Posted on 05/23/2003 3:59:51 PM PDT by unspun
| The Absurdity of 'Thinking in Language' | |||||
| This paper has been read to the University of Southern California philosophy group and the Boston 1972 meeting of the American Philosophical Association, as well as to the Houston meeting of the Southwestern Philosophical Society. Appeared in The Southwestern Journal of Philosophy, IV(1973), pp. 125-132. Numbers in "<>" refer to this journal. | |||||
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Perhaps the Alamo-Girl equivalent of fishing with dad would be making Christmas candy with mom. Of course, I don't know if that would "resonate" with anyone else.
Hugs!
Kudsman, thank you for bringing this observation of A-G's to the fore again. Certainly, "hate, fear, evil, willfulness" are not things to be treasured, or continued in the sight of God. Hope nobody's accusing me of endorsing such repulsive and life-denying things.
I merely observe that such things are very much alive and active in our world, and generally they do not operate to the advantage of mankind.
"Heretics and blasphemers" are legion these days, so mainstreamed that the public at large finds them innocuous. I hate to name names; but to give you the gist, any such list would probably include such eminent personages as Bill (and Hill) Clinton, Dan Rather, Maureen Dowd, Peter Jennings, Howell Raines, Peter Singer, Richard Dawkins, Stephen Pinker, etc., etc. The list seems endless. Plus then, there are their "hapless followers" to be numbered among them....
I dunno, Kudsman. There are days when I think the "culture war" is over -- and it has been lost. Now, we are in a war to defend the truth of reality. Reality (and it follows, what we commonly mean by that term) seems to have entirely lost its basis -- because the culture that historically has supported and defended the very idea of "the truth of reality" -- ineluctibly founded by and in God -- seems utterly to have disintegrated.
But I'm not quite ready to say "Welcome to the Brave New World" yet. I pray a lot instead.
Certainly, you should never, ever be accused of endorsing any of those things. I regret the excerpt left you with that impression. It was basically an attempt to illustrate that such contrasts in creation (good v. evil, courage v. fear, love v. evil, obedience v. rebellion) are necessary for the godly to emerge, and the ungodly to be culled.
I also am deeply concerned about the "culture wars" and pray earnestly!
At the present time (probably because of my math/physics bent) I have difficulty in responding in the proper sphere when the inquiry turns to the "truth of reality." If you have suggestions to uncouple the issues, I'd greatly appreciate them.
I probably will not have any further summary or comment on Dr. Willards article; anything I say at this point would be redundant.
Thank you so much, man of Yosemite, for your faithful and deeply moving witness.
WRT the above italics: I suppose it's easy for people to believe that, if a miracle occurs, that must mean that God has suspended the Laws of nature -- of which He is Author. Yet in performing the miracle, God would appear to be invalidating His own Law. What gives with this willful self-contradiction? Can we talk about miracles?
It might be helpful in viewing this subject to provide some cultural background first. Id like to start out with the anti-religious myth that seems to have gained enormous social traction in our time:
Religion is the fruit of ignorance. Ignorant people, because they do not know how the world really works or the true causes of things, have always had recourse to explanations based on mythical beings and occult forces. They attribute the unpredictability of nature to the whims of gods and spirits .
But religion is not just simply ignorance. It is a form of pseudo-knowledge. True knowledge which is to say scientific knowledge is based on reason and experience, on testable hypotheses and repeatable experiments. Religious beliefs, on the other hand, are based on the authority of ancestors or holy men or sacred writings in other words, on someones say-so .
Science is the rational approach to reality because it deals with things that can actually be observed. Its statements can be put to the test. Religion, by contrast, characteristically deals with entities God, the soul, angels, devils, Heaven, and Hell that are admitted to be invisible. Its statements, because untestable, must be taken on faith. Faith is nothing but the wholly arbitrary acceptance of statements for which there is no evidence and is therefore the very antithesis of reason: it is believing without reason.
[Gee sounds like Ayn Rand so far to continue:]
As science has progressed, religious explanations have given way to scientific ones. No evidence of God or of the soul has ever been forthcoming. Rather, these fictitious entities have less and less room to hide. They were meant in the first place to fill the gaps in our knowledge of the physical world, and consequently they are being steadily and inevitably squeezed out as those gaps are systematically closed. Science is the realm of the known, while religion thrives on the unknown, on the unexplainable, and on mysteries in short, on the irrational.
[The foregoing description excerpted from Stephen M. Barrs Modern Physics and Ancient Faith, 2003.]
Barr notes a couple of things that are wrong with this line of thinking:
(1) In the first place, biblical religions did not originate in pre-scientific attempts to explain natural phenomena through myth.
(2) The Bible shows almost no interest in natural phenomena biblical revelation, both Jewish and Christian, has as a central part of its message that the universe is a creation of God and reflects his infinite wisdom and power. However, the scriptural authors evince no concern with detailed questions of how or why things happen the way they do in the natural world.
(3) The Bibles primary concern is with Gods relationship with human beings, and with human beings relationships to each other.
(4) The religion of the Bible is not a nature religion. One of the great contributions of the Bible, which helped clear the ground for the later emergence of science, was to desacralize and depersonalize the natural world. This is not to deny that the Bible is overwhelmingly supernatural in its outlook, but that supernaturalism is concentrated in a being who is outside of nature .
(5) What is true of the Bible is also true of traditional Jewish and Christian teaching since biblical times: it has been very little concerned with attempts to give religious explanations of natural phenomena.
So much for the backgrounder. Getting back to miracles a very common opinion these days is that a miracle must be understood primarily as a violation of the laws of nature, committed by God. But this is not the Christian view. The reason that there are mysteries [e.g., miracles] is that God is infinite and our intellects are finite. Thus the divine nature is not proportionate to our minds . I think it was something like this that St. Anselm had in mind when he said, Thou art not only that than which a greater cannot be conceived, Thou art greater than what can be conceived.
That is to say, compared to the mind and will of God, the human mind and will are quite limited. Such that, when presented with the enormity of a miracle something so vastly outside human experience and expectations of the natural world the human mind will tend to explain what he sees in the morel limited, human terms. To the extent that the natural world has become preeminent in human conceptions of reality, it is only natural for man to see in a biblical miracle, a violation of the laws of physical nature. And it is assumed that physical nature is all there is. Therefore, either God is a liar (i.e., to so gratuitously violate His own rules by, say, turning water into wine, or vastly multiplying the loaves and fishes to feed the hungry multitude, or raising Lazarus from the dead); or God is a fiction, and therefore any miracle attributed to Him is sheer nonsense.
Yet here we show our own modern (post-modern?) proclivity to see the world in only natural, physical terms. This is not what the Bible deals with. In Gods miracle, it is pointless to say that God is violating his own physical laws for God is not subject to what He made in the first place. That would be like saying that Picasso is physically bound by his painting Guernica -- that the creature defines and contains its creator. But this is illogical. The real point is: God as creator of the world -- is not in the world, is not of the world, and therefore clearly is not subject to its (divinely created) laws.
The whole point of a miracle is not what it does to the world. Its what it does to the souls of its participants. Every single biblical miracle is an instance of God reaching out to man, of making His presence known to man, of relating to and supplying the needs of human souls. THAT is what makes a miracle truly miraculous, if you ask me that God seeks us so, that God loves man so much.
Here on earth, it seems to me that natural law is always in effect. Otherwise the world as we know it could not be as it is. After a miracle is over, everything about the physical world is pretty much the way it was before. If there has been any change at all, it is in the hearts, minds, souls of the men for whom the miracle was intended. God doesnt so much as suspend or violate natural law in granting a miracle; perhaps He merely sets up a way to induce some quality or aspect of the timeless, of Eternity, into the world process for a brief time, that spiritual propagation of the hearts and souls of men might take place.
Well, thems me thoughts, FWIW. Im not speaking as an authority here, by any means. And thats for sure. Good night, man of Yosemite. Thank you so much for writing.
In other words:
We are all doing our thing (rational beings) until the boss walks into the room (the miraculous appears) and then we all sit up and pay attention as the boss chews us out (God can hold the sun in it's place) and warns us to straighten out or else (cause the sundial to reverse it's shadow). And then it all starts over again (Natural Law is in effect unless God chooses to suspend it..
Geez, Consort -- I wouldn't put it quite that way. For one thing, my boss ain't the least bit "miraculous" (mundane is more like it), and he sure can't hold the sun in its place -- though he might wish to order me about at will.
For all of these reasons, I conclude: That's why the boss ain't God.
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