Sphex is a genus of wasp which Douglas
Hofstadter, Daniel Dennett, and other writers on cognitive science and
philosophy of mind have sometimes made use of to illustrate a point about what
constitutes genuine intelligence. The
standard story has it that the female Sphex
wasp will paralyze a cricket, take it to her burrow, go in to check that all is
well and then come back out to drag the cricket in. So far that might sound pretty
intelligent. However, if an experimenter
moves the cricket a few inches while the wasp is inside, then when she emerges
she will move the cricket back into place in front of the burrow and go in to
check again rather than just take the cricket in directly. And she will (again, so the standard story
goes) repeat this ritual over and over if the experimenter keeps moving the
cricket.
"One of the best contemporary writers on philosophy" National Review
"A terrific writer" Damian Thompson, Daily Telegraph
"Feser... has the rare and enviable gift of making philosophical argument compulsively readable" Sir Anthony Kenny, Times Literary Supplement
Selected for the First Things list of the 50 Best Blogs of 2010 (November 19, 2010)
Monday, December 30, 2013
Thursday, December 26, 2013
A complex god with a god complex
I thank Dale
Tuggy for his two-part reply to my most recent
remarks about his criticisms of classical theism, and I thank him also for
his gracious remarks about my work. In Part 1 of his reply Dale
tries to make a biblical case against classical theism, and in Part 2 he criticizes the
core classical theist doctrine of divine simplicity. Let’s consider each in turn. Here are what I take to be the key remarks in
Part 1 (though do read the whole thing in case I’ve left out something
essential). Dale writes:
As best I can tell, most Christians
… think, and have always thought of God as a great self…
For them, God is a “He.” They think
God loves and hates, does things, hears them, speaks, knows things, and can be
anthropomorphically depicted, whether in art, or in Old Testament theophanies.
And a good number think that the one God just is Jesus himself – and Jesus is
literally a self, and so can’t be Being Itself.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Peter Geach (1916 - 2013)
Commonweal reports that Peter Geach -- philosopher, one of the fathers
of “analytical Thomism,” husband of Elizabeth Anscombe (with whom he is
pictured in a
famous photo by Steve Pyke), and Catholic father of seven -- has died. A list of some of Geach’s publications can be
found at Wikipedia. I had reason to examine some of Geach’s ideas
in a
recent post. RIP.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Zombies: A Shopper’s Guide
A “zombie,”
in the philosophical sense of the term, is a creature physically and
behaviorally identical to a human being but devoid of any sort of mental
life. That’s somewhat imprecise, in part
because the notion of a zombie could also cover creatures physically and
behaviorally identical to some non-human
type of animal but devoid of whatever mental properties that non-human animal
has. But we’ll mostly stick to human
beings for purposes of this post.
Another way in which the characterization given is imprecise is that there
are several aspects of the mind philosophers have traditionally regarded as
especially problematic. Jerry Fodor
identifies three: consciousness, intentionality, and rationality. And the
distinction between them entails a distinction between different types of
zombie.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Churning out links
At First Things, philosopher Patrick Toner takes
issue with a recent biography of painter Norman Rockwell.
David
Oderberg’s article “The
Morality of Reputation and the Judgment of Others” appears in the latest
issue of the Journal of Practical Ethics. (Don’t miss the accompanying podcast.)
Metaphysician
Stephen Mumford blogs about pop culture and the arts at Arts Matters. Check out his posts on his
preference for paper over digital books, and on comic book artist Jim
Steranko.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Present perfect
Dale Tuggy has replied to my
remarks about his criticism of the classical theist position that God is
not merely “a being” alongside other beings but rather Being Itself. Dale
had alleged that “this is not a Christian view of God” and even amounts to “a
kind of atheism.” In response I pointed
out that in fact this conception of God is, historically, the majority position
among theistic philosophers in general and Christian philosophers in
particular. Dale replies:
Three
comments. First, some of [Feser’s] examples are ambiguous cases. Perfect Being
theology goes back to Plato, and some, while repeating Platonic standards about
God being “beyond being” and so on, seem to think of God as a great self. No
surprise there, of course, in the case of Bible readers. What’s interesting is
how they held – or thought they held – these beliefs consistently together.
Second, who cares who’s in the majority? Truth, I’m sure he’ll agree, is what
matters. Third, it is telling that Feser starts with Plato and ends with Scotus
and “a gazillion” Scholastics. Conspicuous by their absence are most of
the Greats from early modern philosophy. Convenient, because most of them hold,
with Descartes, that our concept of God is the “…idea of a Being who is
omniscient, omnipotent and absolutely perfect… which is absolutely necessary
and eternal.” (Principles
of Philosophy 14)
Monday, December 9, 2013
Back from Cologne
Back today
from an excellent conference on the theme “New
Scholastic Meets Analytic Philosophy” hosted by the Lindenthal Institut,
with cooperation from the publisher Editiones Scholasticae, in Cologne,
Germany. (Since the best return flight
option required staying an extra day, I was fortunate to have the opportunity
to visit Cologne Cathedral and the tombs of Albertus Magnus and Duns Scotus.) An impressive group of students from KU
Leuven attended the conference. David Oderberg
and I are pictured with them above.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Dude, where’s my Being?
It must be
Kick-a-Neo-Scholastic week. Thomas
Cothran calls
us Nietzscheans and now my old grad school buddy Dale Tuggy implicitly labels us atheists. More precisely, commenting on the view that “God is not a being, one among others…
[but rather] Being Itself,” Dale opines that “this is not a Christian view
of God, and isn’t even any sort of monotheism. In fact, this type of view has always competed
with the monotheisms.” Indeed, he
indicates that “this type of view – and I say this not to abuse, but
only to describe – is a kind of atheism.” (Emphasis in the
original.)
Atheism?
Really? What is this, The Twilight Zone? No, it’s a bad Ashton Kutcher movie (if
you’ll pardon the redundancy), with metaphysical amnesia replacing the
drug-induced kind -- Heidegger’s “forgetfulness of Being” meets Dude, Where’s My Car?
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Neo-Aristotelian Perspectives in Metaphysics
My article “Being,
the Good, and the Guise of the Good” appears in the volume Neo-Aristotelian
Perspectives in Metaphysics, edited by Daniel D. Novotný and Lukáš Novák and forthcoming from
Routledge. The other contributors to the
volume are Jorge J. E. Gracia, William
F. Vallicella, E. Jonathan Lowe, Gyula Klima, Michael Gorman, Michael J. Loux, David
S. Oderberg, Edmund Runggaldier, Uwe Meixner, James Franklin, Robert Koons, William
Lane Craig, and Nicholas Rescher.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Nietzschean natural law?
Some years
ago, at an initially friendly dinner after a conference, I sat next to a fellow
Catholic academic, to whom I mildly expressed the opinion that it had been a
mistake for Catholic theologians to move away from the arguments of natural
theology that had been so vigorously championed by Neo-Scholastic writers. He responded in something like a paroxysm of
fury, sputtering bromides of the sort familiar from personalist and nouvelle theologie criticisms of
Neo-Scholasticism. Taken aback by this
sudden change in the tone of our conversation, I tried to reassure him that I
was not denying that the approaches he preferred had their place, and reminded
him that belief in the philosophical demonstrability of God’s existence was,
after all, just part of Catholic doctrine.
But it was no use. Nothing I said
in response could mollify him. It was
like he’d seen a ghost he thought had been exorcised long ago, and couldn’t
pull out of the subsequent panic attack.
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Averroism and cloud computing
The Latin
followers of the medieval Islamic philosopher Ibn Rushd or Averroes (1126 - 1198),
such as Siger of Brabant,
famously taught the doctrine of the unity
of the human intellect. The basic
idea is this: The intellect, Averroists (like other
Aristotelians) argue, is immaterial.
But in that case, they conclude (as not all Aristotelians
would), it cannot be regarded as the form of a material body. It is instead a substance entirely separated
from matter. But matter, the
Aristotelian holds, is the principle by which one instance of the form of some
species is distinguished from another.
Hence there is no way in which one human intellect could be
distinguished from another, so that there must be only a single intellect
shared by all human beings.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
FORTHCOMING: Scholastic Metaphysics
I’ve had a
number of book projects in the works for a while, one of which, my edited
volume Aristotle
on Method and Metaphysics, appeared last summer. Next on the schedule is Scholastic Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction, which will be out next year from Editiones Scholasticae/Transaction
Publishers. You can read a little about
it here. More information to come.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Aquinas’s Fifth Way in Nova et Vetera
My article “Between
Aristotle and William Paley: Aquinas’s Fifth Way” appears in the latest issue (Vol.
11, No. 3) of Nova et Vetera. The article is fairly long and is by far the
most detailed exposition and defense of the Fifth Way I’ve yet given, going
well beyond what I say about it in The
Last Superstition and Aquinas.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Some questions on the soul, Part III
In some recent posts I’ve been answering readers’ questions about the Aristotelian-Thomistic (A-T) understanding of the soul. One more for the road, from a reader who is unclear about why mind-body interaction, which is notoriously problematic for Cartesian dualism, is not also problematic for A-T. The reader writes:
[U]nless something like dualist
interactionism is true, I don't see how… immaterial thoughts and - in
particular - the will - could possibly cause me to do something as simple as
typing this e-mail…
Science would seem to say that the
efficient cause of this was certain electrochemical reactions in my body.
The material cause would be the physical events happening in my body. It
seems that A-T philosophy would hold that the final cause was getting an answer
to a philosophical question, and I agree. My soul would then be the
formal cause, but I guess that notion is incoherent to me… And, unless the
immaterial mind somehow interacts with my body (through quantum physics,
maybe?), I don't see how my thinking about something in my immaterial intellect
could cause my body to do anything.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Bloggers in arms (Updated)
Back today
from the “Thomas
Aquinas and Philosophical Realism” symposium in NYC. While there I had the great pleasure of meeting
blogger and statistician to the stars Matt
Briggs and blogger and science-fiction scribe Mike Flynn -- names which will be known
to many longtime readers of this blog. The
three of us are pictured above.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Oerter is a mensch
Physicist
Robert Oerter and I have been having an exchange over James Ross’s argument for
the immateriality of the intellect. In
response to my
most recent post, Oerter has posted a brief comment. Give it a read. I have nothing to say in reply other than
that Oerter is a good, honest, decent guy and that if we’re ever in the same
town I owe him a beer.
Monday, November 4, 2013
Around the web
Was the twentieth-century
Thomist Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange unduly influenced by Leibnizian rationalism,
as followers of Etienne Gilson often allege?
No, argues Steven Long, over
at Thomistica.net. (Be sure to read
the discussion in the comments section as well as the original post.)
The debate
over Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos
never ends. Raymond Tallis reviews
the book in The New Atlantis, and
Jim Slagle reviews it
for Philosophy in Review.
You’ve read
Sean Howe’s Marvel
Comics: The Untold Story and checked in regularly at its companion blog. Now brace yourself for Blake Bell and Michael
J. Vassallo’s The
Secret History of Marvel Comics, which has a blog of its own. It’s a
look at the seamier, pulp magazine side of the company’s early history.