I’ve often
emphasized that the reason consciousness poses such a persistent problem for
materialism has less to do with consciousness itself than it has to do with the
desiccated conception of matter that we’ve inherited from early modern
philosophy and science. Barry Dainton
makes the same point a couple of times in his book Self. For example, he writes:
Friday, May 29, 2020
Friday, May 22, 2020
The lockdown is no longer morally justifiable
As
I have said before, I think that the lockdown that was put in place in the United States
two months ago was morally justifiable given the circumstances at the
time. In my opinion, under current
circumstances, it is no longer morally justifiable. To be sure, I am not denying that some social distancing measures are still justifiable and even necessary. I am also not denying that a more modest
lockdown may still be defensible in some localities. But the draconian total lockdown that was put in place across most of the country is
at this point no longer defensible, and state and local authorities who are
relaxing it are right to do so.
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Oderberg on the hierarchy of being
In February,
David Oderberg gave a lecture in Oxford on the theme “Recovering
the Hierarchy of Being.” You can now watch it on
YouTube. Be sure also to check out David’s new book The
Metaphysics of Good and Evil (about which you can find information at
the publisher’s website).
Friday, May 15, 2020
The lockdown and appeals to authority
Here are two
things every serious student of logical fallacies understands. First, if what is at issue is the soundness of an argument, then the
motives and expertise of the person giving the argument are completely irrelevant. To fail to see this is to commit an ad hominem fallacy of “poisoning the
well.” Second, if what is at issue is
the credibility of expert testimony, then
the motives and expertise of the
person giving the testimony are highly
relevant. To fail to see this is to
commit a fallacy of “appeal to authority.”
Friday, May 8, 2020
Presentism and analogical language
Terms are
used univocally when they are used in
the same sense, as the word “bat” is in both “The baseball player swung the bat”
and “The cricket player swung the bat.”
Terms are used equivocally
when why are used in completely unrelated senses, as the term “bat” is in “The
baseball player swung the bat” and “A bat flew in through Bruce Wayne’s
window.” The analogical use of terms is a middle ground kind of usage. I gave an example when discussing Aristotelian
realism in my recent First Things review of William
Lane Craig’s book God Over All:
Friday, May 1, 2020
Joe Biden Superstar
For
something lighter as you go into the weekend, have a listen to songstress
Hannah Hoffman’s “You
Know the Thing,” a setting to music of Joe Biden’s deep thoughts on the
foundations of human rights. This promises
to become something of a new genre, given that we’ve already had The Gregory
Brothers’ now-classic Biden-penned hit “Hairy Legs.” Certainly you can take it to the bank that
Biden will keep providing us with interesting lyrics.
While you’re
at it, you should check out also the jazzy Ms. Hoffman’s philosophical tunes “Euthyphro,” “Fallacy
Funk,” and “The
Trolley Problem.”
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