Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Is This Really Necessary?

The necessity of possibility and the possibility of evil. I thought that was a pretty snappy way of putting it, because it still preserves divine omnipotence except insofar as even God doesn't have the power to not be God. God is not a deconstructionist. 

As we've said before, God somehow has the perfections of both freedom and necessity, and to an eminent degree. Herebelow we live in a world of contingency, a world that did not have to exist. But as Schoun says, "Contingency is always relative, but relativity is not always contingent." 

We know this for reasons touched on in yesterday's post, i.e., the irreducible "Absolute Relativity" in God, for it seems acceptable to say (for example) that the Son is relative to the Father (and vice versa), but it would be incorrect to conclude that the Son is contingent -- as if he might or might not have been, depending upon the whims of the Father. 

This latter error would also imply a principle prior to the Father (or Trinity), which is a nonstarter.

Contingency on the one hand and the presence of the Absolute on the other; these are the two poles of our existence (Schuon).

Oh by the way. 

Except -- or so we have heard from the wise -- the Absolute has furnished a way for us to transform mere contingency by plugging into, or hitching a ride upon, the Divine Relativity, which is the "good news" of Christianity. Everything about it is ordered to the possibility of this transformation and this movement between the two poles mentioned by Schuon.

I suppose we could say that "fallenness" is appropriately situated on that same bi-directional vertical line. It means that there really is a down and an up in the cosmos, and a bare acquaintance with History suggests -- or certainly is consistent with the idea -- that

man has radically turned away from his human vocation by plunging into the world of contingency and by identifying himself with it, whence the profane ego with its tyranny and vices (ibid.).

I suppose that's the bad news which the good news is designed to remedy.  

I found some unexpected confirmation of this view in a book I'm reading called Human Nature, by David Berlinski, despite the fact that he is a secular Jew. He is also a highly insultaining debunker of atheistic pieties, scientistic faith, and primitive progressive religiosity, and seems happy to dwell in the uncertainty and mystery of it all.

It was in discussing the "cause" of World War I that he made an intriguing point:

None of the Great Powers were compelled to go to war. They could have walked away. If these considerations are admitted, the causal chain that was designed to explain the outbreak of war is less a chain than a series of unconnected links.

This is because of the freedom and therefore contingency located in every human actor in the "causal chain." It very much reminds me of one of my favorite aphorisms, that

The permanent possibility of initiating a causal series is what we call a person.   

There's more to this than one might suspect, especially with reference to the words "permanent," "possibility," and "causal." 

First of all, permanent implies a kind of absoluteness, or necessity, or even eternity. For example, to say that 2+2 necessarily = 4 is to partake of an eternal truth. It may be a trivial truth, but it is the shadow of an Absolute that is the opposite of trivial.

Now, supposing we want to trace the causes of World War I to a single one, say, the assassination of Franz Ferdinand. But this is wholly arbitrary, because we could then trace the causes of Franz Ferdinand to the beginning of time -- either to a First Cause or to an intrinsically absurd infinite series, neither answer satisfying our desire to understand what's going on down here.

It is true that God is, among other things, First Cause. He is quite literally brother Nicolás' Permanent Possibility of Initiating a Causal Series, for which reason he is a Person (and vice versa.)

But hey, we're persons too! Of this we are absolutely certain. It's not one of those things that can be disproved, because who is disproving it? 

But still, what is it, and how have we come by this strange privilege of being persons amidst contingency while knowing the Absolute (or absolute certainty)?

the foundation of metaphysical certitude is the coincidence between truth and being; a coincidence that no ratiocination could invalidate. 

And 

We are situated in contingency, but we live by the reflection of the Absolute, otherwise we could not exist (Schuon).

I'm going to go out on a limb and say we do exist. Furthermore, we exist as persons capable of initiating causal series from a mysterious center that can only be a reflection of a Celestial Central to which we are linked in each moment. 

Speaking of limits on omnipotence due to the reality of Possibility, yesterday I was thinking to myself that the petition Thy will be done obviously implies that his will is not necessarily done, and can even be opposed or undone by our own power to initiate a causal series, beginning, I suppose, with Genesis 3, which circles back to The necessity of possibility and the possibility of evil

28 comments:

johnson nicea said...

Tertullian says the Father chose to beget the Son, and a few Councils between Nicea 325 and Constantibople 381 anathemetize anyone who says the Father begat the Son out of necessity and could not have chosen freely to do so.

I would say this is what actually prevents the Trinity from being polytheism. To say either that the Son and Holy Spirit always existed win personality without an act of the Father generating them within his uncreated essence, or that the Father was forced by necessity to generate them within himself, makes it polytheism.

Gagdad Bob said...

I was just reading about that opinion the other day in a book called Catholic Dogmatic Theology: A Synthesis, Book I, On the Trinitarian Mystery, by Jean-Herve Nicolas. Definitely not the Catholic view. He gives his reasons, but I'm not sure I want to dive back into the book and track them down.

Gagdad Bob said...

Okay, maybe a little. Of Tertullian's take, Nicolas seems to regard this as a "primitive explanation" (which he doesn't mean in a pejorative sense). "This outlook was never abandoned by the Eastern Fathers, and it has its place in Latin theology. However, by itself, it remains insufficient for resolving the problems" and is even "manifestly insufficient for safeguarding monotheism." This insufficiency "quickly became apparent," and the author then goes on to explain how and why...

My own view is that God is irreducible substance-in-relation.

julie said...

the petition Thy will be done obviously implies that his will is not necessarily done

I would take it even a step farther and say that his will is, more often than not, completely ignored if not actively thwarted herebelow, else why would it need to be a prayer?

Gagdad Bob said...

A prayer given by God himself -- or from God to God -- no less.

julie said...

I love how it pretty much covers everything a person needs in just a few short lines.

Gagdad Bob said...

Well, I finally received McGilchrist's The Matter With Things in the mail. I feel like I should do an unboxing video, but I guess I'll dive right in... the journey of 1,600 pages begins with a single flip. All I can say is, this better be good.

Gagdad Bob said...

Pretty good so far. Definitely exploring the same attractor we do, albeit a notch or two lower in terms of abstraction, hence the length. In other words, greater abstraction to principles = more concision & synthesis.

Gagdad Bob said...

He presents lots of cutting edge science from physics to biology to neuropsychiatry that I wouldn't otherwise seek out, so I got that going for me.

julie said...

Yes, but can it possibly contain as much intellectual depth as this?

Gagdad Bob said...

One area where I disagree with Schuon is over the idea of a necessary historical devolution ending in the present Kali Yuga. Kamala and the rest of the Brandon administration makes me think, "second look at the Kali Yuga?"

Petey said...

Let's compromise and call it the Kamala Yuga.

julie said...

I guess we have to laugh; crying isn't an option yet.

julie said...

I don't know why, but whenever I've thought of the end of times I never imagined even for a second that it would be this stupid.

Gagdad Bob said...

Yes, you'd think they'd at least be clever and witty, like Lord Henry in The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Gagdad Bob said...

"Lord Henry takes pleasure in impressing, influencing, and even misleading his acquaintances (to which purpose he bends his considerable wit and eloquence) but appears not to observe his own hedonistic advice, preferring to study himself with scientific detachment. His distinguishing feature is total indifference to the consequences of his actions."

Gagdad Bob said...

Speaking of "total indifference to the consequences of his actions," I'm reading a biography of Keith Moon that is surprisingly good. I met him in a bar in Malibu in 1977, so now I'll be able to understand the context of how our paths crossed for those 30 seconds.

Gagdad Bob said...

He was very drunk, which he literally had been every day from 1964 onward.

Gagdad Bob said...

But very approachable, and outrageously pleased when I told him I was a big fan.

Gagdad Bob said...

He came in with Eric Clapton, who seemed the opposite, so I left him alone.

julie said...

I'm trying to understand how someone can have a total indifference to the consequences of his actions. Most Machiavellian people I know are the kind who love to stir up a storm then sit back and watch the sparks fly - from a safe distance, of course. I mean, watching the sparks fly is the entire point.

julie said...

* For Machiavellian, I really just mean shit-stirrers

Gagdad Bob said...

Ringo was there too, but one doesn't simply approach a Beatle.

julie said...

You need that "One does not simply..." meme from Lord of the Rings to go with that.

Gagdad Bob said...

It is indeed hard to fathom someone who has a total indifference to the consequences of his actions, which makes the story both compelling but at times tedious. I've never heard or read of a similar person, let alone someone who got away with it for so long.

Gagdad Bob said...

Also, his actions were never that of a normal person to begin with.

Anonymous said...

I don’t think anybody’s against using one’s freedom to create. I think everybody’s against using one’s freedom to steal. It gets a bit muddy when one steals another’s creations while pretending to be a creator. It shouldn’t be this way, but there’s a sucker born every minute.

Van Harvey said...

Julie said "...whenever I've thought of the end of times I never imagined even for a second that it would be this stupid."

I know the feeling, but that speaks more to what we'd hope to face as a challenge, when the fact of the matter is that the essence of Evil, is stupidity. It can be clever, crafty, and so on, but at root, (contrary to Dark Helmet) evil is stupid. Way it is.

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