It started innocently enough with an article I read this morning called Medieval ‘Reductio’ vs. Modern Reductivism, before things rapidly spiraled out of control (https://www.thecatholicthing.org/2022/10/18/medieval-reductio-vs-modern-reductivism/?mc_cid=e5a5432269&mc_eid=c604663a22).
For us, “reduction” means making things smaller. Literally, however, the Latin word reductio means to “lead back.” Thus... “reduction” of the other disciplines to theology does not involve shrinking them down into theology. Not at all. Rather, the goal [is] to show how all the other disciplines, operating according to their own proper methods, can lead us back to God.
But he isn't me anymore --Mike Scott
Science seeks increasingly deep unities to explain the outward phenomena. Presumably this will end with a big TOE, a Theory of Everything, the equation of our cosmic birth, a simple formula for generating this cosmos and everything in it.
But supposing we do ever stub this TOE on our mental furniture, we would still need to know who or what devised the equation, and it could not be something less than intelligence. And it would indeed be the "ultimate intelligence," since it would be the ultimate case of Unity beneath diversity.
As intellectually OMniverous Raccoons, we want nothing less than the TOENAIL: Theory of Everything: Nous, Atman, Intellect, & Logos included.
Although existence is necessarily One, it nevertheless discloses many seemingly irreconcilable worlds -- at least if we begin at “the bottom” of the cosmos and try to work our way up.
And neither the macro-world of relativity nor the micro-world of subatomic physics has anything to do with the human experiential world, at least in the absence of a heroic dose of psilocybin.
Likewise, with regard to cosmology, the “big bang” undoubtedly conjures up a visual image, but the image has nothing to do with the reality, any more than you could imagine the square root of negative one. For it is not a human world.
Nor is the world of DNA a human world, or even a living world. From the standpoint of the human world, life is not a function of DNA; rather, DNA is a function of life, which is a total freaking mystery. Any questions? Wrong question, for there are only questions.
Consciousness too is a complete and utter mystery. You will often hear the cliché that you can learn more about human beings by reading this or that great novelist than you can by studying psychology, and this is often true. There are certain forms of psychology that most certainly do not touch the human world, behaviorism among them.
This is where religion comes in, because, it discloses quintessentially human knowledge, aimed at human beings and the human world, which is to say the real world. This is something that truly needs to be emphasized: that science does not disclose the real world, but various abstract models of the world that humans -- and only humans -- may access, and only because of their humanness. But no one can live in a scientific model, any more than you can eat the menu.
Thus, science is an extension of the human knower, but it can never explain the existence of the human knower. In other words, it is a small part of the larger world called truth to which humans have unique access. While animals are subject to the laws of the cosmos, the fact that we can know the truth of these laws places us infinitely above them.
Metaphysics is the science of the Absolute and of the true nature of things. You might say it is the science of the ultimate Subject, whereas science is the religion of the ultimate object. The purpose of metaphysics is to discriminate between the Real and the apparent, in order to align our mind and will with reality, in a divine-human partnership.
What is language, anyway? What is a word? It is a special thing, because only it has the capacity to bridge the bifurcation introduced by Creation. Apparently words can do this because they are somehow prior to the Great Duality and therefore partake of both heaven and earth, above and below, vertical and horizontal.
The literal meaning of the word "symbol" is to "throw together" or across, as if words are exterior agents that join together two disparate things. But the Biblical view implies that language actually has this "throwing together" capacity because it somehow subtends the world on an interior level: language is what the world is made of, so it shouldn't surprise us that with it we can see all kinds of deep unities in the cosmos. The unities are there just waiting to be discovered, and language is our tool for doing so.
For man possesses two types of intelligence, a horizontal, analytical, “dividing” mind, and a unifying, synthesizing mind. However, the latter takes priority, for the ultimate purpose of analysis is to synthesize. If science is the reduction of multiplicity to unity, then the final unity must be the same unity from which we begin, only transformed by the spiraling journey back to its eternal self.
To summarise: if reality is nothing else, it is One. It is One prior to our bifurcation of it into subject and object, and it will always be One. We can throw out the Oneness with a pitchfork, but it will always rush back in through the walls, up through the floorboards, and down from the ceiling.
Funny; we're battling through fractions, and of course one the challenges is knowing when, why and how to reduce them (I literally don't even know how many time this morning I have said "reduce"). But of course, "reducing" fractions doesn't actually mean that we're making them smaller, it means we are putting them in simpler terms that make them easier to comprehend. Leading them back, so to speak, to a more unified form...
ReplyDeleteEverything in math begins and ends with the idea of One. Or at least that's what Petey says.
ReplyDeleteMorning, Gagdad. I see David Warren also took up the subject matter of reductio and reductionism, yesterday. If you have not read it, I thought you may be interested.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.davidwarrenonline.com/2022/10/18/more-downsizing/
That one by Warren and another post today called The Hard Labor of Christian Apologetics got me to thinking about the contemporary disconnect between mind and reality, and how to bridge it. It's a bit late to begin writing a post about it, so that will be the subject of tomorrow's offering, unless fate intercedes.
ReplyDeleteThose 50 apologetic essays may be interesting to read, but also may be a re-inventing of the wheel. The message of salvation, as delivered by the Messiah, is truly a simple message, which, if we are to spread it, I think we must learn how to better share it in today's language, by which I mean in words that are somehow more contemporarily alive. In opposition to this, though, I fully recognize that not all individuals truly want to hear the message of salvation and the work required to live a Christ based life. They would rather live to feed their biological appetites, than renew their minds.
ReplyDeleteThis essay is a test for how long you can cringe.
ReplyDeleteIt was a cold night in November 2016 when I first saw the sign.
Long runs in the winter darkness were my response to post-election anxiety. Music both angry and somber provided the soundtrack as I chewed over the president-elect's racist, sexist, anti-immigrant, fact-denying rhetoric. So many groups of people would be vulnerable in the next four years. In the coming battles to protect them, where did we start? And how could we tell who was on our side?
As if by magic, the answer appeared in a well-lit yard: A 26-word statement rendered in colorful letters on a black background. “In this house we believe,” it began, followed by this concise summary of allyship: “Black Lives Matter. Women’s rights are human rights. No human is illegal. Science is real. Love is love. Kindness is everything.”
"No matter what the protest is, you can yank this out of your lawn and you're good to go...
****
Question: if a black illegal rapes a kind woman because love is love, what does the science say?
"we must learn how to better share it in today's language, by which I mean in words that are somehow more contemporarily alive."
ReplyDeleteConcur. I think we have to begin at the beginning, with the "explanatory power" of the entire Christian vision, compared to any and all alternatives.
And that requires an apologetics that is ready for any objection. I know this, because I used to be one of the objectors, armed with every sophistry known to man.
ReplyDeleteWell, I failed that essay cringe test. As for that sign, and for those individuals displaying it, they lack critical intelligence, and as such are unable to understand the vacuousness and endpoint of the statements emblazoned on the signs for the simple reason that it feeds their emotions, providing them a shot of biological endorphins.
ReplyDeleteRe. the essay, that is excruciating. Those are the kind of people who, if a black illegal rapes their kind daughter, apologize to the black and illegal (or homeless and crazy, as the case may be) community for the crime of noticing.
ReplyDeleteALong similar lines, apparently at this school we believe armed gunmen should be protected from police, who might try to stop them from living their best life.
ReplyDeleteJohn:
ReplyDeleteThe question is, how to reach those vacuous souls with post-critical intelligence and unexamined indoctrination? Short of being mugged by reality they'll never change. In fact, I'm old enough to remember when a conservative was a liberal mugged by reality, whereas now, as Julie says, a liberal is someone who is mugged by reality and apologizes to the mugger.
Seeing this and comments at Vanderleun's, and the flood of similar tales, just brings home ever more clearly the idea that there will always be a remnant - that is, the comparative handful of those who keep hold of the truth even as the world they know comes crashing down around them.
ReplyDeleteI can't imagine being the parents of a woman like this; everything about this situation would be absolutely devastating.
Julie, yes, there will always be a remnant because His truth is permanent and cannot be destroyed. His Truth is eternal, from everlasting to everlasting, without beginning or end.
ReplyDelete“Short of being mugged by reality they'll never change.” Exactly - no mere argument will ever succeed with these people.
ReplyDeleteI live in a far left district of a far left state, surrounded by trembling Karens of both sexes who have been mugged by the state but want the state to protect them from being mugged. Thus, we're stuck with the likes of Newsom, Gascon, Schiff, Pelosi, Swalwell, et al.
ReplyDeleteI'm not even sure who my congressman is, since it doesn't matter, but I believe it's the perfectly vile Ted Lieu.
ReplyDeleteWrong. It's the equally vile Brad Sherman.
ReplyDeleteWhere we are, it's fairly purple, but the farther east you drive the more solidly red it is. Literally about 10 miles east it's MAGA Country. The past couple years here were crazy, but not anything like along the coast.
ReplyDeleteFunny thing, our church had one of those synod meetings this spring where they tried first just with people who are part of a Parish ministry. It was clear the questions were all meant to lead us to social justice concerns, but instead everyone in our group was talking about how disappointed they were with the Church's spineless handling of Covid restrictions. The moderator was clearly not ready to discuss those concerns...
One of the most red places in the country is Bakersfield. In fact, given our population, it is possible that there are more Republicans in California than any other state.
ReplyDelete