Sunday, May 12, 2024

Living With a Whole in Your Head or Functioning Without One

That first part is misleading, in that mind and body together constitute the irreducible whole of the human person, and that's just the way it is. Once you separate them -- as does, for example, Descartes -- there's no forcing them back together. It reminds me of a wise crack by Thomas I read yesterday, that

strictly speaking, it is not the senses that perceive, but man perceives through them.

We can of course distinguish between sense and intellect, but never separate them without separating man from himself, i.e., dividing his holistic personhood.

You could say we are a "part" of the Cosmos, but then again, man as such is uniquely intertwined with the totality of being in such a way that it is given to us in the evolving space we inhabit between intellect and intelligibility. 

It is these two -- intellect and intelligibility -- that uniquely mirror one another in man, such that to separate them is to deny what man is, precisely. And again, once separated they can never be reunited in an organic way. 

The Catholic philosopher Maurice Blondel said that "there are no more difficult problems to solve than those that do not exist" (Tyson), the so-called "mind-body" problem being a quintessential example. Why separate what God -- or whatever -- has joined together in wholly patrimony? 

To the extent that man is a "part," it is only in the context of a deeper complementarity between part and whole, both horizontally and vertically. 

Analogously, our individual organs are in one sense "wholes," but parts of an organism that displays a deeper kind of wholeness. Likewise, the individual person is a whole, but always a part of a deeper and more comprehensive wholeness. 

What and where is this latter wholeness? It cannot be found "below," in the (merely) material cosmos, even though it too reveals an irreducible wholeness as described by modern physics. Whitehead, for example,  writes of how

We habitually speak of stones, and planets, and animals, as though each individual thing could exist, even for a passing moment, in separation from an environment which is in truth a necessary factor in its own nature.

Now, what is the human environment? That's a tricksy one, because other animals are adapted to, and enclosed in, specific circumstances which they can by no means transcend; rather, the world is as big -- or as small -- as their perceptions of it. 

My dog surely exists in the Cosmos, but she doesn't know that. The biggest her world gets is when she goes for a walk and is exposed to novelty.

Novelty. That was a big one for Whitehead, an irreducible category of being. He suggested that life itself is  "an offensive directed against the repetitious mechanism of the Universe." As I wrote in an old post,

everything participates in everything else in ways that are far beyond the ken of 19th century atomistic science. Furthermore, in a post-relativistic cosmos, both space and time are nonlocal, so things are also temporally connected in ways that materialistic science cannot disclose.

Back to man's proper environment. Turns out that 

man's world is not merely and neatly the rather abstract "totality" of all there is, but an intermingling of specific "surroundings" and universal "world" (Pieper). 

There is a kind of endless dialectic between the two, in that we live in our immediate surroundings, and yet, have a "universal openness" that frees us "from the specifics of a habitat." Man is 

"a being surpassing himself and the world," really not bound anymore to profess, "I am part of the world. I am embedded in the world." 

No, we always surpass ourselves and our environment:

it insults the dignity of man's spirit to lead a life so much confined and imprisoned within narrow considerations of immediate usefulness that his own small environment utterly ceases to be a window on the 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 indeed all too human (Pieper).

Tempting, but I'll pass.

4 comments:

julie said...

Why separate what God -- or whatever -- has joined together in wholly patrimony?

Well, if the two are separate then one can claim to be unbounded by mere accidents of birth. If my mind and body are only incidentally related, or if my body is merely a meat puppet or an ambulatory vehicle for the soul which is my true self, then my soul can be any magical thing I wish I was, instead of the mere, fallible and imperfect mortal I actually am. If they are one, conversely, then I am simply what I am, and for a great many people the very suggestion is intolerable.

Open Trench said...

Hello friends, countrymen, patriots. We have come to a critical juncture today.

From the post: "The Catholic philosopher Maurice Blondel said that "there are no more difficult problems to solve than those that do not exist" (Tyson)."

It was said thusly: "When a drop of water falls into the sea, if it still there kept its separate identity, it would remain a little drop of water and nothing more, a little drop crushed by all the immensity around, because it has not surrendered. But, surrendering, it unites with the sea and participates in the nature and power and vastness of the whole sea."

Now then, what are these problems which are suggested not to exist? Perhaps all of them. The single act of surrender banishes all vexations and dilemmas as if they were only morning mist dispersing in the rays of the rising sun.

Therefore defining and then proposing solutions to problems is nothing more than a fiction, written for entertainment. All problems can be solved, or let us say dissolved, by union with God.

The four pillars of Yoga (union, yoking, conjoining, becoming part of):

Unity - A sense of all in one, connected, vast.
Equality - A calm centeredness not perturbed by what does or does not happen; no judgements.
Sincerity - The being oriented Godward, with all resistant elements purified and obedient.
Surrender - The complete, total consecration and offering of all parts of the being to God.

I can and have expounded on all of these at one time or another, but I tell you as a newly minted Christian, a disciple of Jesus, that the four pillars of the yoga still hold for every Christian as much as every Sadhu. These Vedic terms can be translated into Christian terminology, but why bother? They remain as starkly utilitarian as when conceived by the blessed Rishis of yore. Perfection.

There are the targets, ladies and gentleman. On your way then, and Godspeed.

Open Trench said...

Julie wonders if her soul is separate from her body, and I opine Julie it is. My evidence is that upon death, the layers surrounding the soul are peeled off one by one and go to the levels they go to for processing.

The soul itself goes into union with God and what happens after that we cannot know, all sould having been given the water of Lethe which causes amnesia, prior to our coming here.

If the soul was conjoined with the body, it would have to sit around in the decomposing corpse or the ashes of the cremated person, and await there within the vault, crypt, or grave, for liberation by Jesus. This would be ridiculous. Souls have things to do, places to go.

Saint Peter expects all souls to report to him in a timely manner after death, with no delay. If a soul reports suspiciously late to the que to pass the pearly gates, i.e., date of death not within the last month or so, that soul will be taken aside and pointed questions asked, such as, where you been homie? What take you so long to show up? You playing with Devil eh?

You don't want to be that soul.

Julie, there is your answer. Body and soul are separate components and follow a different arc after physical death. This is determined by nothing more than common sense.

Love, Trench

a_probst said...

Bachelor's theses using these online 'tools' are accepted in academia now? Hmmm.

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