This essay is part of an ongoing series in philosophical theology from the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology.
The series asks some basic but demanding questions: What makes reality intelligible? How does theological language work? What philosophical assumptions support Christian belief?
Behind the series is a simple conviction: theology exists because these questions exist. Its first task is to make Christian doctrine intelligible without reducing, replacing, or explaining away the reality to which that doctrine points.
In the previous essay, I wrote about an afternoon at the Fichte House in Jena. It was not really an essay about history. I was trying, instead, to recover something of the intellectual atmosphere that once made a place like Jena possible.
Fichte, Hegel, Schelling, Schiller, Novalis, and many others disagreed deeply about reality, reason, freedom, and God. But beneath those disagreements was a shared assumption so basic that they rarely felt the need to defend it: reality was worth understanding, and devoting one’s life to that pursuit was among the highest of human callings.
Walking through Jena today, much appears unchanged. It is still a university town. Students still fill the streets and cafés. The institutions remain. Research continues, and knowledge advances at astonishing speed.
And yet it is difficult not to wonder whether something more fundamental has quietly disappeared.
The question is not whether universities still exist. The question is whether they still understand the vocation for which they came into being.
This is not mainly a question about falling enrollment, administrative bureaucracy, or today’s political controversies, important as those issues may be. The deeper question concerns our cultural imagination.
At some point in late modernity, we stopped assuming that reality was worth understanding for its own sake. The pursuit of knowledge increasingly had to justify itself through economic value, technological progress, practical usefulness, or personal fulfillment. Understanding alone no longer seemed like enough of a reason to give one’s life to something.
How did that happen?
There is no single event that explains the change, and it would be too simple to tell a story of uninterrupted decline. The modern world has brought extraordinary advances in science, medicine, technology, and political freedom. It has also taught us important truths about history, culture, language, and the conditions that shape human knowledge.
Still, something has changed in the way educated people imagine the purpose of intellectual life. I suspect that at least three major substitutions have reshaped that imagination.
I. Truth Gave Way to Authenticity
The classical philosophical question was not first, “Who am I?” but “What is true?”
That does not mean earlier thinkers ignored questions of identity, vocation, or selfhood. Augustine and Kierkegaard, among many others, took such questions with utmost seriousness. But they usually placed them within a deeper commitment to reality itself.
Human beings came to understand themselves by learning to inhabit a world they had not made. The self discovered its vocation by participating truthfully in reality, not by turning itself into the measure of reality.
Modern culture has not exactly rejected truth. It has quietly changed the order of priorities.
Authenticity now often occupies the place truth once held. The deepest obligation is no longer understood as conformity to reality, but faithfulness to oneself. An idea may therefore seem persuasive less because it corresponds to its object than because it resonates with personal experience or affirms a particular identity.
This development should not simply be dismissed. It arose for understandable reasons. Modernity rightly became suspicious of authorities that demanded conformity while suppressing individuality. Its recovery of the dignity of the person was a genuine achievement.
But every gain can bring losses with it.
When authenticity gradually replaces truth as the highest intellectual norm, reality begins to recede from the center of inquiry. The self becomes the horizon within which reality is interpreted, rather than reality becoming the horizon within which the self learns to understand itself.
II. Discovery Gave Way to Construction
A second shift followed closely behind the first. Reality came to be described less as something we discover and more as something we construct.
Modern philosophy has done us a great service by reminding us that knowledge is never gained from nowhere. We know through language, concepts, traditions, histories, and particular forms of life. No serious thinker can simply ignore these insights.
The question is whether we have begun to confuse the conditions through which we know reality with the conditions through which reality exists.
That confusion is now common.
It is one thing to say that conceptual frameworks mediate our knowledge of the world. It is another to speak as though those frameworks create the world itself. Reality becomes identified with discourse, narrative, social construction, or linguistic practice. Gradually, the distinction between discovering reality and organizing our descriptions of it begins to disappear.
Ordinary experience, however, keeps resisting this conclusion.
The world disappoints us. Scientific theories must be revised. Carefully built explanations collapse. Reality repeatedly refuses to conform to our descriptions of it.
Language and concepts clearly shape human knowledge. But the world continues to show that it is not simply a product of either one.
III. Contemplation Gave Way to Management
The third substitution may be the easiest to see because it now shapes the university itself.
Knowledge is increasingly expected to justify itself in practical terms. Education is measured by employability. Research is measured by outcomes. Intellectual life is described through the language of efficiency, productivity, innovation, and management.
None of these concerns is illegitimate. A healthy society needs practical knowledge, technical skill, and responsible institutions.
The problem begins when usefulness becomes the only measure that matters.
A civilization that values knowledge only for what it can produce will eventually lose the ability to explain why understanding itself has intrinsic worth.
The great universities of Europe were not founded simply to produce technical expertise. They emerged from the belief that reality itself was worthy of contemplation. Theology, philosophy, mathematics, history, philology, and, later, the natural sciences all shared in that vocation.
Their immediate usefulness was often uncertain. Their dignity rested on something deeper: reality deserved to be understood.
That may be the most important question facing us now.
We often say that theology has become difficult because belief in God has declined or because secularization has advanced. There is truth in both claims. But I increasingly wonder whether they reach the deepest level of the problem.
Before theology became unintelligible, something even more basic had already become unintelligible: the idea that reality itself deserves our understanding.
Once that conviction weakens, theology inevitably begins to look like one optional discourse among many. It no longer appears as a disciplined attempt to understand reality in light of God’s self-disclosure.
The eclipse of theology, then, did not begin when people stopped believing in God.
It began earlier, when we quietly stopped believing that reality was worth understanding.
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