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38 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A unique approach among worldview books, October 14, 2007
The strength of this book is that it goes beyond merely critiquing or endorsing a particular worldview. Samples explains how to evaluate and compare worldviews based on the criteria of coherence, explanatory power, empirical correspondence, and practicality. He does an excellent job justifying and explaining the criteria, and applies them even-handedly: he shows how each of the worldviews evince favorable and problematic aspects.
The "Putting Christian Truth Claims to the Worldview Test" is an apt subtitle. Samples submits Christianity to the same test he applies to Naturalism, Islam, Pantheistic Monism, and Postmodernism. In the early chapters he goes into a useful, detailed discussion about what a worldview really is in language accessible to the lay reader yet interesting to the expert. The background explanation of the nature of worldview and the nature of the Christian worldview deepen the understanding of the test claims later in the book. The chapter order simultaneously creates a larger argument favoring a Christian worldview while presenting an engagingly wide range of topics throughout the book with clarity and thematic coherence.
One of the things Samples does is attempt to set his book apart from the many other books on worldviews. In this he succeeds remarkably. One distinctive feature of "A World of Difference" is a chapter devoted entirely to explaining logical and informal fallacies. It is like getting a miniature lesson in critical thinking applicable to any topic whatsoever. Samples' vast experience as a college professor of critical thinking shows through in his careful selection of fallacies, and anyone who spends the time to learn what he teaches in a remarkably short span would find much to apply in many other domains. Armed with an understanding of these fallacies the reader becomes a far more effective student of the relative strengths of the arguments posed by various worldviews. I do not know of any other worldview book that so successfully trains the mind of the reader not only to look for logical defects, but to know what the defects are and WHY they are defects.
My favorite chapter was his marvelously concise treatise on Postmodernism. Not only does he clearly explicate the elements of Postmodernist philosophy, he provides a remarkably interesting explanation of how it arose, why it arose, and its effects on culture. For those who "know there's something wrong with Postmodernism" but don't know how to explain it, Samples' chapter on Postmodernism is a perfect primer, easy to read and easy to remember.
Although the book is easy to read and accessible to a lay audience, it is not a book for the intellectually lazy. Samples subject matter demands attention and his writing style makes it interesting. I found the first half of the book somewhat looser reading than the end, which seemed to pick up steam in the final third. Perhaps because the last chapters were more tightly focused on comparison than the earlier chapters, the style seemed to change and become more concise at the end, something I enjoyed.
I also enjoyed the short chapter format. I found it easy to read the book a few chapters at a time and think about them between readings. Unlike books with laboriously long chapters, you can conveniently take on one or two chapters at a time in "A World of Difference" without worrying that you're leaving an important thought halfway. For others like me who are constantly busy, the short chapter format is a mercy.
Easy to read, intellectually challenging, and full of many delights I did not have the time to mention here, "A World of Difference" makes good its promise to put Christian truth claims to the worldview test. It is unique among worldview books in many ways, effective in conveying deep concepts in clear language, and even contains a concurrent real-life story of Samples' near-death reflection on his own mortality and challenges to his own faith.
I strongly recommend buying this book, consuming its contents like a fine meal, and getting others to do the same. With "A World of Difference," you will be intellectually prepared to know and advance the Christian worldview with a confidence and understanding you would not have without it.
--Mark R. Perez, Los Angeles CA
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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Testing the Christian worldview, October 29, 2007
Ever since I attended a Reasons To Believe conference in 2000, I have been fascinated with the approach Ken Samples has taken for testing worldviews for truth. The wait is finally over and "A World of Difference: Putting Christian Truth-Claims to the Worldview Test" is now published. One of the long-term goals of Reasons To Believe has been to provide a comprehensive, testable Christian creation model, and "A World of Difference" adds a philosophical piece to that testable creation model.
Samples' book is organized into three main sections. The first, short section describes the components that make up a worldview, including theology (view of God), metaphysics (view of reality such as the universe), epistemology (theory of knowledge), axiology (moral values), humanity (human nature), and history (the recorded events of human existence). Included in this section are a suggested means of comparing and testing worldviews for truth. In order to be valid, a worldview must be logically consistent, balanced (not too simple or complex), provide explanatory power and scope, correspond to well-established facts, be verifiable (truth claims can be verified or falsified), be applicable to real life, fill existential needs, provide a cumulative and comprehensive approach, and compete in the marketplace of ideas. The first section ends with a short introduction into logic and logical arguments.
The second section (and longest of the three) examines the Christian worldview in depth. Scripture is cited in detail to formulate a comprehensive, biblically-accurate Christian worldview.
The final section of A World of Difference examines five popular worldviews; Naturalism (a completely secular worldview), Postmodernism (a skeptical worldview), Pantheistic monism (Eastern mystical worldview),
Islam (a radical monotheistic worldview), and Christianity (Christian theistic worldview). Each worldview is examined for its strengths and weaknesses using the nine tests developed in section one. For me, these five chapters were the most interesting in the book, and give insight into ways of witnessing to individuals who hold those worldviews.
A World of Difference is a great resource to help Christians examine the truth claims of the world's popular worldviews. Samples' book has a list of questions at the end of each chapter that can be used in Bible study groups as a take-off point for discussions. Such a study is highly recommended for all Christians, since the evaluation of worldviews tends to be an area that is neglected by most churches.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Worldview Introduction, December 28, 2007
Ken Samples has done it again. His first text called Without A Doubt was a great resource. This new text is THE primer on worldview thinking. Ronald Nash would be proud of this acccomplishment. By the way, Ken was suffering from a physical illness during the writing and the reader can see that Christianity sustained him and was the real thing during his suffering. The book has a basic primer on what a worldview is and what logic is. This material can easily be used for teaching students and presenting this material in a classroom setting. Ken richly integrates philosophical thinking with reformed theology. THe final section evaluates key worldviews and offers a grid/critique method for evaluation. Definately a lesson in logic and critical thinking. I especially love how he put references at the end of the book. He has rich footnotes, Bible verses, and bibliographies for more study. The amount of work put into this low cost book is worth it. This can be considered either an apologetics work or a theology work. Both fields of study will benefit from this resource. I can't wait for his next book!
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