Friday, December 27, 2019

The Tao of Fredo

Nothing proves more the limits of science than the scientist’s opinions about any topic that is not strictly related to his profession. --Dávila

Einstein said that the most incomprehensible thing about the world is its comprehensibility. Well, yes -- if one doesn't believe the world is created, in which case there is no principle that can account for all these layers of intelligibility, everywhere we look.

Of course, when it comes to the big wide world outside physics, Einstein was no Einstein. He became Einstein because of his preternatural ability to focus so narrowly on that little world. Or maybe it was just autism.

Wait -- little world? Let's see you make a revolutionary breakthrough in physics, Bob! Last time I checked, you flunked out of business school during the Carter administration because of "math and stuff." What makes you qualified to judge Einstein?

I'll tell you what makes me qualified: the same thing that makes you qualified, which is to say, common sense. For the plain fact of the matter is that the world is comprehensible. (Or to back up one step, either it is comprehensible or it isn't; and if it isn't, you may -- must -- stop thinking now, assuming you ever started, because your "thinking" will bear no knowledge-relation to the world.)

For those of us with common sense, the world is plainly comprehensible. Now, why is it comprehensible? The first thing you must comprehend is that this is not a scientific question. Rather, the intelligibility of the world is a scientific assumption, or an implicit axiom without which the conduct of science is impossible.

Here again, in order to even begin to answer this question, one must exit the narrow world of physics, because no answer(s) will be found there. Sure, you can pretend physics holds the answer, but mere physics can't even account for itself, let alone anything transcending it. Which is why this polemical sounding aphorism isn't really polemical at all:

Why deceive ourselves? Science has not answered a single important question.

This is literally true, in the sense that the very concept of "importance" is an extra-scientific value judgment. The other day I saw Fredo Cuomo on CNN, a man who pretends to be Catholic, aggressively insist that only science could (some day) determine the morality of abortion. Until it weighs the evidence and renders its judgment, it's like, just your opinion, man.

Here we see how science, far from answering (or even being able to answer) important questions, renders one stupid by attempting to rely upon it to answer those very questions. Again, don't believe me, believe the Aphorist:

Fredo vividly demonstrates to his airport audience how Nothing is more alarming than science in the ignorant.

For just look at how Fredo's Stupidity appropriates with diabolical skill what science invents.

Indeed, Fredo shows us how Scientific ideas allow themselves to be easily depraved by coarse minds.

And What is more irritating than [Fredo's] stupidity itself is a scientific vocabulary in [Fredo's] mouth.

Now, If good and evil, ugliness and beauty, are not the substance of things, science is reduced to a brief statement: what is, is.

THEREFORE, Whoever appeals to any science in order to justify his basic convictions inspires distrust of his honesty or his intelligence.

In the case of Fredo, honesty AND intelligence.

Hmm, I got a little sidetracked with the Fredo bashing. However, I think we're almost finished anyway.

I suppose we've left out one other possibility, that the world is comprehensible but not created. What would this imply, and why does it make no sense?

Well, for starters, the world's comprehensibility would be anchored in no principle; nor would its intelligibility to our intelligence have a sufficient reason. As Pieper describes it, this would reduce to a "total lack of orientation," because we would deprive ourselves of any and all possible support, whether from inside or outside ourselves, i.e., subjectively or objectively.

Existential freedom? Yes, "this is precisely that famous kind of freedom to which one is not called but condemned." It is not freedom as the Christian understands it but as the nihilist understands it: it is reduced to being irretrievably lost in the cosmos, as opposed to being given a teleological freedom, the purpose of which is theosis, or participation in, and assimilation of, divinity. "God becomes man that man might become God," as the Fathers say.

Freedom, truth, knowledge, intelligibility, virtue, science: each of these is impossible in a world that isn't created -- not "in the past," but in each and every moment. If the world isn't created, then not only are we all condemned to Fredohood, but inescapably so.

Although creation as a process and event necessarily remains inaccessible to our knowing faculties, still it can be said that it must be at any rate a non-temporal event which transcends all succession in time....

Our routine "awareness of going beyond the 'here and now'" will be dismissed "as unreal and poetic idealization... to those who do not see or admit to the true situation of man within the whole of reality." But for the restavus, this vertical awareness "is nothing other than the simple description of reality."

Bottom line aphorism: modern physics PROVES that the cosmos is vastly larger than we had ever imagined. And yet:

The distances of the physical universe are those of a prison.

14 comments:

julie said...

For the plain fact of the matter is that the world is comprehensible.

The boy got a set of Snap Circuits for Christmas, a scientific toy that helps teach people the basics of electronic circuitry. Touch this bit of metal to that bit of metal, touch that to some other things with different properties, connect it all to a battery pack, and you create a flowing stream of electrons that creates light, heat, sound, and motion. Perfectly "comprehensible," yet indistinguishable from magic, and impossible in a happenstance cosmos.

Gagdad Bob said...

As the man said, we know everything about energy. Except what it is.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Bob, merry Christmas.

Anonymous said...

Hello Dr. Godwin and blog readers all.

Regarding this post, I must say Dr, I don't get where you are coming from.

You wrote:

"I suppose we've left out one other possibility, that the world is comprehensible but not created ....the world's comprehensibility would be anchored in no principle; nor would its intelligibility to our intelligence have a sufficient reason."

Now you have oft been tastefully obscure, but this latest offering is especially tenebrous. I'm slightly concerned as to why I can't grok this. Is it me, or is it you?

Julie, Van, or other reader, any input here? What is going on?

No worries, Dr, you are one of the greats, this little hiccup will not affect my interest in your work.

The attack on Einstein and Frego and other God-doubters, I get where you are coming from. But I would say, you can call off the dogs. Nobody who is anybody doubts God these days. There is a steep rising curve in certainty on this matter and atheism is headed for the dust-bin of history as we speak.

To wit, go outside your home and try to locate an actual atheist. See how long it takes you. At 8 hours in you can throw in the towel. Point proved.

Regards, Dr. Pibb, Esq, FAC, Retired.



Petey said...

Sounds like you haven't yet convinced yourself that existence is meaningless. You just have to work at it a little harder. You'll get there.

Anonymous said...

Ayn Rand said that existence has very deep meaning if you look out for #1.

Anonymous said...

Dr. Pibb, Esq, FAC, Retired,
You're not groking this because you're a DK.

I am not a DK, so read and learn.

I miss the days when nuns were singing and flying. Anything seemed possible back then. Then Mother Teresa cozied up to Baby Doc and now only old maids become nuns anymore.

I’m seeing atheist channels emerging on Youtube and public access. It’s a matter of time before there’s an atheist sitcom, though some may say that already happened with Seinfeld. As you know, that show promoted Al Yeganeh the original soup nazi, Iranian secularist and anti free speech activist. Some may forgive him because he was a capitalist, but I’m not going to be fooled. He puts demons into his soup.

Cousin Dupree said...

Yes, but Festivus chases them away.

Anonymous said...

Hello all:

I asked for a clarification of an obscure passage in the post and I got no help at all from any quarter. Does anybody know what was intended and can restate for clarity? If you all would please focus on the inquiry and stop the clowning.

Petey, I am no atheist, and stand in no need to tend in that fruitless direction.

Anonymous, Ayn Rand was gravely mistaken on many things and no one needs to pay heed to those writings.

Anonymous 10:55, your comment was balderdash of the most crass sort. Pull yourself together girl.

Dupree if you would turn up the acrimony that would be appreciated.

Did you know 80% of professed atheists cry out to God for succor when interrogated skillfully? This exposes the sordid sham that is atheism.

The new, more muscular believer of today needs no trappings, props or doctrine and tends to the Lord's business by trucking with the Lord Himself. Be that kind of believer and you will never go spiritually hungry.

Alright then, carry on. I do expect better from all of you in the future.

Dr. Pibb, Esq, FAC, Retired.

Anonymous said...

Dr. Pibb, Esq, FAC, Retired.,

Our God is a conservative God. Be gay and you'll be burning in hell with all the other unclothed masochistic gays. Not that there's anything wrong with that. Or not that such a thing might be so bad after all. Some of those demons have really big pitchforks.

Is this why God doesn't like gays, because his hell cannot fully torment them?

I digress. I think Bob meant that a world with no principle would mean that we'd all be under the thumb of the rich and powerful. Yet ironically, we now are, even after Jesus repeatedly told us where it is that they're all going to wind up. My head is about to explode.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 12:10, your relentless pessimism is wearing thin.

Do you ever say anything good about anything with a straight face?

If ever a person was sorry for herself, that would be you.

Do you love God? Then say you are blessed.

If you are not a believer, then you are in the right place; one function of the comment section is to help the person standing on the fence finally jump over.

The arms of Jesus will catch you, and you probably already sense this but just need to come in out of the cold. It's OK, you are going to be fine.

-Erect Pillar

Anonymous said...

Erection,

Walking around all day looking and sounding like everybody else takes its toll.

So I do all my bitching here. It's cathartic.

I may give MAGA-speak a whirl. Seems a little blind faith cult zombie to me, with a charlatan twist, but I'll try to focus on those few The Donald's policy beliefs in which I agree.

Anonymous said...

Hello Anonymous 3:02 PM:

Point well taken, it is OK to have a bitching station for catharsis. It seems I took the bitching to be your baseline state and got a bit concerned.

Of course you have your joys in life, you've written of them many times, you are the cat and ant lover. I love cats and ants too.

There is no need for acrimony here among friends. Go in peace and I look forward to reading more from you. You are loved and appreciated.

-Pretty Pussy

Anonymous said...

I'm happiest when "the meek" get to have their way. This is because most of the meek that I know aren't so greedy and power hungry that they've become pathological and sociopathic. I've 'played' with that latter kind as well. In my most humble of meek-minded experiences, no good ever comes from playing with the pathological. Even on their better days they still lie like they breathe.

The meek are definitely on the ropes these days. And it makes me grumpy.

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