The Inevitable Collapse of Autonomous Worldviews
By Yuri Schein
There is a deeply rooted illusion in modern thought: the idea that man can analyze reality from a neutral position, without presuppositions, as an impartial observer floating above existence. This epistemological fantasy has contaminated nearly all contemporary philosophy, from empiricism to secular rationalism. Modern man imagines he can “follow the evidence” without already possessing a ultimate foundation from which he interprets what he calls evidence.
But this is impossible.
No one reasons in a vacuum. No one interprets facts without a prior starting point. Every worldview inevitably begins with a first principle, a fundamental axiom, an absolute presupposition from which everything else will be interpreted.
This is precisely where Coherential Presuppositionalism begins.
Coherential Presuppositionalism is not merely an apologetic method. It is an analysis of the unavoidable structure of human thought itself. It affirms that every worldview—religious or secular—inevitably rests upon a foundational principle that cannot be demonstrated by something prior, and that this foundation must therefore be judged not by a nonexistent neutrality, but by coherence, explanatory power, and the impossibility of self-destruction.
Man does not choose between “having presuppositions” or “having none.” He only chooses which presuppositions he will have.
And this is precisely where the collapse of autonomous worldviews begins.
1. Every worldview begins with a starting point by necessity
Every system of thought requires an ultimate foundation. Always.
The rationalist begins with reason.
The empiricist begins with the senses.
The skeptic begins with doubt.
The materialist begins with matter.
The Muslim begins with the Quran.
The Christian begins with biblical revelation.
There is no thought without presupposition.
The modern attempt to deny this only produces an impossible infinite regress. Because any attempt to justify a foundation will require a prior foundation. And that prior foundation will require another one. And so on, until the absolute collapse of knowledge becomes inevitable.
In the end, every man must inevitably stop somewhere.
And that “somewhere” is his epistemological god.
The secularist often mocks the Christian for “starting by assuming the Bible,” while simultaneously assuming:
the reliability of reason;
the validity of logic;
the uniformity of nature;
the trustworthiness of perception;
and the intelligibility of the universe.
The difference is that the Christian admits his foundation.
The unbeliever hides his behind the word “evidence.”
But evidence never interprets itself.
All interpretation presupposes a prior system of meaning.
Coherential Presuppositionalism begins precisely by dismantling the myth of neutrality. There is no neutral observer. There is only a clash between competing ultimate foundations.
2. More than one absolute starting point is impossible
Here arises one of the greatest collapses of modern hybrid philosophy.
Many attempt to combine multiple absolutes:
reason and revelation;
senses and Scripture;
autonomous logic and God;
secular science and transcendence.
But this is impossible.
Two absolutes cannot coexist without one limiting the other.
If two principles possess ultimate authority, then neither is truly ultimate.
Because inevitably, at some point, there will be a conflict between them. And when that conflict arises, one must judge the other. The judge becomes superior to what is judged.
This immediately destroys the idea of multiple ultimate foundations.
Either human reason judges revelation,
or revelation judges human reason.
Either the senses interpret God,
or God interprets the senses.
Either human autonomy is supreme,
or God is supreme.
There is no third option.
Much of modern theology desperately tries to construct impossible syntheses between human autonomy and divine sovereignty. The result is inevitable incoherence.
Because competing absolutes inevitably go to war.
Coherential Presuppositionalism recognizes what many try to avoid: every system must have a single final authority.
And any attempt to divide that authority produces epistemological collapse.
3. Every starting point is necessarily indemonstrable by something prior
This point completely destroys one of the most popular objections against revelational systems.
The unbeliever often asks: “Who proves the Bible?”
But rarely notices that the same question destroys his own system.
Who proves logic?
Who proves the senses?
Who proves reason?
Who proves causality?
Who proves the uniformity of nature?
Every attempt to prove a foundation using something prior only demonstrates that the true foundation was already assumed.
Therefore: every ultimate axiom is necessarily presupposed.
This is not a weakness.
It is logical inevitability.
The problem is not having an indemonstrable axiom.
The problem is having an axiom incapable of sustaining reality.
The secularist mocks the Christian for presupposing Scripture while simultaneously presupposing:
consciousness;
rationality;
identity;
language;
morality;
universals.
Without ever being able to justify any of them within a materialist universe.
In the end, every worldview has faith.
The difference is that some have coherence, and others do not.
Coherential Presuppositionalism exposes precisely this: the question was never “who has presuppositions?”
The question is: which presupposition survives without collapsing?
4. The starting point must adequately answer the ultimate questions of existence
A true foundation cannot explain only isolated parts of reality. It must explain the whole.
A valid worldview must answer:
what truth is;
what logic is;
what morality is;
what identity is;
what meaning is;
what consciousness is;
what rationality is;
why the universe is intelligible;
why logical laws are universal;
why humans have dignity;
and why anything can be known at all.
Most systems fail miserably here.
Materialism destroys rationality by reducing thought to brain chemistry.
Relativism destroys objective morality.
Naturalism destroys purpose.
Existentialism destroys essence.
Empiricism destroys certainty.
Skepticism destroys knowledge.
Postmodernism destroys meaning.
These worldviews often survive only because their adherents live emotionally as parasites of the Christian structure while intellectually denying it.
Biblical Christianity, on the other hand, provides a unified foundation:
logic reflects the coherent mind of God;
morality derives from His nature;
truth exists because God knows all things;
identity derives from divine decree;
meaning exists because God interprets reality;
and knowledge is possible because God has revealed.
Coherential Presuppositionalism demands explanatory totality. Emotional answers or pragmatic usefulness are not enough. The system must sustain the entire structure of reality without self-destruction.
5. The starting point must not contradict itself
Here occurs the decisive massacre of many modern worldviews.
An incoherent worldview is already dead before the debate even begins.
If a system destroys the very presuppositions required for its existence, it collapses automatically.
The relativist says: “there is no absolute truth.”
But if that statement is true, then it is itself an absolute truth.
Instant self-destruction.
The skeptic says: “nothing can be known.”
But if he knows that, then at least one thing can be known.
Immediate collapse.
The materialist says: “we are only matter in motion.”
But then thoughts would be nothing but blind chemical reactions, not reliable rational conclusions.
Thus materialism destroys the very reasoning used to defend it.
The empiricist says: “all knowledge comes from the senses.”
But that statement did not come from the senses.
It is a philosophical abstraction.
Inescapable contradiction.
Coherential Presuppositionalism insists on a brutal requirement: the foundation must survive the implications of its own system.
If the axiom destroys:
logic,
rationality,
meaning,
identity,
or truth,
then it must be rejected.
No matter how popular it is.
No matter how many doctorates defend it.
No matter how many universities celebrate it.
Contradiction remains contradiction.
6. The inevitable clash of worldviews
Modern man hates exclusivity because exclusivity demands judgment.
But reality is necessarily exclusive.
If two worldviews contradict each other, both cannot be true simultaneously.
The law of excluded middle continues destroying relativism: either something is, or it is not.
There is no third option.
Therefore worldviews inevitably collide.
Christianity affirms: God is the absolute foundation.
Materialism affirms: matter is the absolute foundation.
Both cannot be correct at the same time.
Relativism affirms: there is no absolute truth.
But that statement itself claims absolute truth.
It self-destructs upon utterance.
Coherential Presuppositionalism demands direct confrontation between rival systems. There is no neutral diplomatic space between ultimate foundations.
Worldviews must be placed side by side:
analyzed;
tested;
pressed to their final consequences.
And those that implode must be discarded.
Not by emotional preference.
Not by cultural taste.
But by logical necessity.
In the end, every worldview will be reduced to its ultimate foundation.
And that foundation must answer:
without contradiction;
without collapse;
without self-destruction;
and without secretly depending on its rival.
Very few systems survive this test.
Biblical Christianity remains because only it provides:
absolute foundation;
universal logic;
objective morality;
intelligibility of the universe;
identity;
meaning;
and final coherence.
The rest often survives only by intellectual borrowing from what it denies.
Conclusion
Coherential Presuppositionalism does not ask for neutrality.
It exposes its impossibility.
It does not ask for absence of presuppositions.
It demonstrates that this is impossible.
It does not promise rational autonomy.
It reveals that autonomy inevitably ends in collapse.
Man will always serve some ultimate foundation.
He will always interpret reality through some absolute.
He will always have an epistemological god.
The real question was never: “who has presuppositions?”
The real question is: which presupposition can coherently sustain reality without collapsing under its own contradictions?
And this is exactly where autonomous worldviews begin to die.

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