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The Case for Calvinism is unavailable, but you can change that!

Cornelius Van Til wrote this book as a response to a series of three volumes published by Westminster Press in 1959: The Case for a New Reformation Theology, The Case for Theology in Liberal Perspective, and The Case for Orthodox Theology. In The Case For Calvinism, Van Til challenged their views “by setting the truly Christ-centered position of the historic Protestant faith, especially the...

The whole of Aristotle’s tremendous effort in his various works is expanded in trying to make sense of the idea that man, on the one hand, has absolute knowledge and, on the other hand, has no knowledge at all. Aristotle was trying to solve the Meno problem, but could not solve it. How is man’s own learning by experience to be made intelligible to himself? It cannot be done by pure rationalism. It cannot be done by pure irrationalism. It cannot be done by overlapping pure rationalism with pure irrationalism,