Last week I
gave a lecture at Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, CA, on the theme “What
We Owe the New Atheists.” You can read
the text and/or listen to the audio of the lecture at
TAC’s website. The faculty,
students, and guests who attended were a wonderful bunch of folks and I thank
them for their very kind hospitality.
Friday, April 11, 2014
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Anthony Brueckner (1953 - 2014)
Philosopher
Tony Brueckner of UC Santa Barbara died this week. Tony was a professor of mine when I was in
graduate school, and served on my dissertation committee. I remember him as an excellent teacher, a
formidable philosopher, and a nice guy with a droll sense of humor. I recall a phony pop quiz he handed out in
class one day. The first multiple-choice
question read: “What is your name? (A) Bruce, (B) other.” After a reference he once made to the tune in
a comment in the margins of a term paper of mine, I can never listen to Steely
Dan’s “The Fez” without thinking of Tony.
Tony was a
philosopher’s philosopher, and his work was largely devoted to a rigorous
investigation of the philosophical issues surrounding Cartesian skepticism. No one seriously interested in that topic can
avoid grappling with Tony’s work on it, most of which is collected in his book Essays
on Skepticism. Related issues
are pursued in Debating
Self-Knowledge, co-written with Gary Ebbs.
By all
accounts (such as this
one) he was a kind man. R.I.P.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Self control
The
relationship between memory and personal identity has long been of interest to
philosophers, and it is also a theme explored to good effect in movies and science
fiction. In Memento, Leonard Shelby (played by Guy
Pearce) has largely lost his ability to form new memories following an attack
in which he was injured and his wife raped and murdered. He hunts down the attacker by assembling
clues which he either writes down or tattoos on his body before he can forget
them.
In Philip K.
Dick’s short story “Paycheck” (which is better than the movie adaptation starring Ben Affleck), the protagonist Jennings has
agreed to work for two years on a secret project knowing that his memory of it
(and of everything else that happened during those years) will be erased when
the task is completed. When he awakens
after the memory wipe, he learns that he had, during the course of the two
years, voluntarily agreed to forego the large paycheck he had originally
contracted for in exchange for an envelope full of seemingly worthless
trinkets. He spends the rest of the
story trying to figure out why he would have done so, and it becomes evident
before long that it has something to do with the secret project’s having been a
device which can see into the future.
(Readers who
haven’t either seen Memento or read
Dick’s story or seen the movie version are warned that major spoilers follow.)
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Welcome to the machine
Not too long
ago I attended a conference on theology and technology sponsored by First Things. Unsurprisingly, the question arose whether
modern technology is on balance a good or bad thing, and the general view
seemed to be that it was in itself neutral -- its goodness or badness deriving
from the circumstances of its use. As
Fr. Thomas Joseph White pointed out, however, from a Thomist point of view,
while circumstances can certainly make the use of technology bad, of itself it is actually good rather than merely neutral. It is the product of the practical intellect,
the exercise of which per se helps
perfect us (even if, again, circumstances
can make technology, like other products of practical reason, evil).
Naturally I
wholeheartedly agree, being not only a Thomist but a confirmed city dweller and
something of a technophile. Still, it is
worthwhile considering whether there is something special about modern
circumstances that makes technology morally problematic. I think there is, though by no means do I
think these circumstances suffice to make modern technology on balance a bad
thing. On the contrary, I think on
balance it is a very good thing. But all
good things can lead us to hubris if we are not careful, and there is a special
way in which we moderns need to be careful.
Friday, March 28, 2014
What’s around the web?
John Searle is
interviewed at New Philosopher. He’s in fine Searle form (and well-armed, as
you can see from the photo accompanying the interview): “It upsets me when I read the nonsense
written by my contemporaries, the theory of extended mind makes me want to throw up.”
Jeremy
Shearmur is
interviewed at 3:AM Magazine
about his work on Karl Popper and F. A. Hayek.
Standpoint magazine on Hayek and religion.
A memorial
conference for the late E. J. Lowe will be held this July at Durham University.
Steely Dan is being
sued by former member David Palmer. GQ magazine looks
back on Steely Dan’s Aja, and The Quietus celebrates and cerebrates the 40th
anniversary of Pretzel Logic. Donald Fagen’s book Eminent Hipsters is reviewed in City Journal and in the New
York Observer.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Dharmakīrti and Maimonides on divine action
Here’s a
juxtaposition for you: the Buddhist philosopher Dharmakīrti (c. 600 - 660) and
the medieval Jewish philosopher Moses Maimonides (1138 - 1204). Both had interesting things to say about
divine action, Dharmakīrti from the point of view of a critic of theism and
Maimonides from the point of view of a theist committed to “negative
theology.”
Theism of a
sort reminiscent of Western philosophical theology has its defenders in the
history of Indian philosophy, particularly within the Nyāya-Vaiśeșika
tradition. In particular, one finds in
this tradition arguments for the existence of īśvara (the “Lord”) as a single permanent, personal cause of the
world of intermittent things. The debate
between these thinkers and their Buddhist critics parallels the dispute between
theists and atheists in the West. (To
map the Indian philosophical traditions onto those of ancient Greece, you might
compare the Buddhist position to that of Heraclitus, the Advaita Vedanta position
of thinkers like Shankara (788 - 820) to that of Parmenides, and Indian theism
to Aristotle’s Unmoved Mover. But the
similarities should not be overstated.)
Friday, March 21, 2014
I was wrong about Keith Parsons
Longtime
readers know that Prof. Keith Parsons and I have not always gotten along. Some years ago he famously expressed the view
that the arguments of natural theology are a “fraud” that do not rise to the
level of a “respectable philosophical position” worthy of “serious academic
attention.” I hit back pretty hard at
the time, and our subsequent remarks about each other over the years have not
been kind. I had come to the conclusion that
Prof. Parsons was unwilling to engage seriously with the best arguments of
natural theology. But I am delighted to
say that I was wrong. Prof. Parsons has
said that his earlier remarks about the field were “unfortunate”
and “intemperate
and inappropriate, however qualified.”
He has shown admirable grace and good sportsmanship in his willingness
to bury the hatchet despite how heated things had been between us. And he has most definitely engaged seriously
with the arguments of traditional natural theology in our
recent exchange. I take back the
unkind remarks I have made about him in the past. He is a good guy.
Keith is now
wrapping up his side in our initial exchange.
If you have not done so already, give
it a read. In the near future we
will have an exchange on the subject of atheism and morality. I look forward to it. Keith has also expressed to me his admiration
for the quality of the comments readers have been making on our exchange. I agree, and I thank the readers both of my
blog and of Keith’s blog over at Secular Outpost.
Sunday, March 16, 2014
Stop it, you’re killing me!
In an
op-ed piece in The New York Times,
Ferris Jabr of Scientific American kindly
informs us that nothing is really alive, not even Jabr himself or his
readers. Fairly verbose for a dead guy, he
develops the theme at length -- not by way of giving an explicit argument for his claim, so much as by
putting forward considerations intended to make it appear something other than
the killer joke it
seems on its face to be.
The routine
is familiar, even if Jabr’s thesis is a bit more extreme than that of other
biological reductionists. There’s no generally agreed upon definition
of life; there are borderline cases such as viruses; living and non-living
things are all made up of the same kinds of particles; so…
Thursday, March 13, 2014
L.A. area speaking engagements
On Saturday,
March 29, I’ll be the keynote speaker at the Talbot Philosophical Society
Spring Conference at Biola University in La Mirada, CA. The theme of the talk will be “The Scholastic
Principle of Causality and the Rationalist Principle of Sufficient Reason.” Bill Vallicella will be the
respondent. Come out and see the dueling
philosophy bloggers. More information here.
On Friday,
April 4, I’ll be speaking at Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, CA. The theme of the talk will be “What We Owe the New Atheists.” More information here.
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Gelernter on computationalism
People have
asked me to comment on David Gelernter’s essay
on minds and computers in the January issue of Commentary. It’s written
with Gelernter’s characteristic brio and clarity, and naturally I agree with
the overall thrust of it. But it seems
to me that Gelernter does not quite get to the heart of the problem with the
computer model of the mind. What he
identifies, I would argue, are rather symptoms
of the deeper problems. Those deeper
problems are three, and longtime readers of this blog will recognize them. The first two have more to do with the
computationalist’s notion of matter than
with his conception of mind.
Friday, March 7, 2014
Can you explain something by appealing to a “brute fact”?
Prof. Keith
Parsons and I have been having a very cordial and fruitful exchange. He has now posted a response to my
most recent post, on the topic of “brute facts” and explanation. You can read his response here,
and find links to the other posts in our exchange here. Since by the rules of our exchange Keith has
the last word, I’ll let things stand as they are for now and let the reader
imagine how I might respond.
Another one
of my old sparring partners, Prof. Robert Oerter, raises an interesting
objection of his own in the combox of my recent post, on which I will
comment. I had argued that if we think
of laws of nature as regularities, then no appeal to such laws can explain
anything if the most fundamental such laws are regarded as inexplicable “brute
facts.” Oerter
writes:
Sunday, March 2, 2014
An exchange with Keith Parsons, Part IV
Here I respond to Keith
Parsons’ fourth post. Jeff Lowder’s
index of existing and forthcoming installments in my exchange with Prof.
Parsons can be found here.
Keith, as we
near the end of our first exchange, I want to thank you again for taking the
time to respond to the questions I raised, and as graciously as you have. You maintain in your most recent post that explanations
legitimately can and indeed must ultimately trace to an unexplained “brute
fact,” and that philosophers who think otherwise have failed to give a
convincing account of what it would be for the deepest level of reality to be
self-explanatory and thus other than such a “brute fact.” Unsurprisingly, I disagree on both
counts. I would say that appeals to
“brute facts” are incoherent, and that the nature of an ultimate
self-explanatory principle can be made intelligible by reference to notions
that are well understood and independently motivated.
Friday, February 28, 2014
An exchange with Keith Parsons, Part III
Here I respond to Keith
Parsons’ third post. Jeff Lowder’s
index of existing and forthcoming installments in my exchange with Prof.
Parsons can be found here.
I’d like to
respond now, Keith, to your comments about Bertrand Russell’s objection to
First Cause arguments. Let me first make
some general remarks about the objection and then I’ll get to your
comments. Russell wrote, in Why I Am
Not a Christian:
If
everything must have a cause, then God must have a cause. If there can be
anything without a cause, it may just as well be the world as God, so that
there cannot be any validity in that argument. (pp. 6-7)
Thursday, February 27, 2014
An exchange with Keith Parsons, Part II
Here I respond to Keith
Parsons’ second post. Jeff Lowder is
keeping track of the existing and forthcoming installments in my exchange with
Prof. Parsons here.
Keith,
thanks for these remarks. The question
we are now considering is: Why would the material universe or anything in it
(an electron or a quark, say) require a cause to conserve it in existence? Your view is that the supposition that it
requires one is “gratuitous.” You write:
“Is there anything missing from an electron that would have to be filled in or
supplied from outside? There is nothing
in our physical theories that indicates such a lack.”
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
An exchange with Keith Parsons, Part I
Prof. Keith Parsons and I will be
having an exchange to be moderated by Jeffery Jay Lowder of The Secular
Outpost. Prof. Parsons has initiated the
exchange with a
response to the first of four questions I put to him last week. What follows is a brief reply.
Keith, thank
you for your very gracious response. Like
Jeff Lowder, you raise the issue of the relative amounts of attention I and
other theistic philosophers pay to “New Atheist” writers like Dawkins, Harris,
et al. as opposed to the much more serious arguments of atheist philosophers
like Graham Oppy, Jordan Howard Sobel, and many others. Let me begin by reiterating what I
said last week in response to Jeff, namely that I have nothing but respect
for philosophers like the ones you cite and would never lump them in with
Dawkins and Co. And as I showed in my
response to Jeff, I have in fact publicly praised many of these writers many
times over the years for the intellectual seriousness of their work.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Descartes’ “preservation” argument
In previous
posts I’ve critically examined, from a Scholastic point of view, some of
Descartes’ best-known arguments.
Specifically, I’ve commented on Descartes’ “clear
and distinct perception” argument for dualism, and his “trademark”
argument for God’s existence. We’ve
seen how these arguments illustrate how Descartes, though the father of modern
philosophy, in some respects continues to be influenced by the
Aristotelian-Scholastic tradition, even as in other respects he abandons
it. It’s the novelties, I have
suggested, that get him into trouble. This
is evidenced once again in what is sometimes called his “preservation” argument
for God’s existence.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Four questions for Keith Parsons [UPDATED 2/21]
Keith
Parsons’ feelings are, it seems, still
hurt over some frank things I said about him a few years ago (here
and here). It seems to me that when a guy dismisses
as a “fraud” an entire academic field to which many thinkers of
universally acknowledged genius have contributed, and maintains that its
key arguments do not even rise to the level of a “respectable philosophical
position” worthy of “serious academic attention,” then when its defenders hit
back, he really ought to have a thicker skin and more of a sense of humor about
himself. But that’s just me.
Lowder then bombs
Atheist
blogger and Internet Infidels co-founder Jeffery Jay Lowder seems like a
reasonable enough fellow. But then, I
admit it’s hard not to like a guy who
writes:
I’ve just about finished reading
Feser’s book, The
Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism. I think Feser makes some hard-hitting, probably fatal, objections to the
arguments used by the “new atheists.”
Naturally
Lowder thinks there are better atheist arguments than those presented by the “New
Atheists,” but it’s no small thing for him to have made such an admission -- an
admission too few of his fellow atheist bloggers are willing to make, at least
in public. So, major points to Lowder
for intellectual honesty.
Friday, February 14, 2014
The metaphysics and aesthetics of plastic
There’s a
passage at the beginning of Isaac Asimov’s science fiction novel Foundation’s
Edge which I’ve always found delightfully preposterous. Referring to Seldon Hall on the planet
Terminus, Golan Trevize says:
Is there any structural component
visible that is metal? Not one. It wouldn’t do to have any, since in Salvor
Hardin’s day there was no native metal to speak of and hardly any imported
metal. We even installed old plastic,
pink with age, when we built this huge pile, so that visitors from other worlds
can stop and say, ‘Galaxy! What lovely
old plastic!’
The very
notion of “lovely old plastic” seems absurd on its face, and I imagine Asimov
wrote the passage with tongue in cheek. Aged
wood, stone, or metal structures or furniture can be aesthetically appealing,
but aged plastic only ever seems shabby at best and positively ugly at
worst. Now, why is that?
Sunday, February 9, 2014
A world of pure imagination
Let us fix our attention out of
ourselves as much as possible; let us chase our imagination to the heavens, or
to the utmost limits of the universe; we never really advance a step beyond
ourselves, nor can conceive any kind of existence, but those perceptions, which
have appear'd in that narrow compass. This is the universe of the imagination,
nor have we any idea but what is there produc'd.
David Hume
Come with me and you'll be
In a world of pure imagination
Take a look and you'll see
Into your imagination
In a world of pure imagination
Take a look and you'll see
Into your imagination
Willy Wonka
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Studia Neoaristotelica
Readers not
already familiar with it should be aware of Studia Neoaristotelica: A Journal
of Analytical Scholasticism. Recent
issues include articles by Nicholas Rescher, Richard Swinburne, Theodore Scaltsas,
William Vallicella, James Franklin, Helen Hattab, and other authors known to readers
of this blog. Subscription information
for individuals and institutions can be found here.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
2014 Thomistic Seminar
The 9th
Annual Thomistic Seminar for graduate students in philosophy and related
disciplines, sponsored by The Witherspoon Institute, will be held from August 3
- 9, 2014 in Princeton, NJ. The theme is
“Aquinas, Christianity, and Metaphysics” and the faculty are John Haldane,
Edward Feser, John O’Callaghan, Candace Vogler, and Linda Zagzebski. The application deadline is March 15. More information here.
Monday, February 3, 2014
Heavy Meta
My new book Scholastic
Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction will be out this May. I’ve expounded and defended various aspects
of Scholastic metaphysics at some length in other places -- for example, in
chapter 2 of The
Last Superstition and chapter 2 of Aquinas
-- but the new book pursues the issues at much greater length and in much
greater depth. Unlike those other books,
it also focuses exclusively on questions of fundamental metaphysics, with
little or no reference to questions in natural theology, ethics, philosophy of
mind, or the like. Call it Heavy Meta. Even got a theme song.
To whet your
appetite, here’s the cover copy and a detailed table of contents:
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Jerry-built atheism
David
Bentley Hart’s recent book The
Experience of God has been getting some attention. The highly esteemed William Carroll has an article on it over
at Public Discourse. As I noted in a
recent post, the highly self-esteemed Jerry Coyne has
been commenting on Hart’s book too, and in the classic Coyne style: First
trash the book, then promise someday actually to read it. But it turns out that was the second post Coyne had written ridiculing
Hart’s book; the first is here.
So, by my count that’s at least 5100
words so far criticizing a book Coyne
admits he has not read. Since it’s
Jerry Coyne, you know another shoe is sure to drop. And so it does, three paragraphs into the
more recent post:
[I]t’s also fun (and marginally
profitable) to read and refute the arguments of theologians, for it’s only there that one can truly see
intelligence so blatantly coopted and corrupted to prove what one has decided
is true beforehand. [Emphasis added]
Well, no,
Jerry, not only there.
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Estranged notions
Strange Notions is a website devoted
to discussion between Catholics and atheists and operated by Brandon Vogt. It’s a worthwhile enterprise. When he was getting the website started,
Brandon kindly invited me to contribute to it, and also asked if he could
reprint old posts from my blog. I told
him I had no time to contribute new articles but that it was fine with me if he
wanted to reprint older pieces as long as they were not edited without my
permission. I have not kept a close eye
on the site, but it seems that quite a few old blog
posts of mine have been reprinted. I
hope some of Brandon’s readers find them useful, but I have to say that a
glance at the site’s comboxes makes me wonder whether allowing such reprints
was after all a good idea. Certainly it
has a downside.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
The pointlessness of Jerry Coyne
People have
asked me to comment on the recent spat between Jerry
Coyne and Ross
Douthat. As longtime readers of this
blog know from
bitter experience, there’s little point in engaging with Coyne on matters
of philosophy and theology. He is
neither remotely well-informed, nor fair-minded, nor able to make basic
distinctions or otherwise to reason with precision. Nor, when such foibles are pointed out to
him, does he show much interest in improving. (Though on at least one occasion he did
promise to try actually to learn something about a subject concerning which he
had been bloviating. But we’re still
waiting for that well-informed epic takedown of Aquinas we thought we
were going to get from him more than two years ago.)
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
DSPT colloquium 2014
The
Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology in Berkeley, CA will be hosting a
colloquium on the theme “What Has
Athens to Do with Jerusalem? Dialogue
between Philosophy and Theology in the 21st Century,” on July 16 - 20, 2014. The plenary session presenters are Michael
Dodds, OP, Edward Feser, Alfred Freddoso, John O’Callaghan, Michał Paluch, OP,
John Searle, Robert Sokolowski, and Linda Zagzebski. More information here.
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