Monday, December 29, 2014
Causality, pantheism, and deism
Agere sequitur esse (“action follows being” or “activity follows existence”) is a basic principle of Scholastic metaphysics. The idea is that the way a thing acts or behaves reflects what it is. But suppose that a thing doesn’t truly act or behave at all. Would it not follow, given the principle in question, that it does not truly exist? That would be too quick. After all, a thing might be capable of acting even if it is not in fact doing so. (For example, you are capable of leaving this page and reading some other website instead, even if you do not in fact do so.) That would seem enough to ensure existence. A thing could hardly be said to have a capacity if it didn’t exist. But suppose something lacks even the capacity for acting or behaving. Would it not follow in that case that it does not truly exist?
Friday, December 26, 2014
Martin and Murray on essence and existence
The real distinction between a thing’s essence and its existence is a key Thomistic metaphysical thesis, which I defend at length in Scholastic Metaphysics, at pp. 241-56. The thesis is crucial to Aquinas’s argument for God’s existence in De Ente et Essentia, which is the subject of an eagerly awaited forthcoming book by Gaven Kerr. (HT: Irish Thomist) One well-known argument for the distinction is that you can know thing’s essence without knowing whether or not it exists, in which case its existence must be distinct from its essence. (Again, see Scholastic Metaphysics for defense of this argument.) In his essay “How to Win Essence Back from Essentialists,” David Oderberg suggests that the argument can be run in the other direction as well: “[I]t is possible to know that a thing exists without knowing what kind of thing it is. (Such is our normal way of acquiring knowledge of the world.)” (p. 39)
Which brings
to mind this old Saturday Night Live
skit with Steve Martin and Bill Murray:
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
Christmastime reading for shut-ins
Just
announced: The Institute for Thomistic Philosophy.
At Public Discourse, William Carroll gives
us the scoop on Thomas Aquinas in China.
At Anamnesis, Joshua Hochschild asks: What’s Wrong with Ockham?
Philosopher
Roberto Mangabeira Unger and physicist Lee Smolin have just published The Singular Universe and the Reality of Time:
A Proposal in Natural Philosophy.
In an interview, Smolin addresses the question: Who will rescue
time from the physicists?
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Knowing an ape from Adam
On questions
about biological evolution, both the Magisterium of the Catholic Church and
Thomist philosophers and theologians have tended carefully to steer a middle
course. On the one hand, they have
allowed that a fairly wide range of biological phenomena may in principle be
susceptible of evolutionary explanation, consistent with Catholic doctrine and
Thomistic metaphysics. On the other hand,
they have also insisted, on philosophical and theological grounds, that not every biological phenomenon can be given
an evolutionary explanation, and they refuse to issue a “blank check” to a
purely naturalistic construal of evolution.
Evolutionary explanations are invariably a mixture of empirical and
philosophical considerations. Properly
to be understood, the empirical considerations have to be situated within a
sound metaphysics and philosophy of nature.
Friday, December 12, 2014
Causality and radioactive decay
At the
Catholic blog Vox Nova, mathematics
professor David Cruz-Uribe writes:
I… am currently working through the
metaphysics of St. Thomas Aquinas as part of his proofs of the existence of
God… [S]ome possibly naive counter-examples from quantum mechanics come to
mind. For instance, discussing the principle that nothing can change
without being affected externally, I immediately thought of the spontaneous
decay of atoms and even of particles (e.g., so-called proton decay).
This might be a very naive question:
my knowledge of quantum mechanics is rusty and probably out of date, and I know
much, much less about scholastic metaphysics. So can any of our readers
point me to some useful references on this specific topic?
Friday, December 5, 2014
Working the net
The Daily Beast nominates
Aristotle for a posthumous Nobel prize.
(Even Aristotle’s mistakes are interesting: Next time you see a European
bison, you might not want to stand behind it.
Just in case.)
Physicist
George Ellis, interviewed
at Scientific American,
criticizes Lawrence Krauss, Neil
deGrasse Tyson, and scientism in general. Some choice quotes: “[M]athematical equations
only represent part of reality, and should not be confused with reality,” and “Physicists
should pay attention to Aristotle’s four forms of causation.”
Richard
Bastien kindly
reviews my book Scholastic
Metaphysics in Convivium Magazine. From the review: “Feser’s
refutation [of scientism]… alone makes the purchase of the book well worthwhile.”
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Progressive dematerialization
In the
Aristotelian-Thomistic (A-T) tradition, it is the intellect, rather than
sentience, that marks the divide between the corporeal and the
incorporeal. Hence A-T arguments against
materialist theories of the mind tend to focus on conceptual thought rather
than qualia (i.e. the subjective or “first-person” features of a conscious
experience, such as the way red looks or the way pain feels) as that aspect of
the mind which cannot in principle be reduced to brain activity or the like. Yet Thomistic writers also often speak even
of perceptual experience (and not just of abstract thought) as involving an
immaterial element. And they need not
deny that qualia-oriented arguments like the “zombie
argument,” Frank Jackson’s “knowledge
argument,” Thomas Nagel’s “bat
argument,” etc. draw blood against materialism. So what exactly is going on here?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)