Recently I
was interviewed by two different websites about Scholastic
Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction. Both interviews have now been posted. The
first interview is at Thomistica.net,
where the interviewer was Joe Trabbic.
The second interview is at Strange
Notions, where the interviewer was Brandon Vogt. The websites’ respective audiences are very
different, as were the questions, so there isn’t any significant overlap
between the two interviews.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Friday, November 21, 2014
Augustine on the immateriality of the mind
In Book 10,
Chapter 10 of On the Trinity, St.
Augustine argues for the immateriality of the mind. You can find an older translation of the
work online, but I’ll quote the passages I want to discuss from the
McKenna translation as edited by Gareth Matthews. Here they are:
[E]very mind knows and is certain
concerning itself. For men have doubted
whether the power to live, to remember, to understand, to will, to think, to
know, and to judge is due to air, to fire, or to the brain, or to the blood,
or to atoms… or whether the combining or the orderly arrangement of the flesh
is capable of producing these effects; one has tried to maintain this opinion,
another that opinion.
On the other hand who would doubt
that he lives, remembers, understands, wills, thinks, knows, and judges? For even if he doubts, he lives; if he doubts,
he remembers why he doubts; if he doubts, he understands that he doubts; if he
doubts, he wishes to be certain; if he doubts, he thinks; if he doubts, he knows
that he does not know; if he doubts, he judges that he ought not to consent
rashly. Whoever then doubts about
anything else ought never to doubt about all of these; for if they were not, he
would be unable to doubt about anything at all…
Saturday, November 15, 2014
DSPT symposium papers online (Updated)
Last week’s
symposium at the Dominican School of Philosophy
and Theology in Berkeley was on Fr. Anselm Ramelow’s anthology God,
Reason and Reality. Some of the
papers from the symposium are
now available online. In my paper, “Remarks on God, Reason and Reality,” I comment
on two essays in the anthology: Fr. Ramelow’s essay on God and miracles, and
Fr. Michael Dodds’ essay on God and the nature of life. Fr. Ramelow’s symposium paper is “Three Tensions
Concerning Miracles: A Response to Edward Feser.”
UPDATE 11/16: Fr. Dodds' paper "The God of Life: Response to Edward Feser" has now been posted at the DSPT website. Also, a YouTube video of all the talks and of the Q & A that followed has been posted.
UPDATE 11/16: Fr. Dodds' paper "The God of Life: Response to Edward Feser" has now been posted at the DSPT website. Also, a YouTube video of all the talks and of the Q & A that followed has been posted.
Sunday, November 9, 2014
DSPT interviews (Updated)
Back from another
very pleasant and profitable visit to the Dominican School of Philosophy
and Theology in Berkeley. Many thanks to
my hosts and to everyone who attended the symposium. The DSPT has just posted video interviews of
some of the participants in the July
conference on philosophy and theology.
John Searle, Linda Zagzebski, John O’Callaghan, and I are the interviewees. You can find them here
at YouTube.
Update 11/14: The DSPT will be adding new video clips weekly to its YouTube playlist. This week an interview with Fred Freddoso has been added.
Update 11/14: The DSPT will be adding new video clips weekly to its YouTube playlist. This week an interview with Fred Freddoso has been added.
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Walking the web
Bishop
Athanasius Schneider is interviewed about the
recent Synod on the Family. On the
now notorious interim report: “This document will remain for the future
generations and for the historians a black mark which has stained the honour of
the Apostolic See.” (HT: Rorate
Caeli and Fr.
Z)
Meanwhile,
as Rusty
Reno and Rod
Dreher report, other Catholics evidently prefer the Zeitgeist to the Heilige Geist.
Scientia Salon on everything
you know about Aristotle that isn’t so.
Choice line: “While [Bertrand] Russell castigates Aristotle for not
counting his wives’ teeth, it does not appear to have occurred to Russell to
verify his own statement by going to the bookshelf and reading what Aristotle
actually wrote.”
At The New Republic, John Gray
on the
closed mind of Richard Dawkins.
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Voluntarism and PSR
Aquinas
holds that “will follows upon intellect” (Summa
Theologiae I.19.1). He means in part
that anything with an intellect has a will as well, but also that intellect is
metaphysically prior to will. Will is
the power to be drawn toward what the intellect apprehends to be good, or away
from what it apprehends to be bad.
Intellect is “in the driver’s seat,” then. This is a view known as intellectualism, and it is to be contrasted with voluntarism, which makes will prior to
intellect, and is associated with Scotus and Ockham. To oversimplify, you might say that for the
intellectualist, we are essentially intellects which have wills, whereas the
voluntarist tendency is to regard us as essentially wills which have
intellects.
Friday, October 24, 2014
Nudge nudge, wink wink
Suppose you
go out on a blind date and a friend asks you how it went. You pause and then answer flatly, with a
slight smirk: “Well, I liked the restaurant.”
There is nothing in the literal meaning of the sentence you’ve uttered,
considered all by itself, that states or implies anything negative about the
person you went out with, or indeed anything at all about the person. Still, given the context, you’ve said
something insulting. You’ve “sent the
message” that you liked the restaurant but not
the person. Or suppose you show someone
a painting and when asked what he thinks, he responds: “I like the frame.” The sentence by itself doesn’t imply that the painting is bad, but the overall
speech act certainly conveys that message all the same. Each of these is an example of what H. P.
Grice famously called an implicature, and they
illustrate how what a speaker says in
a communicative act ought not to be confused with what his words mean.
Obviously there is a relationship between the two, but they are not
always identical.
Thursday, October 16, 2014
Could a theist deny PSR?
We’ve
been talking about the principle of sufficient reason (PSR). It plays a key role in some arguments for the
existence of God, which naturally gives the atheist a motivation to deny
it. But there are also theists who deny
it. Is this a coherent position? I’m not asking whether a theist could
coherently reject some versions of
PSR. Of course a theist could do
so. I
reject some versions of PSR. But could a
theist reject all versions? Could a
theist reject PSR as such? Suppose that
any version of PSR worthy of the name must entail that there are no “brute facts” -- no facts
that are in principle unintelligible,
no facts for which there is not even in
principle an explanation. (The “in
principle” here is important -- that there might be facts that our minds happen to be too limited to
grasp is not in question.) Could a
theist coherently deny that?
Friday, October 10, 2014
Della Rocca on PSR
The principle
of sufficient reason (PSR), in a typical Neo-Scholastic formulation, states
that “there is a sufficient reason or adequate necessary objective explanation
for the being of whatever is and for all attributes of any being” (Bernard
Wuellner, Dictionary
of Scholastic Philosophy, p. 15).
I discuss and defend PSR at some length in Scholastic
Metaphysics (see especially pp. 107-8 and 137-46). Prof. Michael Della Rocca
defends the principle in his excellent article “PSR,”
which appeared in Philosopher’s Imprint
in 2010 but which (I’m embarrassed to say) I only came across the other day.
Among the arguments for PSR I put forward in Scholastic Metaphysics are a retorsion argument to the effect that if PSR were false, we could have no reason to trust the deliverances of our cognitive faculties, including any grounds we might have for doubting or denying PSR; and an argument to the effect that a critic of PSR cannot coherently accept even the scientific explanations he does accept, unless he acknowledges that there are no brute facts and thus that PSR is true. Della Rocca’s argument bears a family resemblance to this second line of argument.
Among the arguments for PSR I put forward in Scholastic Metaphysics are a retorsion argument to the effect that if PSR were false, we could have no reason to trust the deliverances of our cognitive faculties, including any grounds we might have for doubting or denying PSR; and an argument to the effect that a critic of PSR cannot coherently accept even the scientific explanations he does accept, unless he acknowledges that there are no brute facts and thus that PSR is true. Della Rocca’s argument bears a family resemblance to this second line of argument.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Meta-comedy
While we’re on
the subject of Steve Martin, consider the following passage from his memoir
Born
Standing Up. Martin recounts the
insight that played a key role in his novel approach to doing stand-up comedy:
In a college psychology class, I had
read a treatise on comedy explaining that a laugh was formed when the
storyteller created tension, then, with the punch line, released it... With
conventional joke telling, there's a moment when the comedian delivers the
punch line, and the audience knows it's the punch line, and their response
ranges from polite to uproarious. What
bothered me about this formula was the nature of the laugh it inspired, a vocal
acknowledgment that a joke had been told, like automatic applause at the end of
a song...
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Thomas Aquinas, Henry Adams, Steve Martin
In his conceptual
travelogue Mont-Saint-Michel
and Chartres -- first distributed
privately in 1904, then published in 1913 -- historian Henry Adams devoted a
chapter to Thomas Aquinas. There are oversimplifications
and mistakes in it of the sort one would expect from a non-philosopher
interested in putting together a compelling narrative, but some interesting
things too. Adams rightly emphasizes how
deep and consequential is the difference between Aquinas’s view that knowledge
of God starts with sensory experience of the natural order, and the tendency of
mystics and Cartesians to look instead within the human mind itself to begin
the ascent to God. And he rightly notes
how important, and also contrary to other prominent theological tendencies, is Aquinas’s
affirmation of the material world. (This
is a major theme in Denys
Turner’s recent book on Aquinas, about which I’ve been meaning to
blog.) On the other hand, what Adams
says about Aquinas and secondary causality is not only wrong but bizarre.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
DSPT Symposium
God,
Reason and Reality is a new anthology edited by Anselm Ramelow. In addition to Fr. Ramelow, the contributors
include Robert Sokolowski, Robert Spaemann, Thomas Joseph White, Lawrence
Dewan, Stamatios Gerogiorgakis, John F. X. Knasas, Paul Thom, Michael
Dodds, William Wainwright, and Linda Zagzebski. The table of contents and other information
about the book can be found here.
The
Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology in Berkeley, CA will be hosting a
symposium on the book on November 8, 2014.
The presenters will be Fr. Ramelow, Fr. Dodds, and me. Further information can be found here.
Monday, September 22, 2014
Review of Jaworski
My review of
William Jaworski’s Philosophy
of Mind: A Comprehensive Introduction appears in the latest issue (Vol.
88, No. 3) of the American
Catholic Philosophical Quarterly.
You can find a preview of the review here,
though unfortunately most of the article is behind a paywall. (I also say a bit about Jaworski’s approach
to hylemorphism, and related contemporary approaches, in Scholastic
Metaphysics. See especially pp.
187-89.)
Friday, September 19, 2014
Q.E.D.?
The Catholic
Church makes some bold claims about what can be known about God via unaided
reason. The First Vatican Council teaches:
The same Holy mother Church holds and
teaches that God, the source and end of all things, can be known with certainty
from the consideration of created things, by the natural power of human reason…
If anyone says that the one, true
God, our creator and lord, cannot be known with certainty from the things that
have been made, by the natural light of human reason: let him be anathema.
In Humani Generis, Pope Pius XII reaffirmed this teaching and made clear what were in his
view the specific philosophical means by which this natural knowledge of God
could best be articulated, and which were most in line with Catholic doctrine:
[H]uman reason by its own natural
force and light can arrive at a true and certain knowledge of the one personal
God, Who by His providence watches over and governs the world…
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