Faith202 PDF
Faith202 PDF
Faith202 PDF
Challenge of Philosophy
in the New Century
Warren Murray
T
he profound changes in philosophy in the last four centuries, particu-
. lady its ever narrowing field of inquiry, is in part a result of the rise of
the experimental sciences. But we should not forget that philosophy
was itself a cause of that rise, at least in the particular way it occurred. Both
Bacon and Descartes insisted that natural philosophy should henceforth be
pra,ctical, and. this practical approach correspoQ.ded to the method of the new
experimental sciences, leaving no place forthe old theoretical philosophy of
nature.
Having thus excluded itself from the field of nature, philosophy has had to
seek out other areas and other approaches to knowledge in ari .effort to justify
its existence. The impact ofthe.new sciences it spawned quickly became so
great that philosophy has had all it could do to remain in existence. It tried
the critical approach and various versions of claims to absolute knowledge;
unable to compete with them, it tried to synthesize the sciences, or put their
houses in order, or, full of envy at their prestige, to deny to the sciences any
real value. I3ut progressively, philosophy has generally become simply the
history ofphilosophy, and philosophicalreflection has given way to scholar-
ship. We have come to a point where it is either assumed that philosophy
should be dependent on the sciences or on history or philology and their
methods, or that its field should have nothing to do with any objective or sys-
tematic knowledge of things.
Indeed, contemporary philosophy, whether in its wildest postmodernist
expressions; or in the half-way houses of a Gadamer or a Rorty, attests to
its own incapacity to answer the perennial philosophical questions, or
126
f';
sometimes even to recognize them as va,lid. In. their place are proposed qpes-
.. . .. ,,. '', . !. .:' ' .
tions to which, it is maintaiJJed, there are not even.any: answers. Yet we are
told :that asking such questions, and. discussing tfu:i.h with.othe,rs; Without,
however, any hope of ever resolving them, is thtfultimate goal of philosophy .
. Qbviousiy, such an attitude, based' on the JJelief th11t truth is unobtainable, can
leadtoskepti,cism, cynicism and solipsistic system .
There. is no serious reason to expect $at the present":day $kepticism and
solipsism in philosophy .will simply aiillppear on their own as methods
of,apalysis fm:md;''it is'niore likely that before .do,
mi)ld-settbat cpgendered them will have spteadits poisonto:an aspects of
and that even the sCiences, witb. technolo--
.gies, will fall vietim to theit' own success. 'l'he war now: being waged.between
the 0f and. of the. Affair") .
could likely de!!trOy all the middle gf()Und and philosophers of'areal-
istbent (if. there still.we any in a few years) wiU find the111selves without an
audience and withoutjobs. I
f It is easy enough to understand why modern :philosophy, in its historlcat
mode, has tended to substitute erudition for thought: where has
excluded universal truth,.therecan remain but conventional truth,or opinion,
alqng with, RerhllpS, some more. or less well-est;:tblisbed facts. And.
if one is not sufe about the truth of some philosopher's one can per-
' haps trY to deCide what he :meant at least, or failing that, what he or
, . when he wrp,te it, etc. Filially, there need remain nothing triore tl:lan the text -.
. itself, which in thj.s context mean .
'Now, philosophers can eitlier continue to follow slippeey slope of sys-
tem building, or fhe,y 'can te.tut'n to the dreek tradttion and bjlilg UpDQ;it
by apply)ng:its principles to the problems of today. Wl1at Chesterton said ,
. about Chrjstianity cap alsq be said abmit tradjtional philosophy in, the present
age: it has rtpt been tried and failecJ, it simply not bee11 trieq;
'The great Englisl) writer an.d. apologist, e s.,Lewis, bad ELpet peeve about
Christians wflo felt obliged to. affix to their Christiapity some
doctrine in drdet to make it fashionable: 311d X;'Chri!'tianity and
Y. Instead. of.such efforts to tryto make Christianity mqre releyant by
ating it "'ith; smrte. enterprise, he preferr.ect what he calJed "Mere
Christianity," believing that Christianity itself sufficed. Well, I would like to
propose that the incarnate in philosophical ;s .
"Thpmism" and "Aristotelianism" is sufficient to,supply future generations
with the principles of solid. philosophical as they did in. the past,
without the addition of any other principles, and without mixing them pp
with radically inc{)mpatible schools of mpdem philosophy.
128 WARREN MURRAY
Nothing in such a proposal, however, ought to be tak;en as implying that
there is no need to .correct the details of this perennial philosophy, but adding
on new discoveries and removing opinions found to be clearly erroneous is
not at all the same thing as trying to correct the very principles and basic
teachings of this philosophy. To fail to make this distinction is to fail to see
the difference between conunon experience and what can be derived from it
with a11d particular experience, which necessarily leads us to less
certitude as it leads us to more detail. Analyzing the corrunon concepts de-
rived from common experience is the privileged sphere ofphilosophical re-
flection, whereas the expansion of experience into more and more particular
forms, and the subsequent efforts to explain this experience by the use of a
priorihypothess, is especially'the domain of the experimental sciences. And
just as common experience comes before and is prerequisite to particular ex-
perience, so too philosophy must come before and be in some way prerequi-
site to science. I say "in some way," since it is obviously not necessary to
have done philosophy in order to do the sciences, but it is necessary to have
done philosophy in order to understand what is being done in science and
what the knowledge obtained in these particular disciplines is worth. In point
ofJact, natural philosophy, with its general considerations of nature, causal-
ity, motion, time and place is wisdomin respect to the experimental sciences.
These principles are the only ones that allow for anything more than an acci-
dental and ad hoc understanding of what science is doing and what scientific
knowledge is wmth.
This role of philosophy as wisdom is so intrinsic to what philosophy is
that we could well maintain that either philosophy is the queen of the sci-
ences, or itis nothing..,.-nothing, that is, but empty rhetoric. To hold that its
only legitimate task in respect to other disciplines is to synthesize their find-
ings is to beg the question of its nature and role. In virtue of what particular
competence can philosophy claim this task as its own unless it is first of all
antecedent tothe sciences and wisdom in respect to them? Unless it already
has some more general principles and a more general method, it can do no
synthesizing. It is, in fact, because philosophy has abandoned the study of re-
allty that it can no longer have a role to play in respect to the more particular
disciplines.
Indeed, one crucial place where philosophy has abandoned its claims to
being able to know a fundamental part of reality is with respect to nature. The
modem world has more and more frrnlly rejected the idea of nature, that is,
that things have a distinctive constitution which is a principle of their activi-
ties and which determines their end or ends, and that the knowledge of this is
the most important kind of knowledge about them that there is. We have
SCIENCE,. POSTMODERNISM, AND fmtPSOPHY 129 '
' . ... . . .: . .
come' so as to deny thal.even we human. .have a na!llre an'd thus
; some end. Such a denial manifestly subverts any attempt to es-
:. tabiish a..uniform and unvarying ,moral code, an<,! destroys the science of
ethics apd politics. .
Even thdse who, .influenced by religious belief, will conttnue t<) try to
' keep .reason in the of the trulylmrpan. deprived. of nat-
.: ural philosophy, will up in systems ofthought they canm:.)t jl1s;.
: tify' and will cease to. hf).ve any impact outside of the narrow cir1e of
' . . . ' .
The ultimate pankniptcy of philosophical thought will ;leave a void
will soon becollle filJedwith ideas of another comii}g fmm ill-diges,ted
science or pseudo-science,. and this will poison theology beyond
any hope of immediate recovery. Or . worse. yet, the reaction.:a,gain&t the
abuses of. will reach a paroxysm anci society will revert to
Things are already well-advanced along both of these fronts. B1Jt; some-
one. might well object: What good f).ll. this rhetoric if in fact ancient
dcn;trines ha*e been shown to.be false? Must hot learn to live with the
truth; ,Shoald we .not be seeidrig.altemate
for more compatible with the discoveries of the
. modem sciences?
. . [' would;suggestthat such projects, llowever sincere, are ill-conceived and
desQ.ned to failure. For one; I .have s.een :no proof that the bf).Sic concepts of
Aristotelian-Thomistic such .as. and have beell
by anyone.'Their .rejeetion is not a.r6futation, we would be
" '' ' . ' .', ' . ' ;
well-advised to why they were or why other concepts were put
in their And although we may have no difficultY in seeing fu.at the re-'
jection of traditional principles always comesfrom failit1g.to even ilit-
qerstand this itself calls for an.
I would furtfierhold thatit is not sciellcethat is todictate to philosophy its
principles, but the inverse, however much our modernwa,ysof dunking. may
make a,,proposition preposterous. To return to true philosophy
does not at ali imply a negation' of eJt>perimental science or .ofits. technology .
It rather places <!iscipliries. in Uteir. and anows . them .
better to serve humankind. ,
In Wtng to .understand the. differences between pbiiosqphy efnafute
the experimental sciences. in respect to the ';lcinds of they give us
of nafure, it is good to reflect on the fact that science; in: its attempts, at expla-
natioi1, can at best shadow nature and natural phenomena. It can, it is .true;
thanks to its mode, arrive .at the discovery of many new and detailed facts
m:tture. But these facts themselves, the more they are particular and de.:.
130 WARREN MURRAY
tailed, the less they will be certain. We may, for example, be fairly well-as-
sured that when quantum physics talks about virtual particles and quantum
voids in space that these expressions do correspond in some way to observ-
ables, but we have no assurance that what they correspond to is really what
they claim to have described. What the scientist observes, as many great
physicists, such as Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg, Arthur Eddington and Al-
bert Einstein, were often Wl;)nt to insist on, are always simple things at our
level of .observation. We do not experience elementary particles, we see
traces of water droplets in a cloud chamber; we do not observe biological
evolution, we find fossils in the rocks, etc. These so-called factual entities be-
yond our ken are, in fact, largely theoretical entities.
It is also true to say that the knowledge that philosophy of nature gives us
is a very general one indeed. So much so that we, habituated as we are to the
more detailed knowledge furnished by the experimental sciences, may be in-
clined to dismissit as without much worth. What such philosophical knowl-
edge lacks in detail, however, it more than makes up for in both its funda-
mental character and in its certitude. The philosophy of nature does not
shadow reality, it talks directly about it; it does not limit itself to the measur-
able and quantitative aspects of nature, it considers nature in all its aspects,
and. most importantly, it seeks to know what natural things are.
Certainly, it does not get to such knowledge for particular things in nature.
We can hardly know what a man is, never mind a. horse or a tulip. But it does
aim at this. Furthe:rmore, it has become evident through the last few centuries
that natural philosophy cannot come to know these things all by itself; it must
take as an ally the experimental sciences, but it must do so, so as to remain
wisdom for them. Without the detailed knowledge which biology, chemistry
and physics supply about natural things, we will never complete the project
that Aristotle set as a task for natural philosophy: namely, to reach to the very
elements of things. On the other hand, if we do not admit the role that the
more general and philosophical part of the stu(jy of nature must play, our
knowledge of.nature will remai.nwithout interpretative principles, without di-
rection, and seriously fragmented.
In order to understand more clearly what I am trying to say, let us examine
some.of the consequences that have arisen from the break with the. tradition
of Greek philosophical thought:
l)As I rrtentionedearlier, one ofthe biggest differences between philoso-
phy in our age and that of the Greek tradition concerns the concept of na-
ture. Now, modern thought denies or ignores nature as an intrinsic principle
of movement and rest. For many centuries now, the word nature, although
retaining some of its original senses in. common. usage, has been more and
' '
'"'
:.. :\ '
P()STMODERNISM, AND PHILOSOPHY 131
more in. philosophieal (!lld scientific .writings to signi{ying either
' the toratity .ofsensible things, or a vague ptinciple derived fro!Jl a sort of dis- .
tillation activities of these natural things, or a force acting
throughout th.e uqiverse in a way, or as vague intention at
, to tbis Even where the wQrd is used to eXpress the essence
of it is less as a principle of motion an4 rest than as some-
" thing and ineit.,Andthis is one reason for the ab()ut
Afistotle's concept ofnature, .since npmy mqdems seem to think
thing has a. nature, then it mpst differ from any othe{creature
1 '''' - ;. . .' ::. :,> - ' '!, ' . i , '
with a different nature 'in the. same. way that a differs from 1.:1 circle,
.. or one number froll} an.()the,r: Atistot1e's nature is form and it is matter. And
.from the combinatit?n' of .tbese two there ,;;uises a qatural being which, a1-.
1
' though it may share:&lr common nature with . still.retruns partiddarities
due to its matter. Its natUre might also tend . that of aQother kind.
f. ' ' ... ,, "' , '
' even,to the poi,nt where. it may become difficult or even impossible to 9jstin-
guish clearly between the two. This flexibility in nature,.this gradual passage
'between Ol)e nature and another; need noOead to abllirringofthe dlstinc-
: tions Which wquld be. the. case' if tile modem notioh of na-
ture were accepted. .
2) Closely to ibis of is the denial of.wany .,
forms of causality; chief among which i$ the final cause, and this also
,, arilounts to the denial that there ,is any transceridence in nature. It is indeed. in
seeldng to Understand how tll.e ifiqal cause 1s a cause that we atf;lled
to see something beydna the p1lfely (!lld sensible world, Now, this
denial stems from more.thali an intellectual problem, and more ofteq than not
' finds its robts in a de.she to. abolish (!lly transcendence from the world. Those
who want no God behind, tbe world IJlustleave no plaee forHitn, wheteasto
admit finatity quite obvidusly leaves the door open His in qur
.. . .
. . . .
3) 'fhe second of causes. that ate denied;-and this will sound strange
indeed.._is a true efficiept capse. 'This is so since no efficient can oper-
ate an. end. The efficient cause has been replaced in modem physics
by forees are always necessarily violent, that is, that always
act. from'' the againSt the resist!;!llce of tbe bodies they aet'upon ..
Now this is what Aristotle. would criticize: there can be no v!oleJ.It. .. _
. motion naturhl one, and no natural one without an end; One of ..
the. fesWts. of this position is. that lllOQOii itSelf 1s denied in what is
most essential tqit: existepce of a lllObile that is not qnly able to change,
, but that is in fact changing. With inertial motion, as this ha8 been defined
'' . sirice Descartes. wecannoteven what is moying .
' ...
.: ;
',_._'1,
142 MARIE LGEOR(.JE
instrUment of governing causing in to all creatures. Before that
uriion Christ "would have been the head of the Church. only. according to his
divine niltute, but after sin [which Aqui11as tO be. the :main reason for the .
Incarnation] it is necessary that 'he be head qf the Church .alsg accordhtg to
, his human nature."l7 .
An ET nature uriited.to the divine nature in Christ wouldthen also he an.
instrument of goyerning.andcausing in regard to ail creatUres; Would there
then be 'two heads(aitd two. Churches), if "head" refers t6 the Word .in both
Ills divine and in his. assumed natpfes? .
which pert,8in 1,1nion are of the greiltestdiffi.,
culty, and I do not pretend to be able to resolve them. I note tMt
on the relatetfqu.estion of would be two pten if he
assumed two human .. gives two answers. In the.
Com:lnentary ..a,rt th Sentences he says thai:
'
"[A]lthough Jesu!l and Peter [the name given to the .Wor(i in hi11 sup-
posed secqijd incarnation] .would one supposit, tttey.
would be two on accoUnt of pluralil)i: of natures as-
but keeping .the unity of the slipposit, the diversity of natures
would not impede that. one would be pte<Ucated. oftlie other, [i.e., it
could be said thai Jesu!l is Peter]; the identity of supposit suf-
fices for the tmth of the predication: IS
Yet in his later work, the Summa Theoiogiae, AquinaS mafutrlns thaf"if a di.;
person would assume two human natures, he would be called bne man:.
having two hUinan natures oq account of the unity ,of the supposit!'I9 Our by.,.:
pbthet,ical ca&e,iunlike the one Aqqinas takes up; involves two ,
. and so Aquinas's solution, if correct, does not 11eem applicijble.20
Perhaps. there is soe way of resolving. the appar.ent . cq1ict between\
Sc;ripture's affirmations that there is one Lord .and one ht;lad of the Church,
and what would obtain if the Word became incamatea,second ti'measan ET.
The S'!Jppositicm a second ine41f11ati9n took place fot the purpose of re-
howevet,tuns up against anadditional and more telling:
difficulty. 1: lS-20 states that:
7 . . . .
I Ibid., q. 29, art. 4, ad 3.
18 super'Sententiis, (Paris: Letbiel}eux, 1956), d; 1, q. 2, a. 5, resp. ._
19 StPnl!la .fheo.logiqe, eq.JnsJitu!i StudiolJUll Medievaliu!ll-
Comlnis$io Piana, 1953), ill, q. 3, tL 7, ad2.. . . .
20 A fur1her would result from the supposition that the Word as-
spmed an ET nature ill the same manner in which he as!lun,1ed human nature is that he
l,tave two mothers. For the Catholic Chw;<,:h teaches that Mary. is "Mother of the .
Church" and "Queen over all $iflgs." (See C(:C, no .. 963 and no. 966.) Yet an ET
mother of God would. seem to have equal clahn. to these titles.
132 WARREN MURRAY
4) There is a third kind of cause that is not entirely denied, but is rather se-
riously limited, and this is the material cause; all that is kept of it is a matter
considered as an already existing component ofthings. This is what an Aris-
totelian would can "secondary matter." What is eliminated is matter as po-
. tency or ability to be things. And this is what matter most of all is.
5) Now, all that really rernai11s is the formal cause. Can we at least say that
modem thought, and science in particular, has at least left this cause intact?
Unfortunately not. Even the formal cause of natural things is not really re-
tained. As an example, let us take the case of the soul. Now, accordiiJ.g to
Aristotle, the soul is the form of the living thing. The modem mind, on the
other hand, would find this far too abstract a form. Form, for the modems, is
either the exterior shape ofsomething, or some accidental aspect of it, or a
representation of the thing, as is a portrait or a symbol, or a mathematical
equation. What science has done to explain things is to introduce extrinsic
formal causes, which are a priori representations of reality. In physics, these
are principally to be found in mathematical equations.
6) Looking now at another fundamental philosophical question, namely,
how the mind is related to things, we find two essential traits that are re-
versed in modem thought. First of all, it is now generally held that the mind
is an active principle which measures the things we know, rather than being a
passive ability measured by the things it knows. This doctrine was developed
in some continuity with the teachings of the Latin Averroists, but was
strongly influenced by the a priori method of the sciences; it its con-
secration as a principle in Kant's version of the Copernican revolution, and
then this d()ctrine gradually gave way to an even more subjective concept of
knowledge for which the mind creates in total freedom the concepts it uses.
7) Concomitant with .this concept of the knowing mind was the reversal of
the relation between the will and its object, the good. Whereas traditional phi-
losophy held that the good measures the will and that, hence, a will is only to
be called good if it is fixed in the good, the modem spirit found this too con-
straining and decided that it was rather the will that the good. Al-
though these .two positions had antecedents (they are, in fact, the ultimate tri-
umph of Protagoras's doctrine that man is the measure of all things), in
modern times the main force in establishing these ideas c:ame from Kant.
This strange doctrine about the anteriority of the will to its object reached its
ultimate consecration in the. philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre, Who accords to
man the kind of absolute freedom that even God could not have.
8) Furthermore, given that the good was no longer considered to be the
measure df the will, and given that in art it is we who are the measures of the
works that are produced; it was only inevitable that there should come about
SCIENCE, POSTMODERNISM, AND PHILOSOPHY 133
a substitution of art (technique) for prudence, both for the individual and for
political society. Now, traditional philosophy held that art must he subject to
prudence, since the latter is concerned with all the r)Jeansto the ultimate end
of man.
9) Another ofthe consequences of the above changes in mind-set is that
theoretical knowledge has become subordinate to practical knowledge,
whereas the tradition placed practical knowledge after, and considered it infe-
rior to, the theoreticaL Both Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes were
on claiming that the ancients, Aristotle especially, had produced but sterile
philosophical reflections, whereas the new natural philosophy must be practi-
cal. For Descartes, this meant that although metaphysics and physics itself
constituted the roots and the trunk of the tree of knowledge, its branches and
fruits were to be sought further out, and consisted of knowledge of a practical
nature, such as medicine, mechanics and ethics. Bacon, for his part, pro-
claimed that "knowledge is power." And indeed this is what it has become.
The very idea today of a science of nature which is not productive seems
strange to us. Yet this was the ideal of the Greek tradition.
1 0) Another major transformation of thought concerns logic. Whereas
logic for an Aristotelian is the art or science of directing the mind in coming
to truth, and whereas it was thought that for that purpose it had to be
cemed with concepts, the modern mind (started with Galileo, Descartes and
Leibniz, and reaching a certain perverse perfection in Frege and Russell) has
succeeded in conflating logic and mathematics. This has come about for
many reasons, chief among which are confusions about the nature and pur-
pose of logic, on the one hand, and the nature of mathematics; on the .other. If
mathematics is seen to be purely instrumental, yet, in a sense, tautological,
and logic is thought to be the same, what would distinguish them? If words
and symbols are the .same, what could distinguish an art of using words from
one that manipulates symbols? Besides, the use of symbols in science has
long proved to be not only important, but indispensable. Therefore, all of
logic should follow the same path.
In addition, the tendency to nominalism, which started already in the late
Middle Ages, amounts to a denial of the universal, of essential definitions,
and of categorical reasoning, as well as of dialectic. Such a conception of
thought, although false on every score, is tied in some ways to the scientific
method, since the latter is not really trying to get to the essences of things. A
clear sign of this, for example, is to be found in the modern schools of bio-
logical taxonomy, all of which tend to be nomiJ1alistic.
11) Finally, having denied and reversed all the principles of ancient philoso-
phy, what should be more natural than that the end itself of this
. . \
o'
,. 134. WARREN MURJtAY
wisdom-sho1;1ld Qe deriied. is no transQendence in .
EverYthing fs this-w()rldly. Being is no longer sought for its own sake, nor are
its causes. so, after havmg eliminated natural, philosophy, mathematics, logic
modem thought tak.es on metaphysics.
. we .must then, that it is not only a few differences of opinion that
ancient phuosophy frop1 the\moderri: but an entire Rer-
haps, in fact, the wont "philoSophy" comes C,Jos,e to l:leing purely eqrlivocaL
Witho:Ut. the that a solic:l and can fur-.
riislljmany. philosophers and.s(;ientists wiWfeel.free,tg hnpose on real,ity, our-
. selves inclpded, tney clesire and whatever .tec!bnology .allows.
OUt for. 'and. 3:ction a .90ITect. QOI}C,eption of nattrre,
. philosophers will to. hol(i 'that tuind is not by
truth and can thus think,vvhatever itwants; 'and ilialthe wiR is not,measured.
by some .objectiye.good;but shoUld freedmp.and
specifyitsowp'ob]ect, andthencall this . ', :
. If pliilosophers forget that philosophy 'is frrst and' wisdom and
not gatne-pla:ying, and that wht is to wisdom is to direct, theJ.l they
tlieir righiful place the disciplines and leave a
vacuum tht will be filledotherwise. .
. lrl point offact; the:"malaise' peryades the tnodem and that has .
. spawned such monsters as posttp.oderriism, has atleast the jpstification ofits
. origin in the.absence of principles, that riright have allowed the to
find tJ1e4' proper, instead of falling into the hubris of scieritism. Post-
modernism is simply a to a bad blind reaction,
but , a partly understandable .one. If we as would like. to see
something'more serious 011 the philosophical menu; it is up to us to
put it there. ' .
. To do $0, philosophers. will j:laV:e to. return. to the indeperldeJ!Ce and com,.
moo sense .of the Gteek.tradition,. to master .well" its. wisdOm, and to use this ....
thought to the modernist and p6sttp.oderhist with objective .
lmmvledge, and the "scieritistic" con'tentiot1that ..of science there .is no
truth. .this will meru:i a return. a sttidy 6fAristotelian .lbgic,
. ural philosophy, ethics and metaphysics, for only .in sci will philosophy
. be aple to aiiswerthe va,.rious forms <;>f and die j:lespa.iJ:of find- ;
. ing 8JlY ;trui:Q thJtt. have hold of the. the
'),