What is left
to say about Pope Francis and capital punishment? Plenty, as I show in a new Catholic World Report article titled “Three
questions for Catholic opponents of capital punishment.” Those who appeal to the pope’s statements on
the subject in order to justify the claim that Catholics are now obligated to oppose capital punishment
face three grave problems.
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Friday, September 13, 2019
A further reply to Glenn Ellmers
At Law and Liberty, Glenn Ellmers has replied
to my
response to his
review of my book Aristotle’s
Revenge. He makes two points, neither
of them good.
First,
Ellmers reiterates his complaint that I am insufficiently attentive to the
actual words of Aristotle himself. He
writes: “This where Feser and I part. He thinks that it is
adequate to have some familiarity with ‘the broad Aristotelian tradition’ – a
term of seemingly vast elasticity. I do not.”
Put aside the false assumption that my own “familiarity” is only with
the broad Aristotelian tradition rather than with Aristotle himself. It is certainly true that my book focuses on the former rather than
the latter. So, is this adequate?
Friday, September 6, 2019
Review of Smith’s The AI Delusion
My review of
economist Gary Smith’s excellent recent book The
AI Delusion appears today at City Journal.
Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Ellmers on Aristotle’s Revenge
Last week at
Law and Liberty, Glenn
Ellmers reviewed my new book Aristotle’s
Revenge: The Metaphysical Foundations of Physical and Biological Science. It’s one of the weirdest book reviews I’ve
ever gotten. Today my
response appears at Law and Liberty.
Friday, August 30, 2019
Gage on Five Proofs
I’ve been
getting some strange book reviews lately.
First up is Logan Paul
Gage’s review of my book Five
Proofs of the Existence of God in the latest issue of Philosophia Christi. Gage says some very complimentary things
about the book, for which I thank him.
He also raises a couple of important points of criticism, for which I
also thank him. But he says some odd and
false things too.
Saturday, August 24, 2019
Scotus on divine simplicity and creation
In my
exchange with Ryan Mullins on the doctrine of divine simplicity, I
noted that one of the problems with his critique of the doctrine is that he
pays insufficient attention to the history of the debate about it. Hence he overlooks what should be obvious possible
responses to his criticisms, such as Aquinas’s appeal to the distinction
between real relations and logical relations.
He also makes sweeping attributions of certain views to all defenders of
divine simplicity, overlooking crucial differences between proponents of
the doctrine. Other critics of divine
simplicity also often make these mistakes.
A consideration of the views of John Duns Scotus further illustrates the
range of issues with which any serious general critique of divine simplicity must deal.
Thursday, August 22, 2019
Aquinas on creation and necessity
While we’re
on the subject of divine simplicity and creation, let’s consider a closely
related issue. In the Summa Contra Gentiles, Aquinas argues
that God wills
himself, that he
does so necessarily, that what he wills he
wills in a single act, and that he wills other
things besides himself. Doesn’t it
follow that he also wills these other things necessarily? Doesn’t it follow that they too must exist
necessarily, just as God does? No, neither
of these things follows.
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
A further reply to Mullins on divine simplicity (Updated)
UPDATE 8/25: David Mahfood replies to Mullins at Eclectic Orthodoxy. I've got a couple of followup posts, here and here.
UPDATE 8/24: Brandon Watson and John DeRosa also respond to Mulllins.
UPDATE 8/21: Look out! The Scotist Meme Squad has entered the fray.
At Theopolis, Ryan Mullins has now replied to those of us who had commented on his essay criticizing the doctrine of divine simplicity. (The other commenters were Peter Leithart and Joe Lenow.) What follows is a response to what he has to say in reply to my comments on the essay, specifically.
UPDATE 8/24: Brandon Watson and John DeRosa also respond to Mulllins.
UPDATE 8/21: Look out! The Scotist Meme Squad has entered the fray.
At Theopolis, Ryan Mullins has now replied to those of us who had commented on his essay criticizing the doctrine of divine simplicity. (The other commenters were Peter Leithart and Joe Lenow.) What follows is a response to what he has to say in reply to my comments on the essay, specifically.
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Summer open thread
It’s about
time for another open thread, so here it is.
From violent crimes to medieval times to cringe-making rhymes, nothing
is off-topic. Still, as always, please
keep it classy and keep it civil.
While I’ve
got your attention, let me take this opportunity to make several comments about
comments. First, a few readers have
complained recently that their comments are not appearing. In fact, they are appearing. What these
readers do not realize is that after a thread exceeds 200 comments, you have to
click on the “Load more…” prompt at the bottom of the comments section to see the
most recent comments. It’s easy to miss,
but it’s there. Click on it and you’ll
no doubt find that comment that you thought had disappeared into the ether (and
perhaps had needlessly re-posted several times).
Thursday, August 8, 2019
Contra Mullins on divine simplicity
The Theopolis Institute website is
hosting a conversation
on divine simplicity, with an opening essay by Ryan Mullins criticizing the
doctrine and responses so far from Peter Leithart, Joe Lenow, and me. More installments to come over the next
couple of weeks. You can read my own
response to Mullins here.
Sunday, August 4, 2019
McCabe on the divine nature
Herbert
McCabe was one of the more important Thomists of the twentieth century, and a
great influence on thinkers like Brian Davies.
Not too long ago, Davies and Paul Kucharski edited The
McCabe Reader, a very useful collection of representative
writings. Among the many topics covered
are natural theology, Christian doctrine, ethics, politics, and Aquinas. McCabe’s style throughout is lucid and
pleasing, and the book is full of insights.
What follows are some remarks on what McCabe has to say about one
specific theme that runs through the anthology, and about which he was
especially insightful – the divine nature.
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Hayek’s Tragic Capitalism
Those who weren’t
able to read it when it was behind a paywall might be interested to know that
my recent Claremont Review of Books
essay “Hayek’s Tragic Capitalism” is now
accessible for free.
As I noted
before, the essay is a companion piece of sorts to my recent Heritage
Foundation lecture on “Socialism
versus the Family.” My recent post
on post-liberal
conservatism is relevant too.
Friday, July 26, 2019
Debate with Graham Oppy
Yesterday on
Cameron Bertuzzi’s Capturing Christianity
program, I had a very pleasant and fruitful live debate with Graham Oppy about
my book Five
Proofs of the Existence of God. The
debate lasted about an hour and a half (and was followed by a half-hour Q and A
for Capturing Christianity’s Patreon
supporters). You can watch the debate on
YouTube.
Thursday, July 25, 2019
Review of Tallis
My
review of
Raymond Tallis’s excellent recent book Logos:
The Mystery of How We Make Sense of the World appears in the
July 26 issue of The Times
Literary Supplement.
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
The latest on Five Proofs
Tomorrow, Thursday
July 25, Cameron Bertuzzi’s Capturing Christianity
program will be hosting
a live discussion between atheist philosopher Graham Oppy and me about my
book Five
Proofs of the Existence of God.
Philosopher Stephen
L. Brock briefly
reviews the book in The Review of
Metaphysics. From the review:
Friday, July 19, 2019
Psychoanalyzing the sexual revolutionary
When someone
makes a claim or presents an argument and you pretend to refute it by calling
attention to some purported personal shortcoming of his (such as a bad
character or a suspect motive), then you’ve committed an ad hominem fallacy. The
reason this is a fallacy is that what is at issue in such a case is the truth of the claim or the cogency of the argument, and you’ve
changed the subject by talking about something else, namely the person making the claim or
argument. But as I explained in a
post from a few years ago, not every criticism of a person making a
claim or argument is an ad hominem
fallacy, because sometimes the topic just is
the person himself. For instance, when a
person is prone to committing ad hominem
fallacies and persists in them despite gentle correction, it is perfectly
legitimate to note that he is irrational and maybe even morally defective in
certain ways – for example, that he is in thrall to the
vice of wrath, or has a
willful personality, or is guilty of a
lack of charity toward his opponents.
Tuesday, July 16, 2019
Interview on Aristotle’s Revenge
UPDATE 7/17: Part 2 of the interview has now been posted.
Recently Michael Egnor interviewed me about my book Aristotle’s Revenge for the Discovery Institute. The interview will be posted in three parts, spread across the Institute’s ID the Future and Mind Matters podcasts, and today the first part has been posted. (I’m critical of Intelligent Design theory in the book, so the Institute is showing good sportsmanship in hosting the interview!)
Recently Michael Egnor interviewed me about my book Aristotle’s Revenge for the Discovery Institute. The interview will be posted in three parts, spread across the Institute’s ID the Future and Mind Matters podcasts, and today the first part has been posted. (I’m critical of Intelligent Design theory in the book, so the Institute is showing good sportsmanship in hosting the interview!)
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
The metaphysics of the will
Last month,
at a conference at Mount Saint Mary’s College in Newburgh, NY on Aquinas
on Human Action and Virtue, I presented a paper on “The Metaphysics of
the Will.” You
can listen to audio of the talk at the Thomistic Institute’s Soundcloud
page.
Monday, July 8, 2019
Speaking (what you take to be) hard truths ≠ hatred
Suppose I
was driving past you and you stopped me to warn that a bridge was out up ahead
and that I was risking my life by continuing in that direction. Suppose I reacted indignantly, accusing you
of hating me and hoping that I drove off the bridge to my doom. This would no doubt strike you as a most
bizarre and irrational response.
Obviously, there is nothing whatsoever in what you said that entails any
ill will toward me. On the contrary, if
anything, what you said is evidence of concern for me.
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Norman Geisler (1932 – 2019)
I am sorry
to report that philosopher and theologian Norman Geisler has died.
Geisler stood out as a Protestant who took a broadly Thomist approach to
philosophy and theology, and as an evangelical who vigorously defended the
classical theist conception of God against the currently fashionable anthropomorphism
he aptly labeled “neo-theism” (and which Brian Davies calls “theistic
personalism”). Those of us who sympathize
with these commitments are in his debt.
Friday, June 28, 2019
Frege on what mathematics isn’t
Mathematics is
an iceberg on which the Titanic of modern empiricism founders. It is good now and then to remind ourselves
why, and Gottlob Frege’s famous critique of John Stuart Mill in The
Foundations of Arithmetic is a useful starting point. Whether Frege is entirely fair to Mill is a
matter of debate. Still, the fallacies
he attributes to Mill are often committed by others. For example, occasionally a student will
suggest that the proposition that 2 + 2 = 4 is really just a generalization
from our experience of finding four things present after we put one pair next
to another – and that if somehow a fifth thing regularly appeared whenever we
did so, then 2 and 2 would make 5.
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
Just say the damn sentence already
Suppose you
are a Catholic who thinks the death penalty ought never to be applied in practice under modern
circumstances. Fine. You’re within your rights. Whatever one thinks of the arguments for that
position, it is certainly orthodox. However,
that position is very different from saying that capital punishment is always and intrinsically wrong, wrong per se or of its very nature. That position
is not orthodox. It is manifestly contrary to scripture, the
Fathers and Doctors of the Church, and the consistent teaching of the popes up
until at least Benedict XVI. The
evidence for this claim is overwhelming, and I have set it out in many places –
for example, in this
article and in this
book co-written with Joe Bessette.
Attempts to refute our work have invariably boiled down to ad hominem attacks, red herrings,
question-begging assertions, special pleading, straw man fallacies, or other
sophistries and time-wasters.
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Links for thinkers
David
Oderberg’s article “Death,
Unity, and the Brain” appears in Theoretical
Medicine and Bioethics.
Nicholas
Maxwell at Aeon calls
for a revival natural philosophy.
Gee, maybe someone ought to write a
book on the subject.
Philosopher
Kathleen Stock on gender
dysphoria and the reality of sex differences, at Quillette. At Medium, philosopher Sophie Allen asks: If
transwomen are women, what is a woman?
The Onion on liberal
self-satisfaction.
Saturday, June 15, 2019
The bishops and capital punishment
A group of
five prelates comprising Cardinal Raymond Burke, Bishop Athanasius Schneider,
Cardinal Janis Pujats, Archbishop Tomash Peta, and Archbishop Jan Pawel Lenga this
week issued a “Declaration of the truths relating to some of the
most common errors in the life of the Church of our time.” Among the many perennial Catholic doctrines that
are now commonly challenged but are reaffirmed
in the document is the following:
In accordance with Holy Scripture and
the constant tradition of the ordinary and universal Magisterium, the Church
did not err in teaching that the civil power may lawfully exercise capital
punishment on malefactors where this is truly necessary to preserve the
existence or just order of societies (see Gen 9:6; John 19:11; Rom 13:1-7;
Innocent III, Professio
fidei Waldensibus praescripta; Roman
Catechism of the Council of Trent, p.
III, 5, n. 4; Pius XII, Address to Catholic jurists on December 5, 1954).
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Augustine on capital punishment
In his book On
Augustine: The Two Cities, Alan Ryan says that Augustine’s
“understanding of the purpose of punishment made the death penalty simply
wrong” (p. 82). That is a bit of an
overstatement. In The City of God, Augustine writes:
However, there are some exceptions
made by the divine authority to its own law, that men may not be put to
death. These exceptions are of two
kinds, being justified either by a general law, or by a special commission
granted for a time to some individual. And
in this latter case, he to whom authority is delegated, and who is but the
sword in the hand of him who uses it, is not himself responsible for the death
he deals. And, accordingly, they who
have waged war in obedience to the divine command, or in
conformity with His laws, have represented in their persons the
public justice or the wisdom of government, and in this capacity have put
to death wicked men; such persons have by no means violated
the commandment, “You shall not kill.” (Book I, Chapter 21)
Friday, June 7, 2019
A clarification on integralism
Talk of
integralism is all the rage in recent weeks, given the dispute between David
French and Sohrab Ahmari and Matthew Continetti’s analysis of the state of
contemporary conservatism, on which I commented in a
recent post. What is
integralism? Rod Dreher quotes
the following definition from the blog The Josias:
Catholic Integralism is a tradition
of thought that rejects the liberal separation of politics from concern with
the end of human life, holding that political rule must order man to his final
goal. Since, however, man has both a temporal and an eternal end, integralism
holds that there are two powers that rule him: a temporal power and a spiritual
power. And since man’s temporal end is subordinated to his eternal end the
temporal power must be subordinated to the spiritual power.
Sunday, June 2, 2019
Continetti on post-liberal conservatism
At the Washington Free Beacon, Matthew
Continetti proposes
a taxonomy of contemporary American conservatism. Among the groups he identifies are the “post-liberals.” What he means by liberalism is not twentieth-
and twenty-first century Democratic Party liberalism, but rather the broader
liberal political and philosophical tradition that extends back to Locke,
informed the American founding, and was incorporated into the “fusionist”
program of Buckley/Reagan-style conservatism.
The “post-liberals” are conservatives who think that this broader
liberal tradition has become irredeemably corrupt and maybe always has been,
and thus judge that the fusionist project of marrying a traditionalist view of
morality, family, and religion to the liberal political tradition is incoherent
and ought to be abandoned.
Thursday, May 30, 2019
Rist slapped (Updated)
UPDATE 5/31: Commentary from Fr. Joseph Fessio, Fr. John Zuhlsdorf, and Phil Lawler.
LifeSite reports that Prof. John Rist, one of the signatories of the recent open letter accusing Pope Francis of heresy, has abruptly been banned from all pontifical universities – which he learned one day by finding himself suddenly denied permission to park his car at the Augustinianum, where he had been doing research. Read the whole thing for the sorry details of the episode.
LifeSite reports that Prof. John Rist, one of the signatories of the recent open letter accusing Pope Francis of heresy, has abruptly been banned from all pontifical universities – which he learned one day by finding himself suddenly denied permission to park his car at the Augustinianum, where he had been doing research. Read the whole thing for the sorry details of the episode.
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Popes, heresy, and papal heresy
In an
interview at National Catholic Register,
philosopher John Rist defends his decision to sign the open letter accusing
Pope Francis of heresy (on which I commented in an
earlier post). At
Catholic Herald, canon
lawyer Ed Peters argues that the letter fails to establish its main
charge. Properly to understand this
controversy, it is important to see that a reasonable person could judge that
both men have a point – as long as we disambiguate the word “heresy.”
Wednesday, May 15, 2019
Hayek’s Tragic Capitalism
My essay “Hayek’s
Tragic Capitalism” appears in the Spring 2019 issue of the
Claremont Review of Books. (It’s behind a paywall at the moment.) From the article:
Nor will one find in [Hayek’s] work
the chirpy optimism with which many libertarians and Reaganite conservatives ritualistically
defend the market economy. Hayek’s case
for free enterprise doesn’t fit any of the usual simplistic stereotypes. He not only explicitly and persistently rejected
laissez-faire, but could write as eloquently about the moral downside of
capitalism and the emotional attractions of socialism as any left-winger. In an era in which – young socialist chic
notwithstanding – global capitalism appears to have swept all before it, it is
the triumphalist defenders of the free market rather than its critics who have
the most to learn from Hayek’s cautious, nuanced apologia…
Saturday, May 11, 2019
More on presentism and truthmakers
The esteemed
Bill Vallicella continues
to press the truthmaker objection against presentism. I remain unimpressed by it. Can we break this impasse? Let me try by, first, proposing a diagnosis
of the dialectical situation. Then I
will respond to the points Bill makes in his latest post.
Monday, May 6, 2019
Some comments on the open letter
What should
we think of the
recent open letter accusing Pope Francis of heresy, signed by Fr.
Aidan Nichols, Prof. John Rist, and other priests and academics (and for which
Prof. Josef Seifert has
now expressed his support)? Like
others who have commented on it, I think the letter overstates things in its
main charge and makes some bad arguments, but that it also makes many correct
and important points that cannot reasonably be dismissed merely because the
letter is seriously deficient in other respects.
Thursday, May 2, 2019
Review of Brague
My review of
Rémi Brague’s new book Curing
Mad Truths: Medieval Wisdom for the Modern Age appears at
Catholic Herald.
Saturday, April 27, 2019
Open the thread!
It’s your
opportunity lawfully to indulge your impulse to make those off-topic comments I’m
constantly having to delete. Do so in
good conscience, because nothing is really off-topic in this, the latest open
thread. From Donald Fagen to Ronald
Reagan, from the Black Dahlia to papal regalia to inverted qualia – discuss whatever
you like. As always, just keep it classy
and civil and free of trolling and troll-feeding.
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Aristotelians ought to be presentists
Presentism
holds that within the temporal domain, only the present exists and the past and
future do not. Alex Pruss thinks that Aristotelians
shouldn’t be presentists.
That would be news to Aristotle, Aquinas, and other presentist
Aristotelians. I agree with them rather
than with Alex, and I think that presentism is in fact the natural view to take
if one starts with an Aristotelian view of the nature of physical reality, and of the nature of time in particular. I spell all this out at length in Aristotle’s
Revenge. Here I will just
try briefly to convey the general idea.
Tuesday, April 16, 2019
Vallicella on existence-entailing relations and presentism
Bill
Vallicella continues his critical response to my defense of presentism in Aristotle’s
Revenge. In the first
part of his critique (to which I responded in an
earlier post), Bill raised the influential “truthmaker objection”
against presentism. In his latest post,
he rehearses another popular objection, which appeals to the nature of
relations. I don’t think this objection
is any more formidable than the truthmaker objection, but here too Bill
disagrees.
Saturday, April 13, 2019
Vallicella on the truthmaker objection against presentism
Among the
many ideas defended in Aristotle’s
Revenge is the A-theory of time, and presentism in
particular. Relativity, time travel, the
experience of time, and other issues in the philosophy of time are treated
along the way, and what I say about those topics is crucial to my defense of
presentism. (See pp. 233-303.) My buddy Bill
Vallicella objects to my response in the book to the “truthmaker
objection” against presentism. Let’s
consider Bill’s misgivings.
Presentism
is the thesis that only the present exists, and that past and future events and
objects do not. To be more precise, it
is the thesis that in the temporal realm,
only present objects and events exist.
(For one could also hold – as I do, though other presentists might not –
that in addition to what exists in time, there is what exists in an eternal
or timeless way and what exists in an aeviternal
way.)
Thursday, April 11, 2019
Review of a new volume on Neo-Scholasticism
My review of
Rajesh Heynickx and Stéphane Symons’
anthology So
What's New About Scholasticism? How Neo-Thomism Helped Shape the Twentieth
Century appears at
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
Saturday, April 6, 2019
Can you doubt that 2 + 3 = 5?
In his first
Meditation, Descartes famously tries to push doubt as far as he can,
in the hope of finding something that cannot
be doubted and will thus provide a suitable foundation for the reconstruction
of human knowledge. Given the
possibility that he is dreaming or that an evil spirit might be causing him to
hallucinate, he judges that whatever the senses tell him might in principle be
false. In particular, the entire
material world, including even his own body and brain, might be illusory. Hence claims about the material world, and
empirical claims in general, cannot in Descartes’ view be among the foundations
of knowledge.
Friday, March 29, 2019
Artificial intelligence and magical thinking
Arthur C.
Clarke famously said that “any sufficiently advanced technology is
indistinguishable from magic.” Is this
true? That depends on what you mean by
“indistinguishable from.” The phrase
could be given either an epistemological reading or a metaphysical one. On the former reading, what the thesis is
saying is that if a technology is sufficiently advanced, you would not be able
to know from examining it that it is
not magic, even though in fact it is not.
This is no doubt what Clarke himself meant, and it is plausible enough,
if only because the word “sufficiently” makes it hard to falsify. If there was some technology that almost seemed like magic but could be
shown not to be on close inspection, we could always say “Ah, but that’s only
because it wasn’t sufficiently
advanced.” So the thesis really just
amounts to the claim that people can be fooled into thinking that something is
magic if we’re clever enough. Well,
OK. I don’t know how interesting that
is, but it seems true enough.
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