Yesterday's post didn't do justice to the idea that atheism is but bad grammar, mainly because I myself don't know what the statement means, but it sounds intriguing enough to make me want to find out.
Let's begin with Grammar 101 -- i.e., bonehead grammar -- before moving on to Grammar ∞, which is to say, our grammar vs. God's. Grammar is
the system of rules that govern how a language works. It encompasses how words are combined, structured, and used to create meaningful communication. It provides the framework for constructing sentences, phrases, and clauses, and involves understanding how words relate to each other and how their forms can change.
What comes first, the language or its grammar? Oddly enough, according to Chomsky, the latter: he posits a universal grammar that serves as the deep structure of any particular language. It is said to be "hardwired" into the human brain, and although Chomsky assumes it to be biological, he concedes that no one really knows: rather, he limits himself to describing the what, but there is no explanation as to the how it presumably evolved.
Whatever the case, human beings have an implicit grammar that other animals lack, which is why even the most intelligent chimp can't really learn language. What a child accomplishes effortlessly, the chimp cannot accomplish with any amount of effort.
The Bible has a kind of theory of language, in that God speaks creation into existence, crowning this with the creation of a being made in the image and likeness of the Creator-Speaker, for which reason man is assigned the task of naming all the other creatures. That's not something you could ask a chimp or dog to do. Indeed, you could point to this or that animal and ask the dog what it is, but they'll only stare at your finger.
Now, a name is a universal, so naming the animals presupposes knowledge of universals. Here again, this is precisely what a chimp that is taught sign language cannot do. While they can can use signs to refer to objects and actions, they soon hit a wall that excludes them from abstract and conceptual thinking. They cannot truly get "inside" language, but at best can only enact a facsimile of this.
It seems that we cannot even speak of human language without a concept of interiority: we can only be "inside" language because there is an inside to begin with. But how is it even possible for an inside to exist in an externally related universe?
In other words, scientism assumes a universe of externally related parts with no inside, so how did interiority ever arise in such a setting? How do we get from objects to the subjects that know, understand, and communicate about them? This strikes me as the most inconceivable leap conceivable. Hence Schuon's remark that
The first thing that should strike a man when he reflects on the nature of the Universe is the primacy of the miracle of intelligence -- or consciousness or subjectivity -- whence the incommensurability between it and material objects, whether a grain of sand or the sun, or any creature whatever as an object of the senses.
As far as I can recall, it was Stanley Jaki's Means to Message: A Treatise on Truth that first alerted me to what all philosophers and philosophies naively presuppose. I've discussed the book on numerous occasions, for example, in a post called How to Exist:
All philosophers, intellectuals, thinkers, pundits, and professors, despite different conclusions, must agree on one thing: that "They all use tangible means for the delivery of their respective messages" (Jaki). In order to effectively communicate meaning, there must be a means of effective communication.
Therefore, if philosophers are logical, their primary concern should be about the extent to which their particular philosophy justifies the use of any such means, indeed its very reality and all the consequences, both numerous and momentous, that follow from this.
Take Darwinism, for example. Is there anything in this philosophy that permits the entities explained by it to explain themselves?
No there is not. "Yet only in the measure in which that justification is done, implicitly or, what is far better, explicitly, may the philosopher's message become truly about truth" (Jaki). Which means that 99% of philosophers imagine they are finished, when they haven't actually even begun. In other words, they haven't begun to explain how the communication of truth between humans is possible
In a subsequent post called The Message of the Cosmos, I wrote that
In order for existence to ex-ist, there must be this primordial distinction between means and message. Typically we think of the foundation of things as consisting of matter, or energy, or law, but these are all somewhat beside the point if there is no Message and no Means to encode and transmit it.
Bob goes on to say that
There are diverse methods for encoding and unpacking these messages, from poetry to science, philosophy to theology, math to music.
More generally, you might say there are qualitative ways and quantitative ways. In our Age of Stupidity, there is a widespread belief that only the quantitative ways are valid, but guess what? As soon as you say that, you've made a qualitative argument, one that obviously cannot be reduced to numbers....
Science not only deals with material reality, but conflates it with existence itself. But as Schuon writes, matter is only "the sensible manifestation of existence," so existence is obviously more than what science can say about it. Or, put conversely, if you were to consider all the things science says about matter, they wouldn't add up to existence itself, for existence is infinitely greater than the sum of its parts.
But the deeper point is that science simply assumes not only that "matter talks," but -- more bizarrely -- that scientists can hear and understand what it is saying.
To which the only sensible response is ?!, because this communication of intelligibility to the intellect is the first thing we assume but the last thing we'd expect. (Literally, as in Einstein's remark that "The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible.")
This is getting way out ahead of our skis, but in another post I wrote that
If the totality of reality is completely intelligible, then God exists.
But the totality of reality is completely intelligible.
Therefore God exists.
Now, everyone I know assumes that reality is intelligible. Indeed, that's what reality is. There are people for whom reality is unintelligible -- or who live "outside reality" -- but we call them crazy.
The point is, knowledge of, and conformity to, reality, is not only our standard of sanity, but the whole basis of education, not to mention justice. But the question is, in what kind of cosmos are reality, truth, and justice even possible?
A grammatical cosmos?
Well, let's go back to our initial definition of grammar, which is the system of rules that govern how a language works. It encompasses how words are combined, structured, and used to create meaningful communication.
It seems to me that the cosmos must be grammatical before we are, which is why it can meaningfully communicate to us, so this grammar cannot be biological, rather, biology is one of the consequences of the grammatical structure of reality. As are biologists and linguists.
I suspect we need to further consider the grammar of the Trinity -- which is to say, Grammar ∞ -- in order to get to the bottom of this.