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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----- From "Objectivism: the Philosophy of Ayn Rand" by Leonard Piekoff (pages 78 and 79)
A concept (writes Ayn Rand) is like an arithmetical sequence of specifically defined units, going off in both directions, open at both ends and including all units of that particular kind. For instance, the concept "man" includes all men who live at present, who have ever lived or will ever live. An arithmetical sequence extends into infinity, without implying that infinity actually exists; such extension means only that whatever number of units does exist, it is to be included in the same sequence. The same principle applies to concepts: the concept "man" does not (and need not) specify what number of men will ultimately have existed -- it specifies only the characteristices of man, and means that any number of entities possessing these characteristics is to be identified as "men."
The tool that makes this kind of integration possible is language. A word is the only form in which mand's mind is able to retain such a sum of concretes.
If a man, deprived of words, were to perform only the steps indicated so far, he would have before his mind a complex, unwieldy phenomenon: a number of similar objects and a resolve to treat them and everything like them together. This would not be a mental entity or a retainable mental state. Every time the man would want to use his concept, he would have to start afresh, recalling or projecting some relevant similars and performing over again the process of abstraction.
A word changes the situation dramatically. A word (aside from proper names) is a symbol that denotes a concept; it is a concrete, perceptually graspable symbol. Such a symbol transforms the sum of similars and the resolve to treat them together into a single (mental) concept.
Only concretes exist. If a concept is to exist, therefore, it must exist in some way as a concrete. That is the function of language. "Language," writes Ayn Ran, "is a code of visual-auditory symbols that serves the ... function of converting auditory symbols into the mental equivalent of concretes."
It is not true that words are necessary primarily for the sake of communication. Words are essential to the process of conceptualization and thus to all thought. They are as necessary in the privacy of a man's mind as in any public forum; they are as necessary on a desert island as in society. The word constitutes the completion of the integration stage; it is the form in which the concept exists. Using the soul-body terminology, we may say that the word is the body, and the conscious perspective involved, the soul -- and that the two form a unity which cannot be sundered. A concept without a word is at best an ephemeral resolve; a word without a concept is noise. "Words transform concepts into (mental) entities," writes Miss Rand; "definitions provide them with identity.
Christianity is not for everyone, it was never intended to be. And it is not intended to make sense to the world at large
For helping to define this very troubling matter from the other end too:
"But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day. The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance."
2 Peter 3:8-9I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone-- for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. This is good, and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth. For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all men--the testimony given in its proper time. And for this purpose I was appointed a herald and an apostle--I am telling the truth, I am not lying--and a teacher of the true faith to the Gentiles.
1 Timothy 2:1-7
(It should be noted that "repentence" means simply put, "the condition of having turned" as in, to turn to the one to whom we are subject.)
Goodness & wellness,
(God being well found in the paradoxes He provides....)
Which are you?
Using language, "man" can also mean one person, one adult person, of one particular gender, etc. Therefore, the term "man" reqires context. However, the terms "human" or "mankind" or "humankind" or "human race" might be better choices in the above sentence.
Certainly not everyone is on the same page in this regard, tortoise; not even Christians are on the same page in this regard. There was a great split in Christian thought and dogma, back in the 17th century. It divided the community of Christian faith into two camps, the partisans of the old [corrupt] faith (i.e, Roman orthodoxy), and the reformed faith, inspired by great spirits and thinkers such as Martin Luther, John Calvin, Jacob Boehme, Jacob Hermansz, John Wesley, et al.
This fatal split came about due to irreconcilable differences in theology, dogma, and practice that divided Christianity into a multiplicity of sects. The reformers were largely motivated by a burning desire to purge the Church of corruption and abuse, which by the 17th century was obvious and rampant. The reformers at large tended to believe that the best corrective for the abuses of the clergy and the bishops was to be found in popular democracy, where the people would elect (or dismiss) their own clergy, and control the activities and expenditures of their church. (Few people realize the debt that America owes to the Reform Church and particularly to its Puritan expression -- for her own foundational principles.)
You may wonder, tortoise, where Im going with this. Please bear with me. The question were dealing with is the extent to which reason is preeminent or not -- in Christianity. Though I sense youd like to take that question beyond mere Christianity, and extend it to religion or faith itself, Im personally not adequate to perform that task.
Because that would be a search for a universal; and I am ill-positioned (for reasons you well appreciate) to conduct such a search. What I can do, however, is speak about my own tradition, that is, Western culture. Which cannot be done without invoking its sources, which lie in Jerusalem and Athens.
You wrote:
There are two perspectives at play here that aren't really even mutually exclusive. On the one hand, you have people who already believe in Christianity and accept it as essentially axiomatic. From this perspective there is no need to rationalize Christianity any more than you spend time rationalizing any other axiom. On the other hand, I believe many of the rationalizing theologians are concerned selling the idea to everyone else, i.e. people who are not Christians or at least do not automatically consider Christianity to be axiomatic. You can't tell a moderately rational person "this is admittedly irrational but you should believe it anyway". It just doesn't fly that well with a good segment of the population, and would be as difficult to sell as astrology if you put it that way. There are plenty of Christians who believe only because it seems rational to them, not because they've ever had a "religious" experience.
How do I interpret this passage? You say that there are Christians who regard their belief as axiomatic, and therefore have no need to rationalize it. This doesnt bother you. But where you get to be bothered is when Christians engage in selling their ideas to you. Because you apparently think these ideas are irrational: You cant tell a moderately rational person this is admittedly irrational but you should believe it anyway is how you put it.
But whats irrational about Christianity? You seem to be ambivalent about that; for you also say, There are plenty of Christians who believe only because it seems rational to them, not because theyve ever had a religious experience.
The seems may be the fatal giveaway from your point of view: We cant get from seems to rigor. Science (or universal axioms) doesnt want seems; it wants rigor.
Yet all that "seems" alludes to is what can be deduced from actual human experience, reflectively understood in terms of human existence as part of a Whole that comprehends the conceiving mind.
Is it therefore irrational to say that, if you cant get rigor, then you have to settle for seems? I don't think so. Because there is no one universal axiom that explains everything that is, was, or ever will be at least not one that man can conceive or derive, from his limited, finite, contingent position -- or that he could understand, from his partial position within the totality that embraces him.
So along this line of reasoning, if things necessarily get stuck in the seems category, on what does seems rely for its validation? To put it crudely, if seems is all weve got to go on, how do we know its honest that is to say, true?
It seems the truth of seems cannot rely on any personal, individual judgment. That sort of thing, writ large, spells only social chaos, anarchy.
Which is where religion comes into the picture. Religion deals with those aspects of human existence that are not explicable in terms of finite human experience. That is to say there is more to a man than merely his physical body. He has extension beyond space and time. And thus is subject to an order that is not itself bound by space and time.
As daunting as that may sound, the Christians say that God made a world that is ordered and, thus, intelligible. And God made man precisely to fit the challenges of living in such a world, by vesting in him reason (intelligence) and free will. Arguably, it is the correspondence, or consonance, between these two terms God-given world and God-given man -- that gives us humans the idea of Truth.
Which takes us back to the original controversy, whether or not religious faith of the Christian sort is rational or not. Id have to say in response: Not only is Christianity rational through and through; but what possible alternative can logically exist to supplant the Christian understanding of God-Man-Society-Nature the totality of human experienced existence and of the existence of every other thing in this universe?
Anyhoot, to wrap up by citing the beginning of this reply, the question whether it is rational to believe. To me, it is irrational NOT to believe.
For without belief, without confidence in God and the world He made, how can we live in this world, the most part of which is entirely outside our own direct ken or will past, present, and future? And on a second count, how can human society organize itself in a manner that is conducive to human liberty and justice -- if the organizing criteria are left to whatever subjective human judgment, aligned to effective social/political power that alone can make its wishes come true -- if there is no higher (i.e., more truthful) standard to go by than human wishing or willing?
Ill just leave the problem there, tortoise, for your introspection.
Thank you so much for speaking with me about these issues, tortoise. Truly I respect the acuity of intelligence and honesty of methods that I see alive in you.
p.s.: I meant to delve into the ideological distinctions between orthodox and reform (i.e., Protestant) Christianity here. But figured that problem could be dealt with later, assuming anyones interested. On my take, the division in the Church set up the necessary conditions without which the ensuing Enlightenment would have been impossible. And what was reformed was the tendency of the Church to find its reasons, not only in the Life of Christ as captured by the Holy Scriptures, but increasingly in the needs of social man. The great classical thinkers of 5th century Athens, whose insights were imbibed and illuminated by the great Scholastic Fathers of the Church, were consigned to obivion and the "teaching fathers" along with them. It was individuals like this that reformed church folk deigned to call "pagans," of the very same status as the famously barbarous ancient Germanic tribes -- no difference to be noted there! Well another story for another time, perhaps.
Point is: At no time has Christianity been divorced from the conscious life of reason. On the contrary, in the West, Christianity has specified what reason is, or consists of.
Please let me know your thoughts in this regard, tortoise.
We could change all the words after the dash to read: "- at least not one that man will accept."
As far as there being one "universal axiom", the link in Post #53 of this thread provides an example of such an axiom, but we will all find reasons to not accept it at all or in part. It also seems to be the exact opposite of Objectivism.
In standard english, the word "man" works well to describe the group consisting of male and female humans.
Words such as dog, cat, horse and duck serve similarly well in the english language.
Yes, I agree. That's why I included the words "also" and "context".
Please don't go to too much trouble, but I would like to know how "reason" is specified by Christianity.
1. Do we always think in language? 2. Do we ever think in language? You may have already said, but would you like to post your determinations?
If you are thinking epistemoloically then wouldn't "in language" be the predominant (if not sole) way you would think? I mean if you start out with rigid, box (or whatever shaped) limits then all thoughts would seek to define everything "in the box" it seems to me.
However, if you add in the hypostatization of a sentient ....mind (for lack of better word) being the impetus of A thought, you struggle with words to define any boundaries. I would humbly suggest that the Bible properly understood and followed might be the language that could guide those thoughts. It wouldn't matter what man language it was written in. The truths and parables would have the same meaning. This would make the second thinking condition livable by a human on earth. (as it is in heaven) :-) JMOFWIW.
I tend to like to be functional in all my capacities. As a matter of fact, I deeply believe I am transcendently responsible to be actively engaged in all the faculties of my inner self.
I posted something you might like to peruse a few hundred posts ago... let me see.... There's that puppy! ;-`
05/25/2003 1:25 PM CDT #376 of 855
I'd appreciate your thoughts.
I do not see a paradox at all, i.e. both selections fit together perfectly. Your selections show it is Gods desire that all should be saved and my selections show that He wants only those who have ears to hear and not to use wisdom of words to reach people.
My comments are directed to those rationalizing theologians who try to sell Christianity. I see this as wandering beyond the teaching of Christ much like trying to convert people at the point of a sword.
The proper way according to the Scriptures I selected is to preach Christ crucified, the gospel as we received it. The results will be like Christ described in the parable of the sower in Matthew 13 (some seed fell on stony places, some among thorns, some on fertile ground.)
In I Corinthians 3, Paul gives the example of Christians needing spiritual milk first before they can handle meat. He uses the metaphor again in Hebrews 5. The metaphor is also used in I Peter 2 always illustrating that even the newborn Christian cannot digest deep spiritual truths at first. How much less can a general target audience handle the rationalizing theologians erudition?
IOW, spiritual meat is for Christians who have been weaned from spiritual milk.. Efforts to make spiritual meat marketable are doomed to fail, IMHO.
My simplistic response is Dr. Willard is man (at least human in form). Unless some insider knowledge not being cited is present, the good Doctor's opinions are just that. Semantics, science, and just as valid as any poster on this thread's. Opinion. It is good but I feel the need for more. Call it a WORD if you will. Love.
p.s. My sidebar with tortoise and unspun does not deal with Christianity and reason but rather with theologians formulating rationalizations to "sell Christianity to the unregenerate. It is a different subject, i.e. evangelizing.
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