Monday, August 14, 2023

Taking a Chance on the Ultimate Adventure

Because the spiritual soul can grasp universal essences, it possesses a potential unto infinity..., [and] the light that makes any individual object intelligible is the same light that permeates the universe.

Woo Woo!  

Our cognitive power is so imperfect that not even the nature of one single gnat was ever entirely understood by any philosopher.

D'oh! 

So, we are condemned to endless progress, I guess: "any cognitive advance will indeed always be a positive advance, but only like a step on a longer journey.... it will always and ever anew remain preliminary, incomplete, proclaiming 'not yet.'"

It's always ALREADY! and NOT YET! Every moment is more than enough and never enough. Stupid complementarity.

First, I wonder if there's a loophole in here? Or at at least a special exemption for me? 

"In any cognitive act, our mind stretches into infinity" without ever reaching it. "The limit of knowledge is never attained, neither in objective fullness nor in subjective satisfaction," but what if it were? How boring would that be? No adventure for you!

So, our minds are at once proportioned to the Absolute without ever reaching it. Which I suppose goes back to Genesis 3 All Over Again. The essence of fallenness is a declaration of independence from the Absolute, and the presumption that we can reach it -- or "who needs God, and besides, I am one." 

The only other option is the absurcular nihilism of "it is absolutely the case that there is no absolute." 

So, some version of open theism, enclosed secular humanism, or the teenage wasteland of nihilism / existentialism.  

Now, I don't entirely blame folks for descending into a smaller world that has the proportions of their terrestrial desires. It's tempting to be a normotic infracoon, both for its own sake and as a distraction from our proper concerns. A lesser, horizontalized adventure displaces the Big One. But it 

insults the dignity of man's spirit to lead a life so much confined and imprisoned within the narrow considerations of immediate usefulness that his own small environment utterly ceases to be a window on a larger "world." To be thus totally absorbed in a mere fragment of reality, to "function" rather than live, is not human; yet to be so tempted is all too human.

The cosmos isn't flat, but most people are, and understandably so. And supposing one makes it through primary education with the third dimension intact, there's always the threat of college, the purpose of which is to extinguish the vertical entirely, and create an elite class of soulless perverticaloids.  

But you can't actually flatten reality, rather, only the humans who inhabit it. Say what you want about the Absolute, it always returns

After all, it is, among other things, necessary being. Conversely, it is we who are unnecessary, but only if we choose to render ourselves so. We -- which is to say, unique and unrepeatable persons -- are only necessary to God. 

Pieper's bottom line in The Truth of All Things -- literally, as it's the last paragraph -- is that

the world of existing things "is placed between two knowing minds," the mind of God and the mind of man. And precisely there, as classical Western metaphysics has always known, springs the truth of all things

Or, in our dodgy scheme, something along the lines of

O

(↑ → ↓)

(  )

We are always the monkey in the middle, at least until we cash in our chimps and leave the table. But middle does not necessarily imply middling, mediocre, or mid-wit, so deal me in!

Truly truly, this is where all the action is, for it is the very basis of the bewilderness adventure we call life in this grand casino. 

Come to think of it, Clarke has another book called The Universe as Journey, and I'll bet if we take a peek inside, we'll find just what we need to tuck in this loose shirt and turn into an actual post.

Actually, it's a book of essays, only one of which is by Clarke. But the introduction describes the overall contours of the journey, in which all being proceeds from the One and returns to it (which is a neoplatonic image endowed with further richness and differentiation in a trinitarian metaphysic). 

Sharing His infinite reality with a community of finite agents through continuous creative action, God directs this community of agents back to Himself as the final cause of their own activity (ibid).

This vision centers on two poles we call O and (¶), and again, there is infinitude at both ends: there is "the personal subject and the Being beyond finite beings," linked by the unrestricted dynamism of the inquiring mind, the drive to know the whole existentialada, AKA the Absolute.   

I guess we could say that the journey to the One is the one journey, and that only a person can take the trip, because a person is the trip, precisely. 

Or at least I am. But it turns out that I AM is always intersubjective. Among the clues we encounter along the Way, this is perhaps the biggest.

For this metacosmic intersubjectivity goes at once to the "absolutely fundamental mutual correlation of mind and being," which is "a natural marriage made in heaven, so to speak, where each partner completes the other." How sweet. For

the human mind is analogously like the female, the mother; reality is like the father. To know truly a reality that it has not itself made, the mind must make itself open [o] to receive this reality [↓], to be informed by it.

And baby makes three:

The mind, fecundated, informed, by reality, then actively responds, pours its own spiritual life into what it receives, gestates, then gives birth to the mental "word" or concept, which in turn flows over into the verbal word expressed to others.

What shall we name it? How about Truth?

And as we've been saying, Truth is a Person, a person on an interpersonal adventure in, of, and toward truth.

Christianity is the adventure of an incarnate god who essentially assumes the history he created and creates. The Author of History enters history -- or timelessness becomes time that time might become timeless. The ultimate bewilderness adventure. 

16 comments:

julie said...

Today at Just Thomism:

If, per impossibile, God were to leave Christ, he would cease being the person he was. This means either that he would poof out of existence or that whoever remained after the change would be another person and have another proper name, even if one called both persons “Jesus.”*

If God were to leave the soul in a state of grace, the person would not cease being the person he was.

Nevertheless, mutatis mutandis, it is the same divine presence or absence in either case.


I don't know who he's quoting, but it seemed fitting.

Nicolás said...

The sole thing that the I is able to prove is that it exists; the sole thing that it can refute is whether it may be God. I think; therefore I am. And I think; therefore I am not God. In the second of these unique, irrefutable truths, the modern world stumbles up again a lethal refutation.

Nicolás said...

Only God can fill even the tiniest gap.

Nicolás said...

Monism is an attitude that violates half of the experience.

julie said...

Also apropos but on a slightly different tangent, this snippet from a post at Ace's today:

I want to come back to New York but it's impossible because the New York I want to come back to is no more.

Nicolás said...

To believe in God is not to believe in God; it is not possible not to believe in Him.

Nicolás said...

For the unbeliever, life is entirely trivial or entirely serious; only for the believer is life trivial and serious at the same time.

Nicolás said...

The intellectual contortions of one who believes in only a single kind of truth will ruin the soul in the end.

Nicolás said...

Many cannot sleep with a truth without leaving her pregnant with errors.

Nicolás said...

The pride of ontic autonomy is the greatest sin because it is the maximum error.

Nicolás said...

History has no sense to it. What gives sense to the human adventure transcends history.

Anonymous said...

Manhattan is wicked expensive and trannies are being greeted with a "thank you for your service" as often as our uniformed military. Talk about messed up.

Plus there are too many guys doing fart videos and the startled innocent bystander chuckling thing, has turned to polite "yes I know you're another one of those guys" sighing. Me, I'm taking my fart machine to Nashville.

To believe in God is not to believe in God; it is not possible not to believe in Him.

Yet scientism-tists have concocted that natural laws have been structured in such a way as to create all possible universes out of nothing. I can get behind that being possible, but only if there's a God behind those natural laws doing all the universe-creating.

History has no sense to it. What gives sense to the human adventure transcends history.

Speak for yourself. The sense I'm getting from history is that personal power is everything. Had somebody as professionally nihilistic as our Nietzsche not mastered it, he would've been as obscure as you.

Anonymous said...

For the unbeliever, life is entirely trivial or entirely serious; only for the believer is life trivial and serious at the same time.

You said it Nicolás. Any individual who doesn’t think exactly like the conservative believer is thought of as being seriously trival, regardless of how seriously “individual” they may seem. Take our goddamned Pope for example. Maybe a few more aphoristic retorts about morality, on top of the usual retorts about all the idiotic braying maggot?

Nicolás said...

When indiscreetly searching the corners of certain intelligences we find a hidden lunatic, mumbling, disheveled, and sloppy.

Oriental Jazzman said...

It's me who affirms everything about Andryville, but at the same time, I'm sure Al Freddie Lion has eyes and ears, and is there a reason for this unreleased work? For him, powerful riffs and tables are a little weak and elusive, and the rhythm of 8 bits and anomalous bosses, which are good at, that are good at playing, and the little elusive vizu of the bell, which has a floating feeling, is a little elusive.

It's interesting that the song Titel has the disturbance of whether it's a story or a rock, and is there anything involved in it? Regarding the content of the music, all of them are good songs first of all, but I think it would have been nice to have a more crushing video or a comedy. Well, in any case, I think it's an above-average masterpiece.

Rico Suave said...

My song, it be make a comeback. Maybe we do Trump in a video. He dance good.

Rico Suave (Gerardo) ((Gerardo Mejia))

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