Saturday, January 20, 2024

Can You See the Real Me?

We're officially sidetracked into Walker Percy's semiotic musings about the mysterious coupler that unites word and thing. He's definitely on to something. I'm not sure if he himself ever grasped the full implications, so that's down to us. After all, he was only a distinguished novelist, not an impertinent blogger.

This post will probably be somewhat scattershot, since I'm working from the book Conversations with Walker Percy, which covers the same ground in different ways from interview to interview. 

One of the points that jumped out to me was his assertion that man is an irreducibly triadic animal who tries to describe everything -- including himself -- in dyadic terms. And to the extent that we do this, the result will be what the modern world calls "alienation" -- or what in a later book he would characterize as being Lost in the Cosmos.

I agree 100%, even if I'm not entirely sure what I am agreeing with. Rather, I just know it. Here are some other passages with which I agree:

Q: An anemone on a tidal flat is perfectly at home as far as I can tell.

A: [The anemone] is himself neither more nor less, whereas a man can either be himself or not himself -- he doesn't necessarily coincide with himself. So you have this tremendous gap between accounting for animals..., which can be done by fairly adequate mechanistic models, and accounting for man, who can erect theories and utter sentences about these very creatures.

Now, the conduct of science would be inconceivable without this gap, so it's another one of those things it ignores. Which is fine, so long as we don't conflate this dyadic methodology with a properly triadic ontology.

Another subtle point is that "it is a burden of science to establish continuities, not discontinuities." As Rosen might say, science reduces evident discontinuities to manageable continuities, doing inevitable damage to the very nature of anything more complex than matter-in-motion. 

We've written before -- including in the book -- that the (vertical) hierarchical continuity of the cosmos cannot possibly be explained from the bottom up, rather, only from the top down. 

There is, of course, both continuity and discontinuity -- for they are complementary -- but as with all Primordial Complementarities, one must be ontologically prior, in this case continuity, because -- obviously -- no amount of discontinuity, no matter how fine, results in continuity. Which is why good vinyl sounds better than digital, even though the latter is more convenient.

Likewise, now that I think about it, thinking dyadically about reality is also more convenient. But applied to Life, Person, Consciousness, Spirit, God, and other tricksy wickets, it is ultimately self-beclowning, as we shall see. I AM is not your clown.

Scientists never even address themselves to the gap, let alone try to explain it.

And with good reason, for this is not the role of distinguished scientists, rather, for impertinent bloggers.

I think it's a kind of misplaced religion. The "biological continuum" is almost a sacred dogma.... [T]he qualitative gap between non-speaking and the speaking animal is offensive to a person who posits continuity as the sine qua non of science. But supposing there is a qualitative gap -- what are you going to do about it? 

Me? Keep writing, of course. As we have said on Many Occasions, there is literally an infinite gap between matter and life and between life and self-consciousness: man in particular, in case you haven't gnosissed, is discontinuous, which in turn is a mystery -- the infinitely intelligible kind.

Why? Because the intellect is conformed to the Infinite, that's why. Let's bring in Thomas for some backup: "Our intellect in understanding is extended to infinity." And "This ordering of the intellect to infinity would be vain and senseless if there were no infinite object of knowledge."

Correct: it could be vain and senseless, but we're betting on... the antonyms of vain and senseless, which is to say, productive and sensible. 

As to the Gap, Thomas affirms that "Created things are midway [i.e., in the Gap] between God's knowledge and our knowledge." Thus the Gap abides unless or until we become God. Or unless God becomes man, and has some skin in the game.

Oh, but it is a game, Dude -- a kind of language game, or better, a game of metalanguage. 

I take it as axiomatic that one should settle for nothing less than the infinite mystery and the infinite delight, i.e., God. In fact, I demand it. I refuse to settle for anything less.

Say,

Q: What kind of Catholic are you?

A: Bad.

But

Q: How is such a belief possible in this day and age?

A: What else is there?

Reminds me of when Stephen Dedalus is asked why he doesn't abandon Catholicism:

What kind of liberation would that be, to forsake an absurdity which is logical and coherent and to embrace one which is illogical and incoherent?

I also can't help thinking of Preacher Harry Powell and The religion the Almighty and me works out betwixt us.

As for Percy,

The only answer I can give is that I asked for it, in fact demanded it. I took it as an intolerable state of affairs to have found myself in this life and this age, which is a disaster by any calculation, without demanding a gift commensurate with the offense. So I demanded it.

We've said before that we are -- no offense -- owed the courtesy of an explanation. Perhaps this sounds impertinent -- again -- but God does not give us the gift of intellect only to leave us lost in the cosmos. Rather, he wants us to find him, you might even say desperately. 

We've only just scratched the surface of the Gap. We will continue the discontinuity in the next installment. 

Friday, January 19, 2024

Cosmic Alienation and the Great In Between

This post took off in an unanticipated direction, for two reasons: it began with a meditation on the mysterious nature of the coupler introduced in yesterday's post.

It then occurred to me that the coupler cuts both ways, in that it is necessarily bound up with both freedom and alienation. I began pursuing the latter angle, before my brain ran out of gas prematurely due to low blood sugar. We'll get back to the generative nature of the coupler per se in the next post.     

Yesterday we spoke of the mysterious "coupler" between symbol and symbolized, word and referent, subject and predicate. Most people don't bother to think about it, while Percy is so bothered he calls it an "ultimate mystery." 

Of note -- and he was a science-minded, trained physician -- it cannot be reduced to any material, neurological substrate, for it is fundamentally immaterial:

The coupler remains a mystery, and in my opinion will never be accounted for mechanistically..., because the coupler has the freedom to couple any elements of language (Percy).

It's why man never stops talking, and yet, never says anything in the same way twice (unless reading from a script). Human language is simultaneously constrained and yet infinite. Could this be because, unlike other animals, man is conformed to the Infinite?

When lower animals reach a state of homeostasis, they fall asleep. But for man, this is when the trouble starts. Give him food and shelter, and he starts dreaming of alternative realities and living in a parallel looniverse. When its instincts are satisfied, the lower animal is "perfectly at home." But for man, it is as if he discovers This is not my beautiful house! 

Alienation. No animal is alienated, whereas it seems that man cannot not be alienated from this world. We have written many posts on how the left reformulates this existential alienation in political terms in order to exploit it for the acquisition of power. Genesis 3 is simply our ur-myth of man's alienation, and oh how many aphorisms go to this truth. Myth?

Whoever does not believe in myths believes in fairy tales.

Neo-Marxist fairy tales of the tenured. 

The left is made up of individuals who are dissatisfied with what they have and satisfied with who they are.

The self-satisfaction takes the form of their supremely punchable smugness and superiority, the arrogant wisdom of the unlearned. 

If the leftist is not persecuting, he feels persecuted.

Or in other words, cannot stop persecuting MAGA extremists and horrible deplorables in order to manage their own persecutory mind parasites projected into us. It's why we are the THRETS TO DEMOKRISY! 

He who wishes to avoid grotesque collapses should look for nothing in space or time that will fulfill him.

Sorry, the alienation is baked into the cake, which was left out in the rain in a park east of Eden, and there is no manmade recipe that can build it back better again. 

Hell is the place where man finds all his projects realized.

The Democrat platform is the Good Intentions Paving Company: destination Hell.

The proclamation of our autonomy is the founding act of Hell.

The atomistic individualism of the progressive herd of conformists.  

The promises of life disappoint no one but the one who believes they are fulfilled here. 

The promises of the left disappoint anyone foolish enough to believe them. 

To be a conservative is to understand that man is a problem without a human solution.

 To be a progressive is to be the disease it pretends to cure.

He who jumps, growls, and barks has an invisible collar and an invisible chain.

They call it "institutional racism," but it's just the pleasure of participating in one's own subjugation, i.e., auto-victimization for fun & profit. 

The liberal is capable of sacrificing even his interests to his resentment.

BLM, CRT, DEI, BDS, DNC, MSNBC, etc. 

Activism is the asylum for one who has nowhere to dwell and nowhere to go.

In other words, alienation pretending it has a political solution. 

Social problems are the delightful refuge of those fleeing from their own problems.

The left never stops trying to put us out of their misery. 

Human nature always takes the progressive by surprise.

Because postmodern philosophy begins with the denial of essences, including human nature.

Man prefers to apologize by offering another person's guilt, rather than his own innocence, as an excuse.

White privilege, patriarchy, transphobia, et al.

Today the individual rebels against his own inalterable human nature in order to refrain from amending his own correctable nature. 

There is actually a cure for gender dysphoria or autogynephilia short of cutting off your johnson. Of course, here in California the cure is illegal. 

Man matures when he stops believing that politics solves his problems.

The intrinsic and permanent immaturity of the progressive left. But

The only possible progress is the internal progress of each individual. A process that concludes with the end of each life.

Again, illegal in California. 

The soul is the task of man.

For the left, the soul doesn't exist, and besides, they killed it. 

We only know how to carry ourselves with decency in front of the world when we know we are owed nothing. Without the pained grimace of a frustrated creditor. 

Life isn't fair, and the world doesn't owe you a living. But it helps to make yourself useful to your fellow man.  

Man is the animal who imagines itself to be Man. 

As we shall see, one of the consequences of the coupler is that man is never finished, but he is oriented to a telos -- a telos that is present in history. 

Self-satisfaction is pathetic proof of lowliness.

And no matter how far they dig, don't be surprised that the left can always go lower.

Thursday, January 18, 2024

The One, the Two, and the Coupler

The gap of the Gods. I thought that was a pretty good line to describe the Spirit. It deserves more than an ignominious burial under the next shovel of pneumabobble. 

Exactly what couples a couple? What is the nexus between two whos -- the we between the I am and the you are?

Who is the third who walks always beside you? / When I count, there are only you and I together / But when I look ahead up the white road / There is always another one walking beside you

He doesn't exactly say. But speaking of the coupler, yesterday I was perusing a book called Conversations with Walker Percy, he being the Catholic novelist who also wrote a mock self-help book called Lost in the Cosmos. In general he preferred to incarnate his novel ideas via character, but in one of these conversations he delves into metaphysics and his theory of language, suggesting that

it is more or less obvious that there is such a thing as a "coupler," an agent which couples, just as in Descartes' Cogito, there is an "I'" which thinks. If subject and predicate or name and thing are coupled, there is a coupler.

For example, to say I think, therefore I am presupposes an implicit link -- a mysterious coupler -- between the two affirmations, and it turns out that this coupler is -- in my opinion -- everything.

If subject and predicate or name and thing are coupled, there is a coupler. I do not presume to say what it is.  

He cites the famous example of Helen Keller, who "couples the liquid water" -- or the experience of wetness -- "with the word 'water.'" 

He refrains from speculating on the ontological status of the coupler, only that there is one.

Where does this leave us? We'll put it in the vertical hopper for now, and hopefully return to it as the post proceeds. 

Back to the book PneumatologyKärkkäinen adverts to "the communion of the Holy Spirit" which ultimately encompasses

the whole "community of creation," from the most elementary particles to atoms to molecules to cells to living organisms to animals to human beings to communities of humanity.

Different comm-unities, same coupler that unites them? For it seems there is a "fellowship as process" which lives "from the exchange of energy with them," such that "Any kind of community of creation is the fellowship of the Holy Spirit."  

Lots of peaches to unpack from that fruitcase. What is the ontological glue that binds these diverse manifestations of community-in-process? Why, it's none other than the gap of the Gods: the Spirit is "guiding, luring, wooing, influencing, drawing all humanity, not just the church." 

Wooing? Is that too woo-woo? Or not enough?

Back to Helen Keller's water, only transposed to a higher key: conversion "can be described as... an event of the life-giving Spirit. It is living water within, springing up to eternal life."

Let's bring in a coonsultant, Stanley Jaki, whose book Means to Message says it all in the title:

philosophy and science depend on a means, an object, some physical reality, which even spoken words are, as the carrier of their message.

The coupler? Kärkkäinen writes that 

Father and Son are not two, but they are not one either; it is the Spirit who unites and distinguishes them.... To use an ancient metaphor, the Father is the source of the river, the Son is the river that flows from the source, and the Spirit is the ocean in which the river ends.

A blissful wave of the immortal now, rising forth from the effulgent sea of existence. inhere in here... A drop embraced by the sea held within the drop.

Consciousness tends, like a spider, the lexical web, in order to capture the ideas that fly into the interior spaces like drunken insects.

Everything is a drunken insect caught in the conscious web of the One, the Two, and the Coupler.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

The Gap of the Gods and the Experience of Experience

We suggested a few posts ago that the Spirit is God's own wild card, and it seems that many of the mysteries of the cosmos come down to the influence of (): life, subjectivity, freedom, creativity, transcendence, teleology. 

Can the same principle be responsible for such a diverse list? I don't know, Bob -- it sounds a bit vague and jumbled, as if the Spirit is just the same old "God of the gaps" covering over our ignorance. 

Maybe, but I suspect there is indeed a deep relationship between O and (), because absent the latter we could never know of the former, but rather, would be sealed in immanence -- like a bad case of metaphysical autism.  

Besides, perhaps () is the God of the gaps -- beginning with the "gap" between Father and Son. Earlier in the book Kärkkäinen suggests that "pneumatology is present in all theological topics," and come to think of it, the Aphorist himself says 

Only God can fill even the tiniest gap.

So maybe we're on to something. It goes to the old problem of the One and the Many, because to say many is to say gaps between things, and yet, absent the underlying oneness we could never even know of the maniness -- the many manies would not be intelligible to Intelligence.  

The Aphorist also says that

Monism is an attitude that violates half of the experience.

And that 

Every discontinuity is an approximation of pure materiality to time.

Which implies that the mysterious experience of Experience accounts for the continuity -- and indeed is Continuity as such -- but we'll have to think this through, or at least leave this seedling for now and hope that something sprouts from it in the course of the post. Did someone say seed?

A seed of God grows into God (Eckhart).

I wonder if the following aphorism has some relevance to our subject, that

The most important thing in philosophy is the line that demarcates the territory of a mystery. The anonymous person who first said: the individual is ineffable, did something more important than one who envisions a bold speculation.

At any rate, the theologiaJürgen Moltmann "highlights the critical role of the Spirit of God in giving birth and sustaining life," aiming "to create a pneumatology that does not exclude any area of life" (Kärkkäinen, emphasis mine).

Eckhart would like to jump in again:

From all eternity God lies on a maternity bed giving birth. The essence of God is birthing. 

In fact, he has much to say about the divine birth in the soul, which strongly implies a feminine aspect of the Spirit, a subject to which we will return below right now:

We are all meant to be mothers of God. 

"Blessed is the fruit of Bob's womb"? That sounds more than a bit sacrilegious. Hey, don't look at me. Blame the Maestro: 

Pay attention now to where this birth takes place: this eternal birth takes place in the soul, totally in the manner it takes place in eternity. 

Eckhart asks

What good is it to me if this eternal birth of the divine Son takes place unceasingly but does not take place within myself?

So hail Bob, who may or may not be full of it.

Moltmann also adverts to the relationship between the Spirit and the miracle of subjectivity, of the revelation of 

God's immanence in human experience, and in the transcendence of human beings in God. Because God's Spirit is present in human beings, the human spirit is self-transcendently aligned toward God. 

Thy will be done, and all that. An alignment -- over the Gap -- of wills.

As to its role in the mystery of creation, Moltmann writes of "the Spirit of God as the power of creation and the wellspring of life":

Every experience of a creation of the Spirit is hence also an experience of the Spirit itself. Every true experience of the self becomes also an experience of the divine spirit of life in the human being. Every lived moment can be lived in the inconceivable closeness of God in the Spirit.

Here again, there is no closeness without the Gap, the Spirit being what closes Gap, precisely. In one of his more famous formulations, Eckhart writes that

The eye with which I see God is the same eye with which God sees me. 

Seeing at once implies distance and yet a unity in the distance. Physicists, for example, can see all the way back to the moment of the creation of the cosmos, i.e., the background radiation of the big bang.

But you needn't be acquainted with physics to see even before the big bang, to its vertical ground and source in the womb of O, which gives birth to the cosmos. The cosmos is a creature, and "Every creature is a word of God" (Eckhart). And "God creates all things but he does not stop creating."

Hardly. For "creatures are always being created and in the process of beginning to be created." Ultimately, "Being is God's circle and in this circle all creatures exist." Moreover, "All creatures are interdependent," which means that the Gap is both real and a kind of illusion.  

Gosh, we've covered an awful lot of goround. Let's leave something for tomorrow's now.

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Two Divided by Love

Again, organisms are open systems that exchange matter, information, or energy with the environment. Our argument is that man is also a vertically open system, open to... let's just call it () for now; () is not matter, nor is it exactly information, but many authorities -- especially in the east -- regard it as a kind of energy.

I was referring to the Christian Orthodox east, but he may have a point. A later chapter of Pneumatology is devoted to cross-cultural conceptions of this mysterious energy, but for now let's stick with Christendom.

Here's something:

If the church is founded by the sovereign action of the Spirit, then the church is an "open system" (emphasis mine).

Analogously, consider the structure of, say, an ocean current, or the jet stream, both of which exist only because of the matter and energy flowing through them. Being that these process structures can persist for hundreds and thousands of years, they are characterized by a kind of "stable instability" on the border between order and chaos.

Come to think of it, this must be why, on the human level, life and anxiety are such cussin' cousins. No matter how stable things appear, we're no more than a damn banana peel from catastrophe. Some of us are more constitutionally sensitive to these perturbations, while others are haunted by the feeling that something good is about to happen.

That was originally a joke, but consider the martyrs, who in the face of the worst possible circumstances, were convinced of a happy ending. This must be the inverse of anxiety -- call it existential unxiety.

Which, they say, is a gift -- a gift of the (). For, what exactly are the gifts of the Holy Spirit, Mr. Google? "The Holy Spirit works in each person in one way or another for the good of all," e.g., faith, fortitude, or serenity now! 

 () also seems to exert a teleological pull; again, it is the strangest of strange attractors:


"God's gracious self-communication in the Spirit has become manifest in history," writes Kärkkäine, and the "world is drawn to its spiritual fulfillment by the Spirit of God, who directs the whole history of the world in all its length and breadth toward its proper goal" (Rahner).

Unless you're the anxious type, in which case the world seems to be spinning off its axis. It was fun watching MSNBC last night.

Kärkkäine cites another theologian who conceives the Spirit "as the efficacy of the energy of God." Moreover, it is God's "vitality," i.e., his "inspiring breath by which he grants life in creation and re-creation." 

Another fellow regards it as "the personal presence of God," or his "personal outreach," and you know how we feel about Presence --again, Schuon says something to the effect that God manifests as truth and presence.

And maybe freedom too, in that "The Holy Spirit is the one who establishes and guarantees freedom." Which makes perfect nonsense, since truth can only be present if it is freely accepted, so these three are intimately related. Come to think of it, where the Spirit of the Lord is, [boom] there is freedom.

Now to say telos is to say meaning, and "the Spirit of God is the life-giving principle that makes human life and the life of the whole creation meaningful." 

Kärkkäine next discusses the theologian Wolfhart Pannenberg, who it seems is very much in our attractor. The following passage caught my attention, for he claims
the relationship between science and theology is essential. They are not two fields but have the same object of study, namely, creation. What theology claims has to be consonant with what other fields of inquiry claim. There can be only one truth.
Correct: one God, one Cosmos, one Truth, and one human nature in potential conformity to that Truth, the latter being communicated to us via some sort of subtle energy, as per the above: "the Spirit is the divine energy and 'bond of love' between Father and Son."

In modern physics, any bond is a function of energy. In fact, if the movie Oppenheimer is correct, you can release an awful lot of energy by messing about with such nuclear bonds. I am become death, destroyer of worlds. Then again, Oppenheimer was a tad highly strung, i.e., anxious. I don’t want to see that crybaby scientist in this post again.

For quantum physics, everything comes down to fields of energy:
Regarding the engagement of science and theology, Pannenberg was drawn to a concept of "force-field" as a potential common theme between the two. He borrows it from modern physics. He notes that in the Bible, the Spirit is depicted as the life-giving principle to which all creatures owe life, movement, and activity.

Furthermore, he wonders -- as do I -- whether "this view of life can be reconciled with modern biology," and why not? One Cosmos One Life One Truth.

Except to say that (O)therness or alterity are are built into this One, for "The Son is the model of an 'otherness" different from the Father." Again, different in relation but not in substance. Nevertheless, I agree that "the Son's self-differentiation from the Father" must be "the basis for the independence of the world."

Thus, perhaps a better word is interdependence, since the relationship abides. This interdependence "facilitates participation of creation in the divine life," so we definitely have that going for us. The Holy Spirit 

is none other than the Creator of all life in the whole range of natural occurrence and also in the new creation of the resurrection of the dead. 

Which must be the first and last Word in unxiety. 

Monday, January 15, 2024

In Tune With the Infinite Tune

Reality is an open system because the Godhead is an open system. 

Which is not the best way to put it, because God can't literally be a system, which is to say, composed of parts. We'll clean that up later. 

What is an open system? Last I checked, it is a spontaneous organization that emerges under far-from-equilibrium conditions. Such systems are open to the surrounding environment, exchanging matter, information, and/or energy, while dissipating entropy. 

Again, it makes no sense to regard God as a "process structure." Then again, there may be certain fruitful analogies to our situation herebelow. 

Back to the book we're discussing. It has a section on Karl Rahner's "transcendental pneumatology," and Rahner seems to be in the same not-so-strange attractor tugging at us in vertical phase space:

His basic thesis is that God reveals himself to every person in the very experience of that person's finite yet open (to God and revelation) transcendence (emphasis mine).

If we're on the right track, then the Godhead must somehow be infinite and open -- which sounds paradoxical until you realize it's quite orthoparadoxical after all, furnishing the key to many mysteries.

Rahner is notoriously obscure and even German, so he is perhaps not the best authority on himself. Nevertheless, let's kick the tires of the following passage and drive it around the block a couple of times:

not only are humans always by nature open to God, they are also always supernaturally elevated by God in that transcendental openness, so that such elevation becomes an actual experience of God in every human life (emphasis mine).

Not only is that refreshingly clear, it highlights all the conditions required for the evolution of a vertical process structure in celestial phase space. In other words, we are all -- by virtue of our humanness -- "pulled" up and into God, who

actually communicates himself to every human person in a gracious offer of free grace, so that God's presence becomes an existential, a constituent element, in every person's humanity.

Now, one thing we want to do is keep this discussion strictly scientific, and yet experiential. Of course, there is no "science of experience," since the very conduct of science presupposes experience. Thus, we're talking about a transcendent meta-level that somehow "feeds" experience from outside and above. 

And when we say "feed," we're being rather literal, because what does nourish the soul? Even people who believe in neither the soul nor God will concede that it dries up without the input of truth, love, and beauty, i.e., the transcendentals. We are always nourished from above. Unless we're malnourished from below. 

This is an unexpected sidestreet, but at the moment I am reading a biography of the immortal songwriter Johnny Mercer. In it there's a description of how he worked. His father wrote that during a visit in 1939, he asked Johnny to

"tell me how it is that a boy of your age [30 at the time] can write over 500 songs and does not know music and cannot play an instrument. How do you account for it?" 

After pondering and thinking for a few minutes, John turned to me and said, "Pop, to tell you the truth I simply get to thinking over the song, pondering over it in my mind and all of a sudden, I get in tune with the Infinite."

The Aphorist reminds us that 

Aesthetics is the sensible and secular manifestation of grace.

 Again, very experience-near.

From an aesthetic experience one returns as from a sighting of numinous footprints.

Mercer's father sensed the footsteps and suggested that his son's inspiration came from "very high sources. That's why I believe that John's talent is from above and that he is a musical genius." 

Aesthetics cannot give recipes, because there are no methods for making miracles.

And 

Every work of art speaks to us of God. No matter what it says.

Back to Kärkkäinen: "God's self-communication means that God makes his very own self the innermost constitutive element of the human person." God

has already communicated himself in his Holy Spirit always and everywhere and to every person as the innermost center of his existence (Rahner).

Always everybody everywhere? 

Only God and the central point of my consciousness are not adventitious to me.

AdventitiousArising from an external cause or factor; not inherent; Of or belonging to a structure that develops in an unusual place. 

And nothing could be a more unusual place than human consciousness. Which is never "alone" but always "with": 

The experience of self and God is never an individualistic experience but rather something that takes place in relation to others. 

The very structure of consciousness is not a structure -- a static one -- but a dynamic and open process structure that again imports and "metabolizes" truth, love, and beauty.

You know the feeling / Of something half-remembered, / Of something that never happened, / Yet you recall it well. / You know the feeling / Of recognizing someone / That you've never met / As far as you can tell,

Well, it's like that. Hard to describe... 

I'll never find the words / That say enough, / Tell enough, / I mean they just aren't swell enough. --Johnny Mercer

Sunday, January 14, 2024

Relational Cosmology and Process Pneumatology

Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness. --God 

No one knows what God is or what Life is. On the other hand everybody knows what God is -- atheists included, or they couldn't reject him -- and everyone knows what Life is, even babies, who have no trouble making the distinction. Ever see a baby encountering a dog for the first time?

They say you can't mix science and religion, but in reality you can't unmix them unless I say so. 

On a tangential note, this especially applies to political disputes, which are ultimately religious in nature (and these days quite religulous, but we'll come back to the left later. Suffice it to say that the idea of the state offering free genital mutilation to illegal aliens was quite beyond even the wildest nightmares of the founders).

I see a deep connection between God and biology, because -- come to find out -- both are deeply and irreducibly relational. But "relation" is a tricksy concept, in particular, when we try to regard it as prior to that which it relates. Which we must do if we are to see rightly. 

For example, in the Trinity, the persons are defined strictly in terms of relations: the Son is related by way of engendering, while the Spirit proceeds from the two thus related: the only distinctions of the one substance are a "consequence" of the prior relations, or rather, the distinctions are the relations. This is our model for how "all things are made"-- both the visible and invisible -- and for the "giver of life," AKA the bio-logos.

To further set the stage, I'm going back and forth between two books, and explicating a deeper relation between them, one on Pneumatology, the other on Life Itself. Will the post succeed, or end in a train wreck?

Again, Rosen proposes a new paradigm for Life itself, which he calls relational biology. Let's consider some of his main ideas in the raw, before I cook them up into something more digestible:

reductionism dispenses with the organization as the first, essential step in analysis. It expects to recapture the organization later.

I call that a promise it can't keep, since you can't get from analysis of the organization back to the holistic presence of Life. 

Conversely, "In a relational approach, it is the matter that is dispensed with," so just the organization -- the relations -- remains. Obviously, in biological organisms, this organization 

is at least as much a part of its material reality as the specific particles that constitute it at a given time, perhaps indeed more so. 

I say there's no perhaps about it: looked at this way, Life is not a "ghost in the machine," rather, the biological system is a corporeal ghost of Life, so to speak. 

Now, to say Life is to say open system, and  

there is still no "physics" of open systems. Largely, this is because of the insistence on thinking of an open system as only a closed system with some additional terms.... 

In every case, the strategy is then to regard the "open" system as an underlying closed system plus something.

But if we turn the cosmos back right-side up, the closed system is just a mental construct; we might say it is an open system minus x

Now let's switch gears and talk about God, in particular, the Spirit. Again, as described yesterday,

As God's divine energy that permeates all life and everything in the cosmos, the Spirit is... the most intimate "contact point" between the Triune God and human beings (Kärkkäinen, emphasis mine).

That all sounds very romantic, but can we be more specific? Kärkkäinen references a book called Process Pneumatology. I don't know anything about the book, but I am definitely yoinking the phrase, because the human being is a kind of process structure that is open to x, AKA the Holy Spirit. This is the same x to which Life Itself is open. For example, the Spirit 

can stand for life itself as a gift of God. God is the source of human (and animal) life (ibid., emphasis mine).

Eh, still too vague.  

The Bible often uses the term ruach for the Spirit. It variously refers to 

the principle of life, in other words, the force that vivifies human beings; [and to] the life of God himself

Similar to Rosen's idea of abstracting relations from matter, "It is a subtle corporeality rather than an incorporeal substance" (emphasis mine). It is "not discarnate. It is rather what animates the body." Ultimately, "God is the only one who gives the life force," and "related to this concept" is "the Spirit's cosmic function, which goes far beyond the human sphere of life."

Again: IT'S ALIVE! But this is still too animistic sounding. Can we do better? 

Let's get down to cases, to human experience. For example, "the first Christian communities experienced the Spirit in their life and ministry with visible signs." This Presence "was indeed so powerful that those signs were taken as the evidence of the work of God," a "source of extraordinary power and guidance." 

The Spirit was discerned to be working everywhere in the church and in the personal spiritual lives of believers.

Good for them, but what about the restavus? Maximus the Confessor confesses that

The Holy Spirit is not absent from any created being, especially not from one which in any way participates in intelligence.

It is "the office of the Holy Spirit to make alive," and why not? I don't usually quote Calvin, but he's not wrong: it is through the Holy Spirit 

that the world is daily renewed, because God sends forth his spirit. In the propagation of living creatures, we doubtless see continually a new creation of the world.

No, this post didn't derail. We're just stopping at the station to pick up some more passengers, including this guy:

I have come that they may have life, and have it in abundance.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

God's Own Wild Card

It is easier to say what Life isn't than what it is. Among other things, it is not and cannot be a machine. Why? Mainly because a machine is composed of parts with exterior relations, whereas everything about Life has interior relations, resulting in a virtual infinitude of interconnections, feedback loops, and entailments. 

So, if we're on the right track, the key principle is interior relations. Or, you could even say relations, because inanimate things aren't actually related until we perceive the relation. A rock, for example, isn't related to another rock. Likewise, we can be in relation to a rock, but the rock isn't in relation to us.

Some people think this is how God rolls -- that we are related to him, but not vice versa. However, a trinitarian metaphysic suggests otherwise, positing a God that is irreducible substance-in-relation. Turns out the Absolute is relative after all.

I'm reading an interesting book on Pneumatology, the Pneuma (AKA Holy Spirit) undoubtedly being the most underrated of the Three. After all, he's a Person too, just a rather slippery one, always blowing about here and there. Hard to pin down. Whoops, where'd ego? To quote Mr. Cale, 
They call me the breeze / I keep blowing down the road.

Nevertheless, 

I ain't hidin' from nobody / Ain't nobody hidin' from me.

This being the case, it seems that the ungraspable Spirit may actually be the easiest of the Three to grasp. He's not hidin', rather, we are. He's always related to us, but we may or may not be related to him (or notice the relationship).

Put it this way: anyone who says they're "spiritual" -- which is almost everybody -- is confessing either the Holy Spirit or a hostile spirit of one kind or another (or a mixture of the two). 

This Spirit is and always has been available to man, ever since man became man. The testimony is abundant, diverse, and continuous. For not only is the Spirit always related to us, I would argue that He is relationship as such -- beginning with the interior relatedness of Father and Son. 

For example, in one famous formulation, the Trinity is Lover, Beloved, and the Love that binds them. Another says something to the effect that the Father is God above us, the Son God with us, and the Spirit God in us; and above, with, and in are distinct but inseparable, each being with and in the others.

As God's divine energy that permeates all life and everything in the cosmos, the Spirit is... the most intimate "contact point" between the Triune God and human beings (Kärkkäinen).  

Or at least change my mind.  

Of note, 

The doctrine of the Spirit has always played a more prominent role in Eastern Orthodox theology...., whereas the Christian West (Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, and Protestantism) focuses on Christology.

This can lead even to ill-sounding charges "of 'Christomonism' against Western theology." One hates to criticize such believers, but after all, Christ went to a great deal of trouble to reveal the threeness of the One. "Too often," writes Kärkkäinen, "a subordinate, secondary role" is "assigned to the Holy Spirit." 

This strikes me as self-evident, now that I think about it. It's one reason why Catholic theology is more rational than Orthodox theology, the latter being more mystical and experiential. Of course, all Three are present in both; rather, it's a matter of emphasis.  

This relative neglect of the Spirit, I think, accounts for people moving from one church to another in search of Him, for "people are experiencing a hunger for a concrete, lived experience of the life-giving Spirit" (ibid.). 

Not unlike earlier times of perceived crisis, Christians today attempt to reconnect with the wellsprings of the faith, hoping these roots will bring about stability, order and meaning to a postmodern world that is often felt to be hopelessly fragmented. In particular, many seek to retrieve a three-personed God who is related to the human community and to the entire universe in love... (Dreyer, in Kärkkäinen).

Emphasis mine, because there's that word again: related

Now, to quote another authority, The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of it, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it goes. I want to say it is the wild card of divinity, emphasis on the wild. For which reason we need to test it, as alluded to above vis-a-vis Holy and unholy maninfestations.

Think of how wildly the Spirit behaves in Acts. Maybe the Spirit is just as wild today -- but again, both the good and bad kinds: for

People are paying attention to the spiritual dimension of their lives and often seem to be experiencing the Spirit in ways and places that often challenge traditional theologies and Church structures.... The Spirit is present and active beyond the official structures and ordained ministries of the Church (Sachs, ibid.).

There's something going on here that is analogous to Gödel's theorems, only as applied to doctrine. For doctrine is a structure that "contains" the uncontainable Spirit, which necessarily eludes containment. Again, it is the wild card: 

Theologians from whom I have learned the most, both ancient and modern, all warn against trying to comprehend the Spirit in a systematic way (ibid., emphasis mine).

As alluded to above, we're talking about something fundamentally relational and experiential -- "the most intimate 'contact point' between the Triune God and human beings."

Even though the experience of the Spirit always leads to theological reflection on its meaning, spirituality is the first contact point. This is clearly evident in the biblical record: a powerful, often charismatic experience of the Spirit came first; only afterward, and in a slow tempo, came theological reflection (Kärkkäinen)

Exactly. The earliest councils first had to sort out the business of the Son before getting to the isness of the Spirit, which wan't nailed down until later.

On the one hand, "talk about the Spirit cannot be based on pure theory but must touch on experienced reality." But on the other, "experience alone does not suffice. It must be tried and tested so that 'one's own spirit' does not take the place of the Holy Spirit."

This post actually began with a very different subject in mind, that is, Rosen's "relational biology," which is a biology that is mindful of the infinitely rich interior relations of organisms. While Rosen doesn't say it, I will: that Life cannot be reduced to anything less than Life Itself, which is in turn related to the living relationship-as-such of the Holy Spirit. 

This is only the introduction to a vast subject, but I suspect creation is substance-in-relation all the way down, starting not only at the top, but within it. 

So many aphorisms, so we'll limit ourselves to five:

God is infinitely close and infinitely distant; one should not speak of Him as if he were some intermediate distance.

God does not reveal with discourses, but by means of experiences. The sacred writer does not transmit a divine discourse; his words express an experience given to him. 

Mysticism is the empiricism of transcendent knowledge. 

The objectivity of mystical experience cannot be demonstrated. Just like that of any other experience.

Any shared experience ends in a simulacrum of religion.

Friday, January 12, 2024

Developmental Bio-Cosmology

Next up in our survey of philosophical nonstarters is Thomas Hobbes, who was a thoroughgoing materialist, back when being one could be dangerous to one's health:

The universe, that is the whole mass of things that are, is corporeal, that is to say body; and hath the dimensions of magnitude, namely, length, breadth, and depth (in Magee).

I'll bite: what are the corporeal dimensions of the truth you just uttered? Where is it in space? I'm trying to touch it, but I don't feel anything.

Nevertheless, materialism serves a kind of purpose, analogous to how the development of a strictly monistic monotheism was necessary prior to the revelation of the triune Godhead, otherwise the folks would mistake the latter for a primitive polytheism.

In yesterday's post we highlighted the philosophical problems that ensue from an underemphasis on the empirical/material world. Hobbes obviously indulges in the opposite error, but only gradually did the practice of science completely cleanse it self of the naive projection of the subject into the object, as in primitive animism.

Somewhat ironically, now that the cleansing of the cosmos is more or less complete, it is safe to go back to the view that IT'S ALIVE! Only from a higher and more integral level. As usual, we are now free to return to the beginning and know it for the first time -- i.e., meta-know it.

What do I mean? Well, in his book The Phenomenon of Life: Toward a Philosophical Biology -- which was a go-to prior to the discovery of Robert Rosen -- he sketches out a theory that for primordial man, everything was alive, death being the Great Exception. Perhaps we were like kittens, who likewise seem to inhabit a world in which everything is alive. 

Clearly, for such a primitive mentality, subjectivity and objectivity are thoroughly conflated. This view isn't wrong, just precritical and prescientific. 

Come to think of it, perhaps it simply results from an underdevelopment of the left cerebral hemisphere, which, to this day (in child development), lags behind the development of the right. At any rate, the Aphorist is not wrong to say that 

Things do not have feeling, but there is feeling in many things. 

Ultimately,

The truth is objective but not impersonal.

But this is a late stage realization known only to Raccoons and fellow vertical travelers. The point is, the personal and impersonal have to be differentiated before they can be reunited at a higher level, where we can truly truly say that

The life of the intelligence is a dialogue between the personalism of spirit and the impersonalism of reason. 

Where indeed,

Truth is a person.

We're not there yet, or rather, let us retrace the steps of how we got here. 

So many possible avenues... Let's begin with Jonas, who writes that

When man first began to interpret the nature of things -- and this he did when he began to be man -- life to him was everywhere, and Being the same as being alive.... Soul flooded the whole of existence and encountered itself in all things. Bare matter, that is, truly inanimate, "dead" matter, was yet to be discovered -- as indeed, its concept, so familiar to us, is anything but obvious.

Thus, 

that the world is alive is really the most natural view, and largely supported by prima-facie evidence. On the terrestrial scene..., life abounds and occupies the whole foreground exposed to man's immediate view. The proportion of manifestly lifeless matter encountered in this primordial field is small, since most of what we now know to be inanimate is so intimately intertwined with the dynamics of life that it seems to share its nature.

Recall yesterday's link to the story about Afro-chemistry, in which matter is confused with primitive identity politics projected into the building blocks of reality. 

Here again, a pathological (or developmentally arrested) subjectivity is thoroughly conflated with objectivity. Suffice it to say this this is not what the Aphorist means by the crack that "there is feeling in many things." Molecules are not racist, not even melanin. 

As for the proper reunion of subject and object, Rosen is again our man. True, we can arrive at the same synthesis via pure intellection, but he does so with bullet-proof math and logic. 

Suffice it to say that -- contra Hobbes -- the world is not a machine, and cannot be a machine. However, there's no harm in viewing it that way, so long as one doesn't elevate this to an ontology. For nothing is that simple, let alone everything

Rather, everything is complex, not merely complicated, because machines -- for example, the one I'm typing on -- can be plenty complicated. But they are not complex, a critical distinction that Judith Curry highlights in her excellent Climate Uncertainty and Risk:

Complexity is not the same as complicated. Complicated systems have many parts but simple chains of causation. Complexity of the climate system arises from the chaotic behavior and nonlinearity of the equations for motions in the atmosphere and ocean, and the feedbacks between subsystems for the atmosphere, oceans, land surfaces, and glacier ice.

There are no mechanical models for such complexity. Well, there are, but as they say, All models are wrong, but some are useful

The aphorism acknowledges that statistical models always fall short of the complexities of reality but can still be useful nonetheless. The aphorism originally referred just to statistical models, but it is now sometimes used for scientific models in general.

Or, supposing you're better at logic than math, you could just say Gödel. Rosen rightly does so even before the first chapter, in the prelude, reminding those of us who need no reminder that "Gödel effectively demolished the formalist program," showing that

no matter how one tries to formalize a particular part of mathematics, syntactic truth in the formalization does not coincide with (is narrower than) the set of truths about numbers.

In short, no matter how good you are at math,

There is always a semantic residue, that cannot be accommodated by that syntactical scheme (emphasis mine, to highlight the fact that semantics cannot be reduced to syntax, and that's final).

This has many mind-blowing -- and liberating -- implications. One of Rosen's key insights is that we, or reductive scientism, rather, has things upside-down and inside-out, because it regards complexity as the exception, when, come to find out, it is the rule: complexity is more general than the linearity and relative simplicity which physics is capable of handling. 

Suffice it to say, you can't get from matter to life via physics; the world mapped by physics is necessary but not sufficient.

Again, one can, for methodological reasons, regard complex systems as simple, just don't forget that they aren't actually simple systems, and thereby reduce yourself to a simpleton.

This is a complex subject, so to be continued...

Thursday, January 11, 2024

Bob and the Eternal D in Geometry

It seems to me that the problem with Greek science was a failure to communicate -- between left and right cerebral hemispheres. This is no doubt a simplistic and reductive explanation, but blame I-Mac for that. 

In any event, something must account for what amounts to an ideological capture that prevented the Greeks from stepping outside their ideas and comparing them to the external world. Instead, if there was a conflict between beautiful idea and messy reality, so much for the latter.

And here we are. 

Speaking of which, if you're not in the Metacosmic Spiral you're in the Intracosmic Circle, in which case extremes meet. Check out this story on the colonization of STEM by barbarous ideologues (which is to say, right brain by left). In a course called -- no, really -- Afrochemistry,

Students will apply chemical tools and analysis to understand Black life in the U.S. and students will implement African American sensibilities to analyze chemistry. Diverse historical and contemporary scientists, intellectuals, and chemical discoveries will inform personal reflections and proposals for addressing inequities in chemistry and chemical education. 

*Ironically*, this description betrays the very parochial mentality that would have absolutely prevented the development of science, which is, among other things, universal. For example, whether black or white, if you swallow a chemical called cyanide, you won't be doing any more science, Afro or otherwise. 

CYANIDE IS RACISS!

Reminds me of how Hitler rejected the Jewish physics of Einstein, Pauli, and Oppenheimer. And a good thing, since, if he hadn't, we might all be Deutsch sprechen

In his book The Savior of Science, Jaki writes of the intracosmic ideological capture of the Greek mind. Obviously it has nothing to do with intelligence per se, as they invented geometry, whereas I scraped by with a D back in 10th grade. If I knew then what I know now, I would have confidently reminded Mrs. Neilson that

Geometry is still not science, inasmuch as science is about the actual universe, where all is in motion and, in contrast to the world of geometry, nothing is ever at rest (Jaki).

And when we say intracosmic left brain ideological capture, we are apparently being quite literal. For example, I was thumbing through Aurelius' Meditations the other day, where he articulates the prevalent idea of what Nietzsche would later characterize as eternal return:

Each thing is of like form from everlasting and comes round again in its cycle.

Therefore,   

Whatever may befall you, it was preordained for you from everlasting

So relax. Everything that happens must happen.

Yes, Nicolás?

I do not want to conquer serenity, like a Stoic, but to welcome serenity in, like a Christian. 

Philosophy, of course, begins in wonder. I wonder why they didn't wonder about the world exterior to their heads?

One is here in the presence of a blindness of the human mind to the obvious, which is worth exploring (Jaki). 

But only briefly, in order to illustrate the fact that left brain capture is not just a thing, but a deadly thing (for a more recent example, see here). For it seems that Aristotelian physics "was taken to be necessarily true, whatever the evidence to the contrary." Much like Afrochemistry and Cuckoo-climatology.

Steeped in that perspective, which included a firm belief in eternal cycles of birth-life-death-rebirth for all, the Greeks of old could be but the victims of an intellectual state..., that all was matter in motion, resulting in rigid determinism (ibid.).

Ultimately,

full trust in a rational Creator was needed to muster intellectual courage to live with quantities as well as qualities whatever the apparent irrationality of the fact that they are irreducible to one another (ibid.). 

So, take that, Mrs. Neilson -- you and your high but barren intellectual plateau. I accept your D with pride! And resignation! For if the inventors of geometry are correct, I shall take this course an endless number of times and earn the same D. 

Mrs. Neilson, top left; also depicted, Mr. Trahan, from whom I earned a D in calculus.

BONUS PHOTO:

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Rational Darkness and Transrational Light

In the book we're using as a template for our discussion of philosophical nonstarters, it touches on the scientific revolution and Isaac Newton. Of course, in Newton's day, philosophy and science had not yet undergone their messy divorce.

Come to think of it, Newton was no atheist, rather, a bit of a religious nut with some peculiar ideas about God. At any rate, subsequent developments were more of a trivorce: just as both Christianity and Rabbinical Judaism emerged out of the matrix of temple Judaism, modern science was only gradually differentiated from the religion and philosophy that gave birth to it.

Now that these three are trivorced and living separate lives, people like to... what's the word, Jeeves? Backread? Yes, that will do -- backread subsequent developments that were not present at the time. It's one of those historical fallacies falling under the heading of anachronism, i.e., 

a chronological inconsistency in some arrangement, especially a juxtaposition of people, events, objects, language terms and customs from different time periods. The most common type of anachronism is an object misplaced in time, but it may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, [etc.], or anything else associated with a particular period that is placed outside its proper temporal domain.

In the deeper context, perhaps Newton's religiosity -- and he is arguably the GOAT of science -- was fundamental to his whole approach to the world. 

For example, my son is taking a philosophy course, and on the first day the professor said something to the effect that the development of modern science would have been impossible absent the ancient Greeks. I don't disagree, and yet, the Greeks did not develop science in our sense of the word. Rather, as in the case of all non-Christian cultures, science was stillborn.

Therefore, we can say that the Greeks met some of the necessary conditions for the development of science, but were weak on the sufficient ones -- the "conditions with which." Which conditions might those be?

Magee doesn't get into them, so I guess it's down to me.

More generally, my hobby is fooling around with seeming irreconcilables. My mind sees connections everywhere, and there's not a damn thing I can do about it. Just built that way, I guess. 

But if religion, philosophy, and theology were once united, who's to say we can't do it again, albeit at a deeper level of harmony and integration? 

Besides, it's fun, and if I have to choose between an amusing metaphysic and an unamusing one, all else being equal, I'm going with the former. Like Alan Watts, I'm a philosophical entertainer, beginning with myself. Obviously I blog to amuse myself, and only hope that others get the jokes. For it is written: my jokes are easy, my words enlight.

With good humor and pessimism it is possible to be neither wrong nor bored.

And I am never bored.

Two contradictory philosophical theses complete each other, but only God knows how. 

To which I would add that It's for God to know and for us to find out.
I believe more in God's smile than His wrath.  

I frankly don't believe in the latter at all, this being but an understandable human projection. True, God hates evil, but not in an emotional way. It's just that he prefers (and cannot not prefer) the Good. Of course it sounds presumptuous to pretend to read the mind of God, but

To speak of God is presumptuous; not to speak of God is imbecilic. 

So in reality, we're simply doing our best to not be imbeciles.

There's a world of difference between a tautology and a self-evident truth, and it is not tautologous to affirm that

The sole proof of the existence of God is His existence.

For it is a binary question: either God does or does not exist. And if he doesn't, then -- among other inconveniences -- we lose the very ground of reason itself, AKA the Logos. I like the orthoparadoxical way Rodney Bomford puts it: "If God does not exist, only He knows it." And if He doesn't, then only man could not know it. Absurd?

Man calls "absurd" his secret pretensions to omnipotence.

Thus, the real absurdity is pretending to a knowledge that only God could possess. He does, but thankfully, we participate in it, which is precisely how and why we have access to truth at all. Unless you think we don't, in which case you are dismissed. To the outer darkness. With no inside. If you can imagine such a state.

I can. Yes, I myself dabbled in nihilism. For

God allows man to raise barricades against the invasion of grace. 

A key point here is that grace takes many forms, the light of truth being just one of them. Beauty, of course, is another, and not for nothing is mathematics so full of beautiful equations. More generally,

God does not ask for the submission of intelligence, but rather an intelligent submission,

This being in contrast to, say, Islam, which means submission, full stop. The unintelligent kind. But Islam is scarcely alone on this score, another being submission to our deeply anti-intellectual educational establishment.  

Why is it so stupid? Many reasons. These reasons extend all the way back to the mythognoetry of Genesis 3, but that's a rather vague and general explanation that takes any number of forms, one of the most consequential being nominalism. 

Coincidentally, I just read an essay on the subject, called The Complications of (Bad) Philosophy. It only skims the surface, but it will do until I haul out the heavy hitters:

Who could have predicted that Ockham’s rejection of universals (nominalism) and emphasis on God’s supreme omnipotence at the expense of the divine intellect (voluntarism) -- esoteric philosophical concepts if ever there were ones -- would provoke such censure, even centuries after his death?

Not only is this not esoteric, it is the very soul of common sense, for if we can't know universals, then truly truly, we can't claim to know anything -- anything beyond the raw perceptions furnished by the senses. Thus, nominalism is the principle of no principles -- "the most perennially pernicious of philosophical assumptions," 

a “universal acid” that “disintegrates the coherence of philosophy in every area: metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, politics, and aesthetics.”

For it

assumes that there is no objective order in creation. It reflects not a wonder or awe at cosmic goodness but rather a pessimistic doubt about reality that demands that people impose order on an otherwise unintelligible creation. This entails that the concepts of truth and goodness are ultimately arbitrary constructs the philosopher creates to prescribe an order for a fractious world.

The outer darkness referenced above: 

if there are no forms, there are no universal natures such as humanity -- every single being is a radically unique individual not limited by human nature. (Sound familiar?)

Yes. Yes it does sound distressingly familiar. Nor is it fun, to put it mildly. These people are at war with comedy, with irony, and with good natured self-deprecation, which is -- in my book -- a sin against the Ho-Ho-Holy Spirit.

[It] dramatically limits our ability to know reality, because without necessary causal relations, we can never understand what is behind our sense experience. There is no rational inference, only the mathematical analysis of material bodies. Everything else is pure speculation.

Now, we never speculate.   

Either God or chance; all other terms are disguises for one or the other. 

Irrational? Hardly:

"Irrationalist" is shouted at the reason that does not keep quiet about the vices of rationalism.  

For example, Gödel responded to the shouting by proving that nothing can be more irrational than a rationalism that encloses man in his own ideas and thereby consigns him to the outer darkness. That is stupid, nor is it funny, except unintentionally.

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