Thursday, March 19, 2020

Now Batting, Number Two, Jesus Christ

Continuing with Bishop Barron's mind-expanding take on The Epistemic Priority of Christ, note that the claim in the title has to do with knowledge of reality; not just any knowledge, but ultimate knowledge of ultimate reality.

Put it this way: no matter your metaphysic -- even something as stupid and primitive as atheism -- you have to start somewhere, and this somewhere is not given by mere reason or math (both or which are tautological), nor by empiricism (since no sensation can tell you what it is sensing; that requires a rational soul that knows essences).

Therefore, all we ask is an honest and transparent statement of how you got to first base. If you faithfully execute this demand, you will quickly realize that you've simply assumed your way to first, thus undercutting your metaphysic before you can get to second, let alone score. Or, assuming you do reach home, you have cheated, because every baseball fan knows you can't steal first base. The instant replay negates the run. Start over.

So, when our team -- the Tonga Raccoons -- steps into the box with a bat labeled the epistemic priority of Christ, we are first of all simply being honest. Nor is this bat "stupid," or "unsophisticated," or "superstitious." Or, at the very least, it is no more or less superstitious than the bat with which you swing, be it scientism, Darwinism, deconstruction, whatever. Rather, it all comes down to how far the ball travels when we hit it.

Indeed, there is a bat and there is a ball. The bat is our mind (AKA intelligence), and the ball is reality (intelligibility).

However, it is no exaggeration to say that modern philosophy begins with the Kantian anti-principle that our bats cannot make contact with the ball. Swing as we might, all we can ever hit is our own a priori categories, thus smashing our own balls. Even if our phenomenal bats could strike the noumenal ball, we could never know it.

In the argot of baseball, if you are unfortunate enough to strike out three times in a single game, it's called a golden sombrero; four times is a platinum sombrero. Now imagine a whole life spent striking out: this is called a tenured sombrero.

Back to our leadoff hitter, the Bishop. Here comes the pitch:

to acknowledge the epistemic priority of Jesus Christ is, first, to assume the intelligibility of all that is.

In other words, it assumes that we can actually see and hit the ball. This is called "common sense," but you don't have to have spent too much time in academia to realize that common sense is against the rules of their league -- much as how the designated hitter runs contrary to any sense of aesthetics or propriety. It's frankly disgusting.

More on the dimensions and properties of our epistemic ballpark:

Since all has been made through, and will be ordered by, a divine rationality, there must be a form in all finite being as a whole and in each particular thing that exists; what comes to be through Logos is, necessarily, logical.... there is an unavoidable correspondence between the activity of the mind [bat] and the structure of being [ball]: intelligence will find its fulfillment [reach home] in this universal and inescapable intelligibility [common sense].

Now, in reality, the conduct of science is just COMMON SENSE writ large. Why then is it so uncommon, historically and culturally speaking? Well,

it is no accident that the physical sciences -- astronomy, physics, chemistry, biology -- developed and flourished in the Christian West.

For in these parts, we stride into to batter's box with "the biblical conviction that finite reality is intelligible, made through the divine Logos," such that our scientific heavy hitters "rather naturally move out to meet the physical world with confident rationality."

Thus, our "investigations will proceed without hesitation to the farthest reaches of the macrocosmic and the microcosmic realms." In other words, we can hit any ball out of any park. If you build it, we will transcend it. For these are the implicit rules of science:

One could argue that the universality of objective intelligibility (assumed by any honest scientist) can be explained only through recourse to a transcendent subjective intelligence that has thought the world into being, so that every act of knowing a worldly object or event is, literally, a re-cognition, a thinking again of what has already been thought by a primordial divine knower.

Bottom line for today: "every scientific act is, ipso facto, an affirmation of God's existence." Or in other words, all along, science has been borrowing God's bat without acknowledging it. Which is why "natural reason is a participation in the pure intelligibility of the Logos and thus is necessarily congruent with the deepest perceptions of theology" (Barron).

I had also wanted to say something about how and why, in our *finest* universities, the common sense of STEM has become utterly detached from the coarse and common nonsense of the humanities. Who took the uni out of the university? Well, yes, diabolos -- i.e., scatterer and divider -- but we'll say more about this as we proceed.

10 comments:

julie said...

I had also wanted to say something about how and why, in our *finest* universities, the common sense of STEM has become utterly detached from the coarse and common nonsense of the humanities.

Like the proverbial lobsters in the pot, though, the humanities keep trying to pull STEM into their own overheated attractor. It's not woke to call it "STEM," it's "STEAM" now. The A is for Art. I love art, science, technology, etc., but one of these things is definitely not like the others. Also, no matter how technically-based your college major may be, you still have to sit through hours of indoctrination classes to ensure you have the correct opinions, prior to learning any unpleasant facts about the nature of reality.

Daniel T said...

Quality posts!

Anonymous said...

Great Post, however it leaves the non-Christian God-lover wondering if they are missing something. So, the post seems to evangelize in a side-ways fashion. Is Jesus the only way? Is Krishna chopped liver? Does the Great Spirit not cut it? Is the generalist God-lover not going to get back in to heaven unless she converts?

You have dropped hints you are working up to another exposition on "Diabolos." Now we know you mean the horned one. I hope this next exposition will be more convincing than the ones that went before. Those were underwhelming to say the least.

The problem encountered was wedging Diabolos into an overarching and unified metaphysic without besmirching God's good name in the process. Let see what you can manage.

-Chronos

robert curry said...

Nice !!

Thanks, Brother Bob

julie said...

Ha - how long has it been the Baked Raccoon showroom?

I hear the cannabis shops are considered essential businesses right now. Probably wisely, it may be the only option some people have to help calm the heck down...

Anonymous said...

Hi Julie:

You are correct.

Cannabis works for some people with mental health symptoms which did not respond well to standard medications. If their cannabis ran out, they could get really ill. Sonme people use it for other health conditions. It is their only option.

So, I agree cannabis dispensaries are essential.

That being said, cannabis users should keep a 6 month supply on hand to cover the risk of shortage. Cannabis users should not hoard immense quantities, which others may need. If seeds are found within product, they should be planted to see what grows.

For spiritual purposes, cannabis use is controversial. Some say it enhances contemplation. Others think it puts up further cognitive barriers between seeker and God.

-Purple Headband



Anonymous said...

Krishna Krishna, hare Krishna.

I saw my first orange bangle dancers in a long while. They were all wearing N95 masks and giving away toilet paper.

Christians have competition.

Anonymous said...

Cannabis makes people lazy and fat. Lobby watchdogs traced the DC choom money straight back to the Frito Lay company, Ben and Jerrys, and Dunkin Donuts.

America isn't gonna come out of this in better shape.

Anonymous said...

" Now imagine a whole life spent striking out: this is called a tenured sombrero."

I have been a professor of literature at a university for about 22 years.

I must reveal I have tenure. At the time it was offered tenure I didn't know any better, so I accepted. I thought everything was fine, until I encountered this blog. Now I am convinced tenure is a detriment to myself and others. I have asked the Dean to withdraw my tenured status. We will see what happens.

I'm not even sure what tenure is for. I thought tenure was a promotion of sorts, and some kind of job security statement. It came with a substantial increase in salary as well. I've been tenured for about 12 years.

But sure enough, as soon as I was tenured I got invited to various university committees and was asked to offer opinions on policy.

But, in my syllabus and guidance of students nothing seemed to change. I've learned the harm done by tenure can be very, very subtle.

About 5 years ago I had an indiscretion with a student. I felt very ashamed and reported this lapse to the Dean. Yet, I was not disciplined. I got a short lecture, a slap on the wrist. I am convinced this was due to my tenured status. But how many other professors were getting away with this? I had to wonder.

I have been very regular going to church and praying daily. Yet I wonder if tenure has tainted my relationship to Jesus. I feel prideful at times, probably more so than if I didn't have tenure.

It will be good to have the tenure removed. I don't think I need it. I could feel good about myself again. Amidst the viral pandemic chaos, this is small matter but I had been meaning to confess this to the readers here and feel better now that I have.

Anonymous said...

I think that tenure, like any well-intentioned system, is something which can be corrupted by the sociopathic few to benefit the socipathic few. Professors become perverts. Business owners become thieves. Priests molest their choir boys. They always achieve this the old fashioned way, with lies and deception. And a fair amount of socially skilled brainwashing I suppose.

I like old school conservatism because it recognizes the wisdom of proven well-intentioned systems. I part company with modern conservatism because it’s come to believe that the sociopathic corruptions to proven systems are part of the system.

Suckers.

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