How Do We Think About the Bible From a Philosophical Point of View? Just like other people in the thread said, it depends on wheter you're interpreting it litterally, allegorically or analogicallly. If you're interpreting it litteraly, it doesn't have much philosophical value, as it becomes more of a history book than a philosophical work. However, if you interpret it allegorically or analogically, it becomes a very interesting philosophical work. It becomes a book about ethics that supports the Golden Rule in the New Testament, for obvious reasons, and offers an early response or even support to nihilism in Ecclesiastes, with passages like: "What profit hath a man for all his toil, in which he toils under the sun?", "Fear God and keep his commandments; for that is the all of mankind. Since every deed will God bring to judgment, for every hidden act, be it good or evil", and "the dead are better off than the living". Also, because of the diversity of views of the people who wrote it, it's a good introduction and starting point to Christian theology and various philosophical views.