Tuesday, March 09, 2021

The Miracle of Certitude

Here is a little question on which Garrigou and Schuon can't both be correct. No doubt it's a question to which most people would respond with another question: so what? But I am not most or even more than a few people. 

Garrigou agrees with all vertical adventurers that the existence of God is certain; or, to put it conversely, it is foolish to maintain that "the existence of God cannot be proved by any apodictic argument"; or to suggest that "by no process of human reasoning can the certainty of [God] be established." 

Now, reason, according to Fr. Garrigou, is "our natural faculty of perceiving the truth." I'm gonna stop the Padre right there, because how can such a mirroraculous faculty be merely "natural"? 

I don't want to get ahead of ourselves, but our ability to reason must be a "supernaturally natural" one, so long as we are deploying it rather than vice versa.  In other words, to use reason is to have transcended reason. 

If we are merely confined to reason, then to hell with it. In that case there would there is no escape from tautology -- except maybe downward into a Rousseauean romanticism, or Nietzschean will, or neo-Marxist hell. We could expand our little epistemological circle but never escape it. Compared to reality, it would be...

We couldn't say, because we would have no real contact with it. If we cannot transcend reason, then we are in the position of people born, say, inside a yellow submarine, speculating on the nature of the ocean. All they have access to is the dials and meters inside the sub. No one inside has ever actually touched water or even knows their submarine is yellow, since they've never seen it from the outside.  

It would be analogous to living inside the liberal matrix, in which case the media and academia serve as the instrument panel inside the crockpit. To call this an epistemologically closed world is an injustice to the left. Rather, theirs is a world of unrelenting coprophagia.

We insist that if reason is merely natural, then that is where it stays: in a circle of tautology. For rationalism always reduces to a futile effort to anchor certitude "in phenomena rather than in our very being" (Schuon).  

But we cannot reason about something transcending reason unless there is already something transcendent in reason itself. Which is how the people living a life of ease inside their yellow submarine can truly know the sea is green and the sky is blue.

There is reason and there is intelligence, the former being a tool of the latter. Intelligence as such "is the perception of a reality" and the discernment between the real, the less real, and the unreal (thus, the Real is at once binary and hierarchical, or both continuous and discontinuous, more on which as we proceed). 

This being the case, we see that intelligence and reality aren't just mirrors of one another, but ultimately of the same substance: if intelligence can know truth, it is because intelligence is truth (and vice versa).

Back to Garrigou. He writes that 

The knowledge of God which can be acquired by the natural light of reason, is not merely a true knowledge, i.e., conforming to the reality; but it is also a knowledge of truth for which we are able to give a reason; hence it is not simply a belief resting on the testimony of God, or on that of tradition, or on that of the human race. It is the result of rational evidence.

With all due respect, I'm gonna say: no way. For one thing, this violates Gödel's theorems, in that there can be no rational bridge between reason and what transcends reason. You can't just sneak something into reason that hasn't been authorized by reason. To put it baseballically, you can't steal first base.

Logic teaches us that no matter how perfect the logic, there will always be at least one truth it cannot prove but will have to accept on faith. Confined to logic, there is no escape hatch from Gödel. And yet, the escape hatch surely exists, otherwise we couldn't even know of the theorems.  Reason is tautologous, but the human mind isn't; we out-Gödel Gödel all the time, or we'd be like animals or leftists, living inside the matrix of instinct or ideology, respectively. 

That was yesterday news. Let's continue with today's headline, courtesy of Schuon (from the book Gnosis: Divine Wisdom):

CERTITUDE IS ITSELF A MIRACLE

That is, to the extent that certitude exists. Which it does. But how? Again, limiting ourselves to reason, we can only draw conclusions from premises. These conclusion can be very likely or even very very likely, but never absolutely certain. 

Likewise, our senses are pretty damn certain, but what can they tell us about the extrasensory world? Nothing. For which reason empiricism ends right where it begins.

Back to the miracle of certitude: certitude is miraculous because it is, as it were, a fragment of the absolute, or a terrestrial spark thrown off from the boiler room of celestial central.  

Schuon provides a particularly useless way of looking at this -- and for the Raccoon, there can be no higher compliment, since the most precious truths are for their own sake and not for the sake of anything else:

things -- thanks to their Existence -- and the intellective subject -- thanks to Knowledge -- open concrete ways towards the Absolute.... 
the world, insofar as it exists -- or that it is not non-existent -- is an aspect of its divine Cause, hence "something of God"; the Divinity, while being absolutely transcendent in relation to the world, is nonetheless "present" at the centre of all cosmic reality.

Yes, heresies and snares are on all sides, so we must proceed cautiously. Moreover, we can appreciate why this isn't the sort of thing one just blurts out to the Many. Pearls and swine, dogs and the holy, pride and fall, blah blah.

Let's consider all these key words in their totality: absolute, existence, intellect, cause, knowledge, certitude. But let's consider them tomorrow. 

11 comments:

julie said...

It would be analogous to living inside the liberal matrix, in which case the media and academia serve as the instrument panel inside the crockpit. To call this an epistemologically closed world is an injustice to the left. Rather, it is a world of unrelenting coprophagia.

Along those lines, House of Eratosthenes has had some good observations recently::

"Yesterday’s rant had to do with the implications of living in a lie, and asking questions that threaten to breach the lie, like the dome of a pretend-world. When someone asks such questions, whoever is sharing the interest of the lie, or pretend world, can

1. Discourage the question by changing the subject
2. Remold the point of breach into something silly (“Darth Vader couldn’t sense Leia because Leia used The Force to block him…”)
3. Discuss the question honestly, admit that this is something the author of the fiction didn’t bother to entertain, that the pretend-world ends here, and real-reality beckons

Those are the three options. There is no other."

Anonymous said...

It would be analogous to living inside the liberal matrix, in which case the media and academia serve as the instrument panel inside the crockpit..

I would’ve nixed the “liberal” part and revised to “materialistic globalist Powers That Be”. Maybe changed “crockpit” to “crockpot”, as in frogs thinking it's a hot tub. But otherwise, an A+. I’ll consider this an impressive achievement for any self-described city slacker.

-Professor Scanlon

julie said...

Nicolas is right, as usual:

"In 2015, GracePointe Church in Nashville became one of the first large Evangelical churches to affirm same sex marriage. Today, they no longer believe the Bible is the Word of God."

You can be Christian, or you can be leftist.

Van Harvey said...

"With all due respect, I'm gonna say: no way. For one thing, this violates Gödel's theorems, in that there can be no rational bridge between reason and what transcends reason. You can't just sneak something into reason that hasn't been authorized by reason. To but it baseballically you can't steal first base."

I'm not entirely sure if I'm agreeing, disagreeing, or just riffing on what you said... I'll have to wait and see once the phOto is developed, but in regards to that comment, I suppose it depends upon what is meant by 'bridge' and 'transcend'? What bridge is needed between the telescope (tele(o)scope?) and the moon or stars? The telescope, no matter how cleverly lensed and focused, is transcended by the entire 360' (vertically and horizontally) range of scenery to be seen, but it still enables us to see what can be seen by us, of what is there to be seen.

The person looking through telescope, doesn't ascend to the moon or stars, but he does perceive some resolution of what really is there to be seen, are we not, in some sense, transcending reason by imagining a sweep of scenery, which our tele(o)scope is only able to show us one small circular o of at a time? The "...rational bridge between reason and what transcends reason..." is the 'thing itself' which it is being.

Reason, in its original factory settings, it seems to me (wo, that's old), is what provides us our ability to recognize, to focus, and to imagine (and abstract from). The aftermarket add-ons which we (well, some of us) soup it up with, methodical reflection and logic, are customizations derived from those original factory specs. Going back to what you were saying about Being the other day, it is, and we are brought into contact with it through what the artful use of our reason brings our minds into contact with, and however much of that our limitations keep us from perceiving, we do perceive some of what is... some more in focus than others.

Eh, if I had more time I could say less, but as is I'll have to leave it there.

Gagdad Bob said...

Schuon often uses the great example of a point surrounded by concentric circles, vs. a point from which lines proceed outward in all directions.

The first is the discontinuous model of things, while the second is the continuous one. And ultimately they must be complementary. Failure to consider both views will result in pantheism at one end, and rationalism or fideism at the other.

In the concentric model, various disciplines correspond to different circles. For example, physics and biology occupy different circles, and there is no explanation of how matter can somehow escape its own little circle and make the jump to life.

So, reason is a circle around the central point; but it is ultimately connected to the point if we supplement it with the radial view.

You could say that the radial view of things accounts for the bridges from one concentric circle to another.

Anonymous said...

Julie, furious that anybody would dare besmirch the Word of God let alone a whole church doing so, I stormed into their website ready for battle. They kindly directed me to the money quotes:

“As Progressive Christians, we're open to the tensions and inconsistencies in the Bible. We know that it can't live up to impossible, modern standards. We strive to more clearly articulate what Scripture is and isn't,” the church noted before stating what the Bible is and isn’t.

"The Bible isn’t: the Word of God, self-interpreting, a science book, an answer/rule book, inerrant or infallible." Rather, it is: "a product of community, a library of texts, multi-vocal, a human response to God, living and dynamic."


I left confused. This sounds a little like this place…. a library of texts, multi-vocal, a human response to God, living and dynamic.

Or should I go sit quietly in the corner and think about it for a while?

Gagdad Bob said...

A voice in my head just told me that when mumbly Joe addresses the nation tomorrow night, he's going to announce that he's stepping down in the near future.

Pretty sure it was just Petey messing with me.

Daisy said...

He's addressing the nation tomorrow?

Trump already gave the SOTU, what more can Joe add?

Van Harvey said...

Gagdad said "...So, reason is a circle around the central point; but it is ultimately connected to the point if we supplement it with the radial view..."

Circles and lines, particles and waves, I can work with that.

Gagdad Bob said...

As I've mentioned before, I suspect the particle/wave complementarity goes to just this idea, particles being discontinuous and waves continuous. Such a description would seemingly violate the principle of non-contradiction, but only from below. In reality, it is resolved from above.

It also goes to other antinomies such as act & potency, left & right brain, male & female, and ultimately to Absolute and Infinite.

Gagdad Bob said...

On the other hand, maybe two sides to every story is the foundation of the racist pyramid.

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