W. Norris
Clarke’s article “A Curious Blind Spot in the Anglo-American Tradition of
Antitheistic Argument” first appeared in The
Monist in 1970. It was reprinted in
his anthology The
Creative Retrieval of St. Thomas Aquinas: Essays in Thomistic Philosophy, New and Old, which was
published posthumously in 2009. I only
just read the essay, and I did so with embarrassment and gratification. Embarrassment because I found that something
I’ve been harping on for a few years now had already been said by Fr. Clarke
over 40 years ago. Gratification because
I found that something I’ve been harping on for a few years now had already
been said by Fr. Clarke over 40 years ago.
Showing posts sorted by date for query soul. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query soul. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Thursday, June 19, 2014
The last enemy
There are
two sorts of people who might be tempted to think of death as a friend: those
who think the nature of the human person has nothing to do with the body, and
those who think it has everything to do with the body; in short, Platonists and
materialists. Protestant theologian Oscar
Cullmann summarizes the Platonist’s position in his little book Immortality
of the Soul or Resurrection of the Dead? as follows:
Friday, May 16, 2014
Pre-Christian apologetics
Christianity
did not arise in a vacuum. The very
first Christians debated with their opponents in a cultural context within
which everyone knew that there is a God and that he had revealed himself
through Moses and the prophets. The
question, given that background, was what to think of Jesus of Nazareth. Hence the earliest apologists were, in
effect, apologists for Christianity as
opposed to Judaism, specifically.
That didn’t last long. As
Christianity spread beyond Judea into the larger Mediterranean world, the
question became whether to accept Christianity as opposed to paganism. Much
less could be taken for granted.
Still, significant
common ground for debate was provided by Greek philosophy. In Book VIII of The City of God, Augustine noted that thinkers in the Neoplatonic
tradition had seen that God is the cause of the existence of the world; had
seen also that only what is beyond the world of material and changeable things
could be God; had understood the distinction between the senses and their
objects on the one hand, and the intellect and its objects on the other, and affirmed
the superiority of the latter; and had affirmed that the highest good is not
the good of the body or even the good of the mind, but to know and imitate God. In short, these pagan thinkers knew some of
the key truths about God, the soul, and the natural law that are available to
unaided human reason. This purely
philosophical knowledge facilitated Augustine’s own conversion to Christianity,
and would provide an intellectual skeleton for the developing tradition of
Christian apologetics and theology.
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.
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.)
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.
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.
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.
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Do machines compute functions?
Robert
Oerter has
now replied to my
most recent post about his criticisms of James Ross’s argument for the
immateriality of the intellect. Let me
begin my rejoinder with a parable. Suppose
you presented someone with the argument: All
men are mortal; Socrates is a man; therefore, Socrates is mortal. He says he is unconvinced. Puzzled, you ask him why. He replies that he is surprised that you
think Socrates is mortal, given that you believe in the immortality of the
soul. He adds that all you’ve done in
any case is to make an epistemological point about what we know about Socrates, and not really given any reason to think that
Socrates is mortal. For though the
conclusion does, he concedes, follow from the premises, and the premises are
supported by the evidence, maybe for all we know there is still somehow more to
men than what the premises tell us.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Some questions on the soul, Part II
In a
recent post I responded to a reader’s question about the
Aristotelian-Thomistic understanding of the soul. Another reader asks another question. Let me set out some background before
addressing it. From the
Aristotelian-Thomistic point of view, strictly intellectual activity -- as
opposed, say, to sensation or imagination -- is
not corporeal. This is the key to
the soul’s immortality. A human being is
the sort of thing that carries out both non-corporeal and corporeal activities. Though less than an angel, he is more than an
ape, having a metaphysical foot, as it were, in both the immaterial and
material camps. That means that when his
corporeal operations go, as they do upon death, it doesn’t follow that he goes.
He limps along, as it were, reduced to the
non-corporeal side of his nature.
This reduction is drastic, for a great deal of what we do -- not only
walking, talking, breathing, and eating, but seeing, hearing, smelling, and so
forth -- depends on the body.
Friday, September 20, 2013
Some questions on the soul, Part I
In a
recent post I spoke of the soul after death as essentially the human being
in a “radically diminished state.” The
Aristotelian-Thomistic philosophical reasons for this characterization were set
out in an
earlier post. A reader asks how I
would “answer [the] challenge that it appears the Bible suggests our souls in
communion with God are better off than those of us here alive in this ‘vale of
tears.’” After all, St. Paul says that “we
would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord,” and Catholics
pray to the saints, who are obviously in a better state than we are. Isn’t this clearly incompatible with the claim
that the soul after death is in a “radically diminished state”? Furthermore, wouldn’t the conscious
experiences that Christian doctrine attributes to the saved and the damned after
death be metaphysically impossible on an Aristotelian-Thomistic conception of
the soul? Wouldn’t a Cartesian view of
the soul be more in harmony with Christianity?
Do we have here a case “where Aristotelian philosophy is just at odds
with revealed Christian truth”?
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Geach on worshipping the right God
In his essay
“On Worshipping the Right God” (available in his collection God
and the Soul), Catholic philosopher Peter Geach argues that:
[W]e dare not be complacent about
confused and erroneous thinking about God, in ourselves or in others. If anybody’s thoughts about God are sufficiently
confused and erroneous, then he will fail to be thinking about the true and
living God at all; and just because God alone can draw the line, none of us is
in a position to say that a given error is not serious enough to be harmful. (p. 112)
How
harmful? Well, if a worshipper is not
even thinking about the true God, then
he is not really worshipping the true
God, but something else. That’s pretty
serious. (I would add to Geach’s concern
the consideration that atheistic objections to erroneous conceptions of God can
lead people falsely to conclude that the notion of God as such is suspect. That’s pretty serious too.)
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Body movin’, mind thinkin’
The human body is the best picture of
the human soul.
Ludwig
Wittgenstein, Philosophical
Investigations
We recall that John B. Watson did not
claim that quite all thought was incipient speech; it was all incipient twitching of muscles, and mostly of speech muscles.
W. V. Quine,
“Mind and Verbal Dispositions”
We're getting down computer action
Do the robotic satisfaction
Do the robotic satisfaction
Beastie
Boys, “Body Movin’”
To perceive
a human being behaving in certain
characteristic ways just is to perceive him as thinking. There are two
ways to read such a claim: Quine’s and Watson’s reductionist way, and
Wittgenstein’s anti-reductionist way.
The Beastie Boys, of course, were putting forward a
computational-functionalist variation on Quinean behaviorism. (OK, not really. Just pretend.
It’s a better quote than any I could have gleaned from a functionalist
philosopher.)
Friday, April 26, 2013
Around the web
Metaphysician
E. J. Lowe discusses ontology, physics, Locke, Aristotle, logic, laws of
nature, potency and act, dualism, science fiction, and other matters in an
interview at 3:AM Magazine.
Saturday, March 23, 2013
EvolutionBlog needs better Nagel critics
EvolutionBlog’s
Jason Rosenhouse tells us in a
recent post that he hasn’t read philosopher Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos. And it seems obvious enough from his remarks
that he also hasn’t read the commentary of any of the professional philosophers
and theologians who have written about Nagel sympathetically -- such as my own
series of posts on Nagel and his critics, or Bill
Vallicella’s, or Alvin
Plantinga’s review of Nagel, or Alva
Noë’s, or John
Haldane’s, or William
Carroll’s, or J.
P. Moreland’s. What he has read is a critical review of Nagel’s
book written by a non-philosopher, and a couple of sympathetic journalistic pieces about Nagel and some of his defenders. And on that
basis he concludes that “Nagel needs better defenders.”
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
New ACPQ article
My article
“Kripke, Ross, and the Immaterial Aspects of Thought” appears in the latest issue of the American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly. Here is the abstract:
Friday, November 23, 2012
Cardinal virtues and counterfeit virtues
The cardinal
virtues are wisdom, courage, moderation, and justice. They are so called because they are
traditionally regarded as the “hinge” (cardo)
on which the rest of morality turns. We
find them discussed in Plato’s Republic
and given a more given systematic exposition in Aquinas’s Summa Theologiae.
For Plato, these
virtues are related to the three main parts of the soul and the corresponding three
main classes in his ideal city. Wisdom
is the characteristic virtue of the highest part of the soul -- the rational
part -- and of the highest class within the city, the ruling philosopher-kings. Courage is the characteristic virtue of the middle,
spirited part of the soul, and of the soldiers who constitute the second main
class in the city. Moderation is the
characteristic attribute of the lowest, desiring part of the soul and of the lowest,
productive class of the city. Justice in
turn is the proper ordering of the three parts of the soul and the city, each
doing its part.
Monday, November 12, 2012
The Incompetent Hack
You might
recognize the name of atheist blogger Chris Hallquist, who styles himself “The
Uncredible Hallq,” from an earlier
post. I there characterized him as “unliterate”
on the grounds that while he is capable of reading, he does not bother to do
so. (Hallquist had egregiously misrepresented
something I had written in an earlier post, and made some silly and false
remarks about what was and was not covered in my book Aquinas
while admitting that he hadn’t read more than 15 pages of it.) But it seems that was not quite right. It may be that, like Otto in the movie A Fish Called Wanda (to borrow an
example I used in The
Last Superstition), Hallquist does
read; he just doesn’t understand.
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