Thursday, February 27, 2020

One Small Step for the Son of Man, One Giant Leap for Mankind

Why do we have these two words: appearance and reality? If your philosophy begins with the idea that we cannot know reality, then the reality behind appearances is only more appearances, all the way down. In fact, there can be no down -- or up, or any direction at all, since there is no unmoving reference by which it can be perceived.

If ground zero of modern thought is I think, therefore I am, the battle cry of postmodern thought must be I know nothing, therefore I know it all; or I am unemployable, therefore I am tenured; etc.

To repeat something Lewis said a couple of posts back, "What we learn from experience depends on the kind of philosophy we bring to experience."

First, this is absolutely true, and second, it must account for much of the appeal of various forms of bonehead relativism. And every philosophy necessarily reduces to bonehead relativism in the absence of God.

To be scrupulously fair to relativists, they would insist that my belief in God is just bonehead absolutism: that the only thing we can know is that there is no truth, only opinions and perspectives ultimately grounded in interest. Granted, while it is true that there is always a perspective, it doesn't follow that perspective is all there is.

For one thing, unlike an animal, we can know we have a "point of view," and awareness of this at once situates us outside or above this perspective. In short, we may partake of objectivity and detachment, which are quasi-divine superpowers -- and literally so, since perception of perception, knowledge of knowledge, and consciousness of consciousness are all immaterial powers that transcend nature.

Along these lines, Schuon writes that

Our intelligence is made for the Absolute, or it is nothing. Among all the intelligences of this world the human spirit alone is capable of objectivity, and this implies -- or proves -- that what confers on our intelligence the power to accomplish to the full what it can accomplish, and what makes it wholly what it is, is the Absolute alone.

In other words, we mustn't reduce human intelligence to the least thing it can do -- i.e., what it shares with the animals -- but approach it from the perspective of what it can uniquely do, and what no animal could ever do. The end illuminates the beginning; we can't know what a seed is for until we see the mature tree.

In order to prove the existence of God, one need only prove the existence of man. I mean this literally, because in claiming man is totally reducible to animal, animal to matter, matter to physics, etc., one is affirming that man doesn't properly exist -- that he is only the appearance of a deeper reality consisting entirely of subhuman law + stuff.

Could be. In the end, it's either something like that or something like this:

The Intellect, in a certain sense, is ‘divine’ for [i.e., from the perspective of] the mind and ‘created’ or ‘manifested’ for God: it is nonetheless necessary to distinguish between a ‘created Intellect’ and an ‘uncreated Intellect,’ the latter being the divine Light and the former the reflection of this Light at the center of Existence; ‘essentially’, they are One, but ‘existentially’, they are distinct...

What this really means, however you wish to characterize it, is that first there is Intellect: it is In the Beginning. It is what we call divine, and we have the word "divine" -- or "sacred" or "holy" -- in order to mark a kind of primordial distinction known to all men at any time, by virtue of being men. Everyone knows that some things are sacred, especially people who don't believe in the sacred, and that it is distinct from the profane and secular.

As we've discussed many times, leftism is a religion; or better, because it superficially denies religiosity, the denied religious energies and categories return in thinly disguised form.

Political correctness, for example, is an enforcement mechanism used to discourage and punish heretics and blasphemy. "Cancel culture" is just excommunication. Victimhood is righteousness, Trump is the devil, and the NY Times is scripture. The saints are too numerous to mention. Elite universities are progressive seminaries, and you shall have no gods before diversity. You are full of ecological sin, and you must purify yourself of carbon and its many minions. You must confess the sin of White Privilege and make reparations.

Man also has imagination and creativity, but the intellect is not these; it is not "active," but rather, passive and receptive, as container to contained, female to male, or soul to God:

The intellect is a receptive faculty and not a productive power: it does not “create,” it receives and transmits; it is a mirror reflecting reality in a manner that is adequate and therefore effective.

This is precisely what it means to be created in the image of God. If you want to be purely logical about it, put it this way: 1) we have certain abilities only a god could have, 2) we are not God, 3) therefore we must partake of God, or be a prolongation of God, or somehow share in his nature. But beware #2: we are not God.

Every profane philosophy affirms premise (1) but denies premise (2), which leads to... well, history, AKA, the fall prolonged in time, the cosmic battle between men who believe in God and men who believe they are Gods. In this Age of Metaphysical Shrinkage,

the intellect is atrophied to the point of being reduced to a mere virtuality, although doubtless there is no watertight partition between it and the reason, for a sound process of reasoning indirectly transmits something of the intellect; be that as it may, the respective operations of the reason -- or the mind -- and of the intellect are fundamentally different from the point of view that interests us here, despite certain appearances due to the fact that every man is a thinking being, whether he be wise or ignorant.

That was a bit of a mouthful, but it goes to what we said above about the impossibility of irreligiosity, for even the most hardened atheist with the most shriveled intellect nonetheless uses a desiccated reason in order to make his case, and reason cannot but help to transmit something of the light and truth that surpass it. Reason itself (like life or freedom) is always good, even if it is inevitably used for bad ends.

Now, here is a key point: yes, the intellect is simultaneously composed of light while being an adequation to it. But it may be compared to a candle against the sun, nor would you light a match in order to get a better look at the sun. That would be stupid, but nevertheless, that is what atheism is: I will flick my little Bic to disprove the existence of Light!

But put that stupid thing down and look up at the sun! For

There is no difficulty in the fact that pure intelligence -- the intellect -- immensely surpasses thought, and that there is no continuity -- despite the identity of essence -- between a concept as such and reality... to lament over the shortcomings of thought is to ask it to be something that it is not; this is the classical error of philosophers who seek to enclose everything in the cogito alone [I think therefore I am].

Rather, and we mean this literally: He thinks, therefore I am; and He is, therefore I think. We cannot be men if there isn't someone superior to man. Or, one small step for the Son of Man, one giant leap for mankind.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Victimhood is righteousness, Trump is the devil, and the NY Times is scripture.

No offense, but this is so 2002. Here in 2020, victimhood is getting angsty, Trump is an anti-constitutional megalomaniac, and the NY Times is part of the 1% conspiracy. Just sayin’. But I like the part about Jesus though, which seems timeless. Carry on.

Come to think of it, I may be remiss. Is this a vintage style blog? Should we be speaking in terms of patriots and traitors and sharia?

Petey said...

Yes, just the same old vintage neotraditional retrofuturism. It is of no worldly use.

julie said...

in claiming man is totally reducible to animal, animal to matter, matter to physics, etc., one is affirming that man doesn't properly exist -- that he is only the appearance of a deeper reality consisting entirely of subhuman law + stuff.

Interestingly, the people who believe that this is so are quite often also the people who believe that humans are the worstest thing to happen to the earth ever, and we should mostly all die. If it's all just molecules in motion, what difference does it really make if we're here or not? The same molecules would just be doing something else without us.

Nicolas said...

If the soul is a myth, genocide is a simple problem of effective anesthetics.

JWM said...

I haven't dropped a comment here in quite some time. More and more, though I'm getting weary of the constant warfare across the wires, and I need something of substance, so I'm lurking around here and a few other places. David Warren is another drink of clear water. I find The Orthosphere is another. But my question: How do things that we cannot know as objective fact, but must take on faith fit into this? For example, I know that I have a truck in the driveway, but I must take it on faith that Jesus is the Christ, or that there is an afterlife.

JWM

julie said...

Purely speaking for myself, even when things go horribly wrong, there have been so many answered prayers in my life that I have no excuse not to believe. Even at those times when it seems like Christ is awfully far away, I know that's a (very convincing) illusion.

As Bob once said way back when, in hindsight it all seems like a conspiracy; it is that hindsight that feeds my faith and hope in the promises of the future. YMMV, of course.

JWM said...

I've had more than ample evidence to believe there is a Greater Hand moving through my life. The whole Lost Canyon Project has been shot through with it from its inception. It stands as the most overwhelming evidence I can think of. I may have some very cool news on that coming up soon. Still holding my breath until stuff is official.

JWM.

julie said...

That's awesome. It's such a great project; Pete was truly special.

Nicolas said...

Faith is not an irrational assent to a proposition; it is a perception of a special order of realities.

Faith is not a conviction that we possess, but a conviction that possesses us.

Faith is what allows us to wander into any idea without losing our way back.

As long as we do not arrive at religious categories, our explanations are not founded upon rock.

Christian doctrines have the implausibility of objects that we do not construct, but that we stumble across.

Certain dogmas of Christianity seem so evident to me that it is not difficult for me to believe in those that are difficult to believe.

It is easy to convert to a doctrine when we hear the defender of the opposite.

Religion is not a set of solutions to known problems, but a new dimension of the universe. The religious man lives among realities that the secular man ignores.

JWM said...

Nicholas: Thank you for that.

Actually the question came from a conversation I had in an exchange of emails with Dion Wright, the one who sort of started the whole LCP thing rolling. I wrote that we have to comfortable with things that we can not know in an objective sense. We may intuit them, or take them on faith, but we can't know them in the concrete sense that I know there is a truck in the driveway (last I looked it was there, anyway) It seems there are two kinds of "knowing".

I myself Have become comfortable with the intuitive, and the faith based knowledge. Which, though I've wandered far afield, I got from hangin' around here in the first place.

JWM

Anonymous said...

In this hybrid body that I like to call my own of material, mind, and spirit, with the mind seemingly operating in the other two there's only one thing I can make my mind up about and that is I don't know who or what put it together and I don't know how I know I don't know. Jesus implied that He knew when He told us to say 'Our Father who art in Heaven' when we pray, and because of other things He said I'd be inclined to believe Him. He functioned on a different level of consciousness than I do and as Albert Einstein said 'No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it'. ~ I am not my name

Anonymous said...

Hi Gang:

I really enjoyed this blog post and the thoughtful comments which ensued.

The consensus seems that God is real; yet He is also diaphanous, subtle, veiled, and elusive. Because of this faith is needed to shore up morale.

Also, doubters get reinforcement for their assertions by way of God being less obvious and intersubjective than matter to the intellect and senses.

The ancients of the Indus valley applied themselves to many of the questions which arise from this post and others. Some conclusions they reached:

God is real; reality is God. (This was considered obvious and self-evident and an accidental or Godless cosmos was never discussed as a possibility).

Matter was God-conscious albeit at a very low level. Animals were endowed with some consciousness at a medium level.

Human beings were endowed with an immortal soul and capable of very high God-awareness.

The human being was diagrammed as a complex aggregate of "sheaths" including physical, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual sheaths. Each of these elements in turn had different gradations, for example the physical would include a subtle body (noumenal, not in our dimension), the vital energetic component, the dense matter component (tissue), and spiritual body (noumenal, not in our dimension). The human being was seen spread across many "planes" of being. These findings were made via deep contemplation and were considered educated guesses at best.

Your controlling awareness (your daily waking awareness) was a temporary phenomenon used for operations here on Earth and was largely discarded upon death. An immortal soul was present. The soul completed a chain of lives, retaining the salient lessons or experiences of each life while gradually getting more complex, powerful, and individualized. At the endpoint or culmination of Earth experience the soul was a fully developed entity and was free to do others things, but these other things, were not known as to what they could be. These conclusions were established via deep contemplation; exactly what was seen was not recorded with high clarity in order to back up these claims.

All matters of life where therefore seen as spiritual in nature; all life was union with God (Yoga).

They went on to describe the character of the soul (unerringly virtuous); virtues were much the same as we see them today. Therefore virtuous conduct was seen as life well-spent, and the contrary, not so well spent.

They conceded life was shot through with contrary (evil) movements caused by ignorance and devoted extensive tracts on how to avoid pitfalls and get around this.

Thus the ancients concluded. Now, these were some really special people, they dove deep and hard on the contemplation thing (which was all they had to work with, and apparently they had plenty of spare time to work it). That's where they got their stuff, and it is pretty good stuff. No folks since have exceeded the introspective depths these Indus Valley savants descended to, bless them.

Van Harvey said...

"If ground zero of modern thought is I think, therefore I am, the battle cry of postmodern thought must be I know nothing, therefore I know it all; or I am unemployable, therefore I am tenured; etc."

Or that modernity is a headlong panicked flight from our responsibility to look up.

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