Monday, October 05, 2020

Weaving the Cosmic Tapestry

Over the weekend I read an enjoyable book called Reality. Which is interesting when you think about it: why on earth do we need to read a book about reality? Isn't it kind of... automatic? What's the alternative? That's right: unreality, AKA fiction and fantasy.

Some people claim there's no such thing as reality; or, that if there is, we could never know it. They think this is a sophisticated attitude, which it is, in the original sense of the word, i.e., sophistry. It's reminiscent of the differences between ideas and ideology, intellect and intellectual, human and humanism, science and scientism, etc.

Sophisticate (the verb) means "to alter deceptively," to falsify, to make artificial and deprive of simplicity, or to debase, spoil, and corrupt. Thus, it is a cause and consequence of what we know of as tenure. If your child attends college and somehow avoids becoming a sophisticate, then the educational system has failed on its own terms. Your child has escaped the progressive Matrix. He is a fugitive slave.

Speaking of which, although our son is homeschooled, some of his classes are taught by other parents. For some reason he's supposed to read the turgid and sentimental Uncle Tom's Cabin, which isn't going to happen. He already deplores racism of any kind, and can't even comprehend how someone could embrace it.

So, I advised him to do what I'd do if I were in his shoes: read the Cliff Notes. We previewed them on amazon, but you still can't get away from the sophistry!

There are probably very few white Americans, if the truth were known, who do not harbor some prejudiced (or, to put it less kindly, racist) ideas about black people, and especially about African Americans....

We all tend to be so conscious today of this prejudiced condition (if not always of the nature of the prejudices) that most white writers would think it foolhardy to attempt a novel whose central characters are African Americans...

Understood. Does this mean black Americans who write and opine about white Americans are fools? Jes' axin'.

The Cliff Notes highlight another problem with Stowe: her Christianity. Of course, "she lived in a less enlightened time," when our unsophisticated citizenry "assumed that the United States was a 'Christian country.'"

Granted, it was founded by Christians upon Christian principles, traditions, and assumptions, but it was really... the notes don't specify. At any rate, Stowe "doesn't apologize for her Protestant chauvinism." The nerve of this woman, to pretend that God abhors slavery! Such a bully.

Here's a non-sequitur: "In our secular time, we tend to avoid the discussion of religion in ordinary 'non-religious' circumstances." But "the separation of Church and State meant something quite different to Stowe." Wait, what? The Constitution forbids a principled Christian opposition to slavery?

End of tangent. What was original point? Right: reality and its alternatives. Note that the latter is necessarily plural, since reality is by definition one. The principle of oneness is why we can both have a reality and know it (more on this point as we proceed). It reminds me of a tweet I read this morning:

I’m a conservative in chess for the same reason I am in politics: because however many good moves there are, there are infinitely more bad moves.

I'm a conservative traditionalist because however many realities there are, there are infinitely more unrealities.

In this context it is permissible to posit more than one reality, so long as we acknowledge verticality, i.e., hierarchy, continuity, and integration, for there are physical, biological, and spiritual (and more) realities. It's just that it's impossible in principle to conceive of these from the "bottom up." If man is intelligent -- which he is -- intelligence can only descend from the top down. If intelligence ascends from below, it's no longer intelligent.

Which is a central point of this other book I'm reading, God and Intelligence in Modern Philosophy by Fulton J. Sheen. Don't let his popularity fool you. This guy was a major brainiac before he became a TV star in the 1950s.

I've already lost the handle on this post. Might as well go with the flow. "The intelligence is the key to the communion of the human and the angelic and the divine. From God, who is the source of intellectual light, knowledge descends progressively" through the vertical hierarchy.

But "modern philosophy" -- as articulated by the sophisticates described above -- "in rejecting the intelligence, has rejected the cornerstone of the whole edifice of continuity and progress in the universe."

Progress. That's another key idea we've discussed in the past, in that the metaphysical underpinning of "progressivism" renders progress impossible in principle. For if truth, morality, and culture are relative, there is no standard but power, i.e., opinion and the will to enforce it. Don't believe me. Just look at what's happening in our Democrat run cities and universities: obey! Or else.

Evolution? Not only are we all for it, but our metaphysic is the only one that renders it both possible and necessary. In other words, God is the sufficient reason of evolution (natural selection is only a means, not the principle). We Coonfolk

did not have to wait for modern biology to reveal continuity and progress in the universe. For it [scholasticism], biological discoveries were confirmations, not revelations. They merely proved in a lower order what reason has already verified in the higher orders.

In short, the universe isn't a static block but a living hierarchy full of intelligence and intelligibility everywhere we turn.

We're out of time, so I'm going to have to pull all of these lucent threads together in the subsequent post. Don't worry: I got this. Everything's under control. Just not mine

8 comments:

Christina M said...

The Reality book looks really good. Can't wait to read your threads and follow along in the book.

Gagdad Bob said...

It might be the most clear and concise exposition I've ever read. Hardly a wasted word.

julie said...

The Cliff Notes highlight another problem with Stowe: her Christianity. Of course, "she lived in a less enlightened time,"

This touches on a discussion we've been having with our kids, about the idea that many have today of people in the past being unenlightened (by which the speaker usually really means "stupid"). Quite the contrary, of course. Then as now, most people did the best they could with the information they had at hand. Judging by the example of 4th and 5th year readers from the 1800s, people were far more enlightened and educated then than they are now.

Nicolás said...

After conversing with some “thoroughly modern” people, we see that humanity escaped the “centuries of faith” only to get stuck in those of credulity.

Anonymous said...

Whoever steals a man and sells him, and anyone found in possession of him, shall be put to death. – Exodus 21:16

When a man strikes his slave, male or female, with a rod and the slave dies under his hand, he shall be avenged. But if the slave survives a day or two, he is not to be avenged, for the slave is his money. – Exodus 21:20-21


Regardless of whichever view of slavery you espouse, there is nothing Biblical declaring that blacks shall be the slaves and whites shall be the owners.

Van Harvey said...

"Don't worry: I got this. Everything's under control. Just not mine"

Yep. Same here.

Anonymous said...

We spend our childhood, adolescence, and young-adulthood mastering our bodies, engaging with peers, and finding our place in the social order.

In adulthood we fend for our growing progeny and establish a home and family.

All of these things are at least partially bent towards physical needs and for reproduction. We work for Nature.

Eventually we pay off our debt, our blood money, to Mother Nature. We have spawned and the progeny are off and running.

We become "spent salmon." That marks the end of the reproductive career.

Following this natural ending we turn our attention to matters of the spirit and devote ourselves to these entirely.

Many retire to a forest clearing and live in a simple hut, subsisting on a handful of grain daily. Each day is a meditation in the sun amidst nature. Thus they become simple, light, clean.

Others prefer an isolated cave and spend dark nights staring into the glowing embers of a fire. Thus they become single-pointed, focused, powerful.

When your time comes you will put aside the things of the world; as you await your departure you consolidate your mastery over your own soul.

Eventually you make your way back here as a mewing newborn dreaming of milk and the honeyed bosoms of your mam.

And the life cycle goes onward. Sure you can care about things like government policies - when you are engaged in that part of your journey. But you will need to let it go.

You will need let everything go eventually.

Anonymous said...

I want the isolated cave. In the latest round the gays aren’t happy with just being pride boys. They also want their ProudBoys hashtag back.

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