Questions
1) What seem to be Keller's control beliefs about all humans beings "religious"? (46, 74)
2) What is the "big story" and how does it supposedly serve as a kind of control-belief-based worldview? (46, 74)
3) Is he right about big stories -- or meta-stories -- providing human beings with "working" theories? If so, how should Christian speakers select their illustrative stories for public communication? (70-71)
Page numbers in above parentheses are from Quentin Schultze, An Essential Guide to Public Speaking.
1) What seem to be Keller's control beliefs about all humans beings "religious"? (46, 74)
2) What is the "big story" and how does it supposedly serve as a kind of control-belief-based worldview? (46, 74)
3) Is he right about big stories -- or meta-stories -- providing human beings with "working" theories? If so, how should Christian speakers select their illustrative stories for public communication? (70-71)
Page numbers in above parentheses are from Quentin Schultze, An Essential Guide to Public Speaking.
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