As mentioned yesterday, Schopenhauer sought the sufficient reason for things, i.e., a reasons proportionate to the phenomena. Of course he failed miserably, and was famously miserable besides, but this isn't to say that he achieved nothing.
Rather, Schopenhauer's greatest achievement was the fine insultainment he spewed at philosophers whose reasons he considered insufficient, for example, Hegel, whom he described as an "impudent and cocky gasbag,"
a flat-headed, insipid, nauseating, illiterate charlatan who reached the pinnacle of audacity in scribbling together and dishing up the craziest mystifying nonsense.
Harsh but fair. Moreover, Hegel's misgeisted followers
mistake the hollowest verbiage for philosophical ideas, the most miserable sophisms for sagacity, childish absurdities for dialectic, and their heads have been muddled by absorbing crazed word-combinations which torture and exhaust the mind that tries in vain to extract some meaning from them.
What would he have said about Foucault or Derrida? Kant also got the needle: he is like
a man who at a masked ball flirts the whole evening with a masked beauty under the illusion of making a conquest, until at the end she unmasks and reveals herself -- as his wife.
Remind me, what is our subject?
Oh yes: reasons, in particular, sufficient ones. Put conversely, I suppose the great majority of reasons we are given for things -- both visible and especially invisible -- are ridiculously insufficient. They are ultimately as rooted in authority, custom, and tradition as any religious dogma.
I well remember the drudgery of school five days a week, broken up by the drudgery of Sunday School once as week. Not only could the reasons given in the former not be reconciled with the latter, nor were they even sufficient on their own terms.
First of all, it is illogical in the extreme to posit two "ultimate explanations," but in both cases a simple Why? was sufficient to render the grown-ups either silent or irritated.
The Aphorist has a number of sharp objects that go to just this point, so there's no need for me to reinvent the needle:
In philosophy a single naïve question is sometimes enough to make an entire system come tumbling down.
In the end there is only one Because that is impervious to every Why: necessary being, AKA the Absolute, or what most folks just call God.
Ultimately,
Natural laws are irreducible to explanation, like any mystery.
Bearing in mind that "mystery" is not synonymous with absurdity, ignorance, or unknowability, but rather, is a palpable and fruitful presence. I'm touching it right now!
A fool is he who thinks that what he knows is without mystery.
You know the type: intelligent enough to obtain an advanced college degree but not smart enough to be ashamed of it.
Being only falsifiable, a scientific thesis is never certain but is merely current.
To not know this is to practice a primitive religion called Scientism.
The definitive scientific sum will never be anything more than the prejudice existing at the moment when humanity becomes extinct.
In other words, science necessarily and literally goes on forever, while never in principle being capable of arriving at its object. This is so because the universe is created. If it weren't created, then this asymptotic convergence would be strictly impossible. Besides, Gödel.
Philosophy gives up when one stops asking simple questions.
Simple questions such as, If consciousness is just a meaningless epiphenomenon, why do you believe that, or anything else?
Four or five invulnerable philosophical propositions allow us to make fun of the rest.
Such as? Oh, the principles of identity (AKA non-contradiction), of causation, of the correspondence of intelligence and intelligibility. Come to think of it,
All truths converge upon one truth, but the routes have been barricaded.
What's on the other side of the barricade? I don't know about you, but my trinoculars see intelligible being enshrouded by Beyond-Being. After that, Nothing. Or All-Possibility.
Nearly every idea is an overdrawn check that circulates until it is presented for payment.
For example, try demanding a Real World from the equations of physics. It's like the old joke about the atheist who bets God he can explain the world without him. The atheist starts by picking up a handful of dirt, and God says, "not so fast -- get your own dirt!" Likewise, get your own math!
The philosopher who adopts scientific notions has predetermined his conclusions.
This metaphysical scientism constitutes Begging the Question on steroids. It is hardly worthy of a serious insult.
Philosophy ultimately fails because one has to speak of the whole in the terms of its parts.
True, but it succeeds when it gives equal timelessness to the Whole, AKA, the ground of being. This ground is not God, rather, his first fruit, i.e., the Logosphere. It's a little mysterious, but to be perfectly honest,
The honest philosophy does not pretend to explain but to circumscribe the mystery.
That's our excuse and we're sticking to it. At least we're not like those deadbrained abracadavers, for
The doctrines that explain the higher by means of the lower are appendices of a magician’s rule book.
Aren't we leaving something out? Yes, we can't end this post without some gratuitous political insultainment:
The theses of the left are rationalizations that are carefully suspended before reaching the argument that dissolves them.
Insufficient persons necessarily have insufficient reasons, the most sufficient reason of all being the category Person, all three of them.
12 comments:
Hegel's misgeisted followers
mistake the hollowest verbiage for philosophical ideas, the most miserable sophisms for sagacity, childish absurdities for dialectic, and their heads have been muddled by absorbing crazed word-combinations which torture and exhaust the mind that tries in vain to extract some meaning from them.
Ha - reminds me of A Fish Called Wanda: "Let me correct you on a couple of things, okay? Aristotle was not Belgian. The central message of Buddhism is not every man for himself."
A little quote from Lynn Harold Hough's book Free Men, which I think goes well with the subject matter.
For when you stop to think of it, the ultimate universe either is or is not like that free intelligence which we find in man. To be sure, its free intelligence may be so vast and radiant that man's power of free thought and choice is only the faintest hint of it. But--and we stick to the point--free intelligence is either the clue to something in the nature of the final universe or it is not. And now we begin to see clearly that while the ultimate reality of the universe may be infinitely more than man's free intelligence, it cannot be less.
And now I'll go shovel snow.
Either God or chance: all other terms are disguises for one or the other.
Weird - I didn't realize there were links in the post until it came up in the feed reader. They are there, but not showing up highlighted in blue. Scopenhauer's Slams is fine insultainment.
Weird thought of the night:
My household is getting over the hot new variant (started getting sick on Friday night), and one of the things I've noticed the past few days is that while I haven't felt terribly ill, my sense of Presence seems to have just disappeared. The first go-round, about a year ago, I lost my sense of smell; this is weirdly similar, which makes me wonder what effects a virus might have on the brain structures related to faith.
There was an interesting video I saw a few months ago, by an Orthodox priest who got the jab; he said that afterward, for several weeks he couldn't sense the presence of God. Fortunately, it did return, but the fact that it had that effect is both interesting and unsettling.
Schopenhauer’s three stages of understanding religion:
https://youtu.be/-L2aPbEU4Kc
Satanic scientists creating vaccines which dissolve God. Why stop there? Why can't we imagine genetic researchers creating armies of faithless fembots?
Be serious. The supply of faithless fembots already far exceeds the demand.
Cute, anon, but that's not what I said.
There is already extensive study on how certain things can impact the brain to bring about mystical experiences - prayer and meditation, trans-cranial stimulation, various chemicals, etc. Obviously, there is in fact some part of our brain physically wired or structured to be receptive to Something which can't otherwise be sensed. It therefore also stands to reason that some things may cause this structure to stop functioning, for whatever reason. If a virus can hit the olfactory center and cut off scent and taste via the nervous system (as opposed to mere congestion), is it impossible that another virus or chemical agent could have a similar effect on other parts of the brain?
I find it interesting in part because I have often seen people who are struggling spiritually say something along the lines that they "can't feel God's presence." In other words, they expect that they should be able to sense it, even if they never have. It's almost a default position. Now why would that be? Unless, like one blind or deaf from birth, the person is aware that something is missing, even if he doesn't know what.
The fact that they can't feel it makes it very difficult for them to believe; maybe it ties in with anhedonia, depression and spiritual asphyxiation.
Well done Julie. Your kindness shows through, even to the least of them.
Material politics Trumping spirituality. I might be persuaded to buy it except I can't find it in the bible.
My appreciation of Schopenhauer has grown threefold.
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