What is vertical causation, and does it exist?
Defined negatively, we could say it is any type of causation that isn't horizontal. Unless you wish to pretend that all causation is horizontal. Then again, to the extent that you're actually thinking and not just behaving like a machine -- and we're not ruling this out -- then you are partaking of vertical causation.
What is the cause of a true thought? What is causing your thoughts right now? Your "brain"? What do you mean, "your"?
There can be no greater category error than conflating material and immaterial realities, or subject and object.
Think about thinking in the most abstract way possible, and where does it end? It ends in a mysterious property we call "subjectivity," beyond which we cannot venture. We know there are objects, and we know there are subjects, because the object is the very first property discerned by the subject. Although the subject is and must be ontologically prior, it is epistemologically later.
In other words, the human baby doesn't start with the infamous cogito -- I think, therefore, you know, the thing -- and take it from there. Rather, we start out life by discovering things. Still, the most interesting things are other subjects, especially the one we call m(o)ther. After that it's all downhill.
Now I'm thinking of the Absolute Principle incarnating as an infant, and before that, a fetus, embryo, zygote, and blastocyst. Is the principle of humanness found in that direction -- as if we could keep going until we find the human archetype down there somewhere? Did you look beneath the refrigerator? Under the cushions?
A similar massbackward approach characterizes physics: as if we merely have to keep dividing and subdividing matter until we reach rock bottom. But we can zee no bottom in that direction; rather, the exercise must end in finer and finer iterations of nothingness.
Not to say that these little nothings do not exist. They do exist, just as do photons emanating from the sun. No matter how dim the light, it's still light and not darkness, the latter being a total privation and literal nothing. No amount of shadows adds up to a quanticle of light.
Likewise, no matter how stupid the idea, it's still a thought and not clump of matter.
These preluminary meditations are brought to you by the book Vertical Causation, by Wolfgang Smith. In it he expresses some ideas that are strangely similar to mine, but it's not so strange when you realize that I stole them from him.
Especially the one about physics and the insane spiritual quest to ground everything in nothing:
from the vantage point of the metaphysical traditions, their quest points "downwards" in reference to the scala naturae: from the pole of morphe to that of hyle, namely a descent which cannot but lead eventually to the "nothingness" of prima materia.
I know: why all the pretentious Latinisms when plainspoken Thomism is tricky enough?
Suffice it to say, there is an ascending and descending scale of being in the cosmos, and that one will not discover reality by fleeing down into matter, all the way to its necessary but inconceivable principle, in that formless matter can be posited but not understood. For prime matter is matter without form, which is to say, devoid of the very principle of intelligibility.
In the material world, everything is hylomorphic, meaning matter + form. Again, we can posit formless matter, but that's not how the cosmos rolls, unless maybe we're talking about the Creator, who begins by creating the formless material to which he will give form. Even believing this in a naively literal manner is philosophically superior to the truly childish belief that form somehow could "evolve" from prime matter, which is to say from nothing.
Ontologically speaking, it thus appears that contemporary particle physicists are actually moving in the wrong direction: "away from reality," towards the nether pole of hyle, where nothing at all exists (Smith).
That's not quite true, for physicists are moving in the proper direction for physicists. They're only going the wrong way to the extent that they pretend to be philosophers.
Conversely, the philosopher is always free to descend to the bottom end of the cosmos, and indeed, a complete philosophy must be able to account for it. But the lower is seen as an effect of the higher, not vice versa, for that would constitute a kind of absolute stupidity.
8 comments:
Nice stony post, pretty psychedelic.
You had posted prior all things are circular or spiraled and invariably double back on themselves. So, if an intrepid physicist burrows down into string theory and so forth, she will ultimately pop out of some sideral hatch into undifferentiated Satchitananda and find herself in the formless Godhead.
Quantum entanglement, for example. Physics found the entanglement but there is no conceivable explanation except it is the mind of God at play.
Run in any direction of the compass far enough and you will hit the Godhead. Your own concept, I might add.
--Naga the Spitter
There can be no greater category error than conflating material and immaterial realities, or subject and object.
Consider the difference between someone alive and someone dead. All the same matter may be present, but without that mysterious immaterial who animating that matter, what remains (no matter how good a job the mortician does) always looks like a weird facsimile or wax dummy at best. There is no question that the person isn't there anymore.
For that matter, some people haven't been there anymore for a very long time, but mysteriously, they still manage to walk around. Whatever animates them probably doesn't bear thinking about...
The sentiments expressed in first comment might be plausible if not for the fact that the relevant evidence disappears along with those who deserve to perceive it. There are spiritual qualifications that cannot be bypassed.
Not to mention the grace that is a necessary condition.
Still, the most interesting things are other subjects, especially the one we call m(o)ther. After that it's all downhill.
Just saw a somewhat distressing video demonstrating the "Still face experiment," where the mom firsts interacts with the 1-year-old baby in all the normal ways, then switches to looking at the baby with a blank expression for about 2 minutes.
I don't think I could have done that when mine were little. Even though it's only for a couple of minutes, seeing how upset the baby is you have to wonder if a seed of anxiety has just been planted.
Now think about the effect of masks on the development of intersubjectivity more broadly, and we're looking at a generation of autistics in 20 years.
Horrible. I saw another image a couple days ago, where a kindergartner had gone through a Christmas catalog and drew masks over all the kids' faces because it looked weird without them. Then the kids in Oregon who were eating lunch outside in 40 degree weather, on the ground, 6 feet from each other and masked between bites. They each got a bucket to use as a table.
"What is the cause of a true thought? What is causing your thoughts right now? Your "brain"? What do you mean, "your"?"
Doh. Sadly, in their case, 'your' refers to the sort of inbrained creature that'd put masks on kids and make them eat outside in freezing weather.
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