Saturday, June 01, 2019

The Argument from Stupidity

Before continuing in our effort to develop an objective definition of spiritual normality -- and therefore pathology -- I want to address an objection raised by a troll; not his objection, mind you, since that would require gifts he doesn't possess -- but the plagiarized sentiments of a John Wilkins, who is of the belief that "science is not a metaphysical system of thought," but rather, "deals precisely with objective experience. Personal views of scientists do not define the results of scientific work."

This reflects the philosophically untutored perspective of a naive and pre-critical scientism that doesn't trouble itself with looking beneath the phenomena, or thinking about thinking, or considering the sorts of assumptions that are built into science (and without which science cannot function).

For to say that science "deals precisely with objective experience" is to affirm something that cannot possibly be true. In order to say it, one must have no idea what the words "objective" and "experience" mean.

Science, by its very nature, deals with things that are relative and therefore contingent. In other words, it deals with the way things are, but doesn't pretend that the way things are is the only way they could or must be; thus, the phenomena of science exist in an ambiguous realm between possibility and necessity.

There is nothing studied by science that (according to its own lights) couldn't be otherwise. Indeed, change one little variable in one of those helpful equations governing the big bang, and neither we nor the cosmos as we know it would be here.

Likewise, to paraphrase Stephen Gould, if one little inconvenient mudslide had occurred back in the days of the Burgess Shale bio-explosion, the wholly contingent evolutionary line leading to us might have been broken, and we wouldn't be here to talk about it.

Indeed, we can all be traced to a common mother, Ms. Mitochondrial Eve, and according to Nicholas Wade, it is possible that we are related to as few as 5,000 people who wandered out of north Africa some 50,000 years ago. If they hadn't been extra-careful about wearing their sweaters in the cold or not running around with scissors, who knows?

The point is, from the perspective of science, the emergence of man is a freakishly unlikely accident literally bordering on the impossible.

Even leaving that aside, Darwinism leaves unexplained how it is possible for contingency bordering on impossibility to know objectivity flowing from necessity. How could this ever be, unless man himself somehow partakes of necessity?

As we've discussed in the past, man is always limited by what Schuon calls four "infirmities." To summarize, we are "creature, not Creator," which is to say, "manifestation and not Principle or Being." Or, just say we are contingent and not necessary or absolute.

Second, we are men, and all this implies, situated somewhere between absolute and relative, God and animal -- somewhat like a terrestrial angel or a celestial ape.

Third, we are all different, which is to say, individual, and there can be no science of the utterly unique and unrepeatable.

This is a critical point, because as far as science is concerned, our essential differences must be entirely contingent, just a result of nature tossing the genetic dice. Suffice it to say that this is not a sufficient reason to account for the miracle of individuality. Well, individual jerks, maybe. But not anyone you'd want to know.

Lastly, there are human differences that are indeed contingent and not essential or providential. These include negative things such as mind parasites that result from the exigencies of childhood, but also the accidental aspects of culture, language, and history. In order to exist at all, we must surely exist in a particular time and a particular place.

Elsewhere Schuon summarizes the accidents of existence as world, life, body, and soul; or more abstractly, "space, time, matter, desire."

The purpose of metaphysics is to delve beneath these accidents, precisely, and hence to a realm of true objectivity and therefore perennial truth (even though, at the same time, we must insist that existence, life, and intelligence especially represent a continuous reminder, or breakthrough, of the miraculous: nature itself is supernatural, or we could know nothing about it).

Now, what do we mean by objectivity? It must be a stance uncontaminated by contingency, passion, or perspective, for starters. There is contingent science -- or the science of contingency -- and there is the "science of the Absolute," which is none other than metaphysics.

Time out for an aphorism: Properly speaking, the social sciences are not inexact sciences, but sciences of the inexact (NGD).

Thus, objectivity begins with the soph-evident existence of the Absolute -- or, in the words of the Aphorist,The sole proof of the existence of God is His existence. This is precisely what confers value and meaning upon human existence, and what sets us apart from everything else in creation.

You might say that humans are "subjectivized intelligence," in that there is surely evidence of objective intelligence in the cosmos prior to our arrival, e.g., DNA or the laws of physics. One needn't say "intelligent design." Rather, just intelligence will do the trick, so long as we know what intelligence is.

As Schuon points out, "Our intelligence is made for the Absolute, or it is nothing." What he means is that man's own intelligence demands a sufficient reason, and this reason is the Absolute. Remove the Absolute, and nothing makes sense, or can make sense, except in a wholly contingent and therefore senseless manner. This is why we insist: God or Nothing, TransCosmic Plenitude or Infrahuman Nihilism.

This same human intelligence "testifies irrecusably to a purely spiritual First Cause, to a Unity infinitely central but containing all things, to an Essence at once immanent and transcendent."

Another helpful wise crack by Schuon: "To claim that knowledge as such can only be relative amounts to saying that human ignorance is absolute."

Which it most certainly is in some people. The existence of such absolute ignoramuses is another roundabout proof of God.

Thought can avoid the idea of God as long as it limits itself to meditating on minor problems. --Dávila

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I’d say that science deals precisely with subjective experience, as observed by the average human being’s 5 measurable senses, and attempts to find objectivity with disciplined rigorous peer review. Metaphysics deals with all else (and sometimes the former too!). Who wouldn’t be happy with that?

That system worked well for Christianity in times past, with a little help from those driven to built grand cathedrals which delighted the senses. Back in the brutish dark ages, if a European observing their child dying from some black death visited one of those most magnificent and miraculous structures that men could build , it offered some kind of visible hope.

Today most grand structures are being built in atheist and allah lands. And they’re not much being dedicated to God. That’d put a dent in perceptions. I’m not saying that most evangelicals are being used as handy tools for the mammon builders, or that mental metaphysical cathedrals aren't valuable, but that a good brick and mortar cathedral can go a long way.

Anonymous said...

The Institute undertook a study of stupidity and spiritual pathology, in the context of what the purpose was in relation to individuals and to the group.

Our 16 person focus group came away with the impression there is some genuine positive role for the "negative," as it were, on a case by case basis. As Norman Vincent Peale put it, the trials of life are meant to make you, not break you. The cumulative outcome of much stupidity appeared to be a progression towards wisdom.

The focus group noted humanity is situated in such a way as to generate much psychic distress and errata, probably intentionally. The controlling Entity has positioned and finely tuned many variables to ensure stupidity and spiritual pathology will occur at a substantial rate.

The Earth is in many ways a "negativity generator." There must be some utility in this. We have some hypotheses. Probably negativity here has a positive effect on sidereal humanity (the soul). It is a progressive process. Negativity is not the final product, but a manufacturing tool or method of some kind. It is never absolute, and often transient.

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