol. 2 No. 1 (2026): JANUARI-MARET
Publisher : Indo Publishing

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.63822/1twvz394

Abstract

  This study explores the concept of freedom in classical philosophy by examining its relevance for constructing individual freedom in the modern context. Within contemporary culture where freedom is often reduced to absolute autonomy devoid of ethical grounding there emerges a crisis of meaning expressed through nihilism, hedonism, and radical individualism. Through a hermeneutical-philosophical approach, this study reinterprets the views of classical philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics, who understand freedom not as the absence of limits but as a moral and rational disposition that directs human beings toward self-mastery (enkrateia), practical wisdom (phronēsis), and a life in harmony with the cosmic moral order. The analysis shows that the classical philosophical tradition conceives freedom as a dual existential structure: external freedom, which demands liberation from external domination, and internal freedom, which is realized through moral discipline, the ordering of the soul, and the alignment of the will with logos. This perspective offers a corrective framework to modern conceptions of freedom that tend to be fragmented between the assertion of individual rights and a crisis of moral orientation. The theoretical gap addressed in this research lies in the absence of a comprehensive integration between classical virtue ethics and modern theories of freedom centered on subjective autonomy. The novelty of this study is its presentation of a conceptual synthesis that situates freedom as a dynamic relationship between rights, rationality, and moral responsibility. Thus, the study underscores the urgency of restoring a paradigm of freedom grounded in moral excellence not merely as a theoretical discourse but as a foundation for cultivating mature and responsible individual freedom.