Friday, March 30, 2012

Weekly Roundup: 23- 30 March 2012



It was incredible how many new references to secularism as a religion were in the news this week. Its really something that is beginning to grow. If not grow, it is just getting louder and more obnoxious. Here are this weeks posts backed by the order of popular demand:






Please vote in the poll on the right side and always feel free to leave a comment or suggestion in the "Ask a Question" tab. Have a great weekend!



New Book: Gilson - Thomist Realism and Critique of Knowledge



For those of the more academic bent, please consider reading Étienne Gilson' book "Thomist Realism and the Critique of Knowledge" (Réalisme thomiste et critique de la connaissance, Vrin, 1939.). As my friend said, it's "drop everything" good!




 Here's a related video:



I will try to make shorter more distilled posts on the topic as I read...

Is Abortion Overemphasized?



On the issue, almost everyone falls somewhere on this spectrum:

  • "It's not wrong if its not able to reason and can't feel pain." 
  • It's not wrong if it can't feel pain."
  • "Less high quality lives is preferable to more low quality lives" (Sanger)
  • "Its not as important as making sure you have enough resources for the rest of your family"
  • "It's not as important as the economy...more people will die that way. Of heart disease from McDonalds that is.
  • "Wouldn't you do the same if you were pregnant and so young?"
  • "We know, we know it's a bit messed up. But settle down."
  • "Yeah, its wrong."
  • "Its a big issue."

Biltrix has been on a roll lately...consider this lady who changed her mind after working in a clinic:


Unfortunately many people don't know the reality of what takes place or, quite frankly, the just don't care. Here's a way to show that you do care.



Go to AbortionBlackout.com

Consider the following testimony:

Fr Joseph Tham, LC, MD, PhD
Suppose you delivered a baby with osteogenesis imperfecta, a rare condition with defect in collagen formation that makes the bones brittle and easy to fracture.  In this case, the condition commonly known as brittle bone disease was so severe that at birth alone the infant suffered 50 fractures. The prognosis was very poor, and the baby would probably grow up blind, deaf and unable to communicate and with severely diminished mental functions. What would you recommend the parents to do?
This was what happened in England in 1961, the doctors believed that the newborn child Nicky Chapman’s quality of life would be so poor that her life would not be worth living. They suggested that she be put into a home and sent away to die.
Did they give the correct advice? Some people today would even suggest that it would be much more compassionate to end the life of neonates born like this so that they would not suffer, or that their parents would not be burdened, or that the society cannot afford the expenses of caring for these children.
Infanticide is not a new idea.  Ancient Greeks and Romans were documented to practice it.  Plato recommended in the Republic to kill babies born with imperfections or certain diseases so as not to burden the state. The Judeo-Christian tradition, however, viewed every human person as valuable and prohibited its practice.
In recent years, when therapeutic abortion became widely accepted in many developed countries, the illegitimacy of infanticide is now put into question again.
Among the most famous proponents of infanticide is the Australian born bioethicist Peter Singer, Chair of Ethics at Princeton. He defines a “person” as someone identified by active “rational attributes” and “sentience.” Abortion is allowed since “fetuses have not preferences before they can feel pain.”
Similarly, the newborn cannot be a person: “Now it must be admitted that these arguments apply to the newborn baby as much as to the fetus. A week-old baby is not a rational and self-conscious being; and there are many nonhuman animals whose rationality, self-consciousness, awareness, capacity to feel, and so on, exceed that of a human baby a week, a month, or even a year old.” (Practical Ethics, 1993). Thus, he reaches the shocking conclusion that infanticide should sometimes be allowed.
While Singer has contemplated this in the case of severely disabled infants whose life would cause suffering both to themselves and to their parents, and in the past suggested twenty-eight days after birth as the cut-off, he now finds this limit as “impracticably precise” and when push comes to shove, concedes that, “A three-year-old is a gray case.”
The Dutch protocol on infanticide
While this may seem shocking at first, infanticide is already practiced in some parts of the world. In the Netherlands, for instance, voluntary euthanasia was legalized in 2001.
In 2005, two Dutch physicians justified their behaviors in the New England Journal of Medicine “The Groningen Protocol for Euthanasia in Newborns.” Under this proposal, if doctors at the hospital think that a child suffers unbearably from a terminal condition, they have the authority to end the child’s life.   These authors believed that life-ending measures can be acceptable in cases when the child’s medical team and independent doctors agree the pain cannot be eased and there is no prospect for improvement, and when the parents consent to it.
The Groningen protocol sought to create the legal framework to actively end the lives of newborns suffering from incurable diseases or extreme deformities. Conditions cited in the paper are very premature births and severe cases of spina bifida and epidermosis bullosa (a rare blister-forming skin disease). These are not only newborns with no chance of survival who are left to die, but euthanasia was extended to “infants who may survive after a period of intensive treatment, but expectations regarding their future condition are very grim” and “babies with an extremely poor prognosis who do not depend on technology for physiologic stability and whose suffering is severe, sustained, and cannot be alleviated.”
It is alarming that four such killings have already taken place at the Groningen hospital, where lethal doses of sedatives were pumped into terminally ill babies. Although these cases were reported to government authorities, no legal charges have been pressed against the hospital or the doctors.
For those who are familiar with academic bioethics, this is not surprising. In fact, many prominent bioethicists, echo Singer’s utilitarian approach to ethics and his reclassification of person/non-person, which would justify infanticide.
Presently, the idea of extending the abortion rationale to infanticide is however gaining popularity.  A year ago, columnist and writer Virginia Ironside, speaking on a BBC religious affairs programme,  affirmed, “If a baby’s going to be born severely disabled or totally unwanted, surely an abortion is the act of a loving mother.’ She added: ‘If I were the mother of a suffering child—I mean a deeply suffering child—I would be the first to want to put a pillow over its face…” (See video clip of interview).
Ethical concerns with infanticide
Many people are uncomfortable with actively killing infants, even though they are gravely sick or disabled. Yet according to the utilitarian ethics of Singer and Ironside, voluntary euthanasia should be allowed when the autonomous person consents to end his live which he considers intolerable.  Not surprisingly, Singer also permits non-voluntary euthanasia of “non-persons”, namely, those who never have capacities to reason and to choose (i.e., infants) or those who have lost them due to senility, disease or incapacitation.
The interests of “non-persons” are superseded by the preferences of “persons” whose greater interests are served by their death. Thus, according to their logic, non-voluntary euthanasia is at times permitted for “unwanted” newborns, the mentally ill, mentally retarded, senile patients, the comatose, and all other disabled human beings who could not decide for themselves.
Another problem with approving measures such as that proposed in Holland is that it might lead to further erosion of care for the neonates.  Since euthanasia became legal in Holland, there has been a decline of palliative medicine, where the sick and dying are kept comfortable at the last stages of their lives. If the Groningen protocol became a standard of medical practice, a similar impact might occur in neonatology, where premature babies might not be revived, even though medical advancements are continuously increasing their chances of survival. Allowing this practice to continue can set a very dangerous precedent where infanticide may become legalized. On this ethical slippery slope, if infants could be killed for their supposedly low quality of life, one could eventually justify killing for less severe conditions. As Dutch bioethicist Henk Jochemsen wrote, “Hard cases make bad laws. As soon as a law is passed, it will expand the number of those who are considered extreme cases.”
Along with infanticide, this protocol would also pave the way for eugenic practices. As prenatal diagnosis becomes routine, when some genetic disease or congenital deformity is discovered, more often than not abortion is the option. This Dutch protocol can become an extension of the eugenic practice of killing deformed newborns not previously detected in utero.
The Groningen protocol is problematic because it is based on somebody else’s assessment of a child’s quality of life.  Since the newborn infant cannot evaluate or define his or her suffering as unbearable, it is usually the physician who makes this assessment and the parents and relatives who give the consent to infanticide.  The problem, we may ask, “Is this not more an issue of the suffering of the adults rather than the newborn in question?”
In his encyclical letter Evangelium Vitae, the late Pope John Paul II reminded us that very often “the so-called quality of life is interpreted primarily or exclusively as economic efficiency, inordinate consumerism, physical beauty and pleasure.” In contrast, it is important to stress that every person has inherent dignity that “should be recognized and respected in any condition of health, infirmity or disability.”
Getting back to the case of Nicky Chapman who was born with osteogenesis imperfecta, if the Groningen protocol were in place back in 1961, she would probably be left to die or actively euthanized.  Luckily, her parents did not take the doctors’ advice and brought the baby home. Despite the 600 fractures in her life and a short stature of 2 feet 9 inches, she grew up, obtained education and work. In fact, Nicky Chapman managed to become the first person with a congenital disability to be appointed to the British House of Lords.
Nicky—or rather—Lady Chapman of Reeds actively works against legislation in the United Kingdom that could pave the way to euthanasia. As she adeptly maneuvers her electric wheelchair in the House of Lords, it is chilling to recall her doctors’ long-distant diagnosis that she had “no noticeable mental functions.”  “That is a little bit different from what I have managed to achieve and where I am today,” she commented.
Author: Fr Joseph Tham, LC, MD, PhD. Assistant Professor of Bioethics, Regina Apostolorum University, Rome; Visiting Professor, Holy Spirit College Seminary, Hong Kong; Fellow, UNESCO Chair in Bioethics and Human Rights
Tip: Biltrix

Just remember that in all cases of abortion, the root of the problem is a general mis-perception of the good of human life, and life in general - as a basic good. According to Aquinas, "the good" is the fullness of being which is due a thing (includes things like water, sex, justice, shelter etc). All things, from rocks to plants to humans, have appetites for (or inherent tendencies toward) their fulfillment and seek these things and never seek evil (things which lead them away from their own fulfillment. However, for Aristotle and Aquinas, a being need not have cognition in order to seek the good: the arrow knows not where it is going, but it is directed towards its target. This is teleology. We can tell something is good by whether it is desirable to us. In short: goodness is understood in terms of desirability; desirability is understood in terms of completion; completion is understood in terms the actualization of potency. Actualization of potency is just 'the bringing about of what is possible for a given being or object." Since it is impossible (in the Thomistic view) to choose what is bad for it directly (who wants that crap?), everything we do is an attempt at goodness, its just that sometimes by choosing one good out of order with the other goods, we violate one good.

Why did I go into that long rant? Long story, short, because LIFE IS A GOOD IN ITSELF. Maybe I am raising more questions than I am answering, but the above concept is the foundation for why the Church believes that not only is abortion wrong but so is contraception because it deliberately avoids a basic good (life). Its like recognizing clean teeth is something to be sought and then brushing your teeth only after you put a mouth guard in. Ok so that's a weird example (I do that occasionally) but you get the idea.

For other posts on Abortion, consider:

Thursday, March 29, 2012

O'Reilly Interview Card. Dolan---Uses a Key Phrase



It is clear that the movement, the religion of secularism has been growing in the United States in recent years even months we might say, where as it has been alive and growing for a long time in Europe. However in America, this has been exemplified in nutties and rallies. Now, I think for the first time we hear a significant Catholic bishop in America call it what it is---what Comte, the atheist founder of the Religion of Humanity called it in 1850---the "Religion of Secularism". 
I'm glad that Dolan called it out as the religion that it is....being almost always more dogmatic in its approach than the most hardlining American religious people today. It is important for people to recognize what secularist/humanists mean when they say there is no dogma, there is nothing for sure...because what that translates to in reality is "there is no dogma [except the dogma of science]". Let me clarify--science is not and cannot be a dogma as put forth by Comte and Dawkins. It is a method, a mechanically useful method, of acquiring true beliefs about the world.



Gonzaga Honors Archbishop Tutu



From the Cardinal Newman Society:

Alumni Petition Opposes Gonzaga University Honors to Archbishop Desmond Tutu

As The Cardinal Newman Society reported last month, Gonzaga University has announced that pro-abortion rights, pro-same-sex marriage, and pro-contraception Archbishop Desmond Tutu is scheduled to deliver the 2012 commencement address and receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree.
This, of course, would seem to violate the 2004 U.S. Bishops’ directive against such honors.A group of alumni are now sponsoring a petition requesting that Gonzaga University President Dr. Thayne McCulloh withdraw the invitation.
The petition says that “Gonzaga has chosen prestige over principles and popularity over morality” with their selection of commencement speaker and urges the president of the university to cancel the invitation “before further damage is done to Gonzaga’s reputation as a Catholic University.”
You can sign the petition by clicking here.
Dear Dr. McCulloh:
As alumni, faculty, staff, students and other friends of Gonzaga University, we are deeply troubled that Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu will give the 2012 commencement address and be honored with an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. If this occurs on May 13 as has been announced, it will mark a sad day in Gonzaga’s history.
Archbishop Tutu’s pro-abortion position was reported by the Cardinal Newman Society on February 13 at this link.
Defrocked/Former Archbishop Tutu
In addition to his position in favor of abortion, Archbishop Tutu has called contraception an “obligation for Christians.” He promotes same-sex “marriage” and the ordination of homosexual clergy, and he has made statements that are offensive to the Jewish people.
The U.S. bishops’ 2004 mandate titled “Catholics in Political Life” clearly states: “The Catholic community and Catholic institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral principles. They should not be given awards, honors or platforms which would suggest support for their actions.” Granting Archbishop Tutu an honorary degree and allowing him to speak at commencement would be in direct defiance of the bishops’ mandate.
The honor signals Gonzaga’s support for Archbishop Tutu’s positions that are antithetical to the Catholic Church’s teachings on issues such as the family, traditional marriage, and expansion of abortion “rights.” This brings scandal to the faithful at a time when the Church is under attack from state and national leaders for her defense of conscience protections and the traditional definition of marriage.
Although Archbishop Tutu performed wonderful work in South Africa, his positions on pre-born life, sexuality, and his disrespect for the Jewish people, should disqualify him from receiving any honors at any institution worthy of calling itself Catholic.
There are gifted and accomplished leaders from many fields who would be far more appropriate choices to receive such an honor from Gonzaga University.
Before further damage is done to Gonzaga’s reputation as a Catholic University, we prayerfully ask you to withdraw Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s invitation, and uphold the sacred mission of your Catholic university. We pray that you find the courage and wisdom to do what is right so the souls of the students in your care won’t be led astray.
Sincerely,
Petition sponsors Patrick J Kirby, JD Gonzaga Law Class of 1993 and Maureen Harrington Kirby, Gonzaga Masters of Organizational Leadership 1996
Petition signers (faculty, staff, students, alumni and other friends of Gonzaga.)

Humanists Stage a Nutty in Florida



Tank of atheists' 'unholy water' (© Bay News 9, http://aka.ms/water)
In an attempt to point out how silly and superstitious it is to bless things, the group "Humanists of Florida" made it clear that they will not tolerate the use of holy water (water of intolerance) on public grounds. So they decided to "unbless" a piece of ground that was blessed a year ago. From MSN:
A group of Floridian "free thinkers" converged on a strip of U.S. Route 98 Saturday with mops and a giant vat of "unholy water" to cleanse the thoroughfare of the blessing it received from a Christian group a year ago. The atheist group, "Humanists of Florida" says it scrubbed the road "of the oils of intolerance," claiming that the original roadside annointment [Nice spelling] by Christian group Polk Under Prayer was an insult to non-Christians and that the highway should be "about welcoming everybody." Source.  
Its kind of like laughing at someone wearing a funny hat while you are wearing the same one. Just curious, is using unholy water a public act of religion? Maybe someone can file a lawsuit for public exposure to religion.

Just for fun some priests should bless a firetruck and drive up and down the 'highway which is open to everybody' and watch them go to work for weeks. Its harder to unbless than to bless. Maybe use holy salt during the winter? Idk.

Hehehe try to clean this one up

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Atheist Disruption of Holy Week In Spain



I have received the following message from a reader and fellow Serran. If you want to help in the "Battle", now is the time to act. The definition of "incitement to hatred" is in danger of being redefined to include anyone who speaks recognizing the dignity of a homosexual person but not their actions/attempt to "marry" and to exclude those advocating the sacking of churches and the return of Red Terror (quite literally).
[Name]:
Para hacer más presión y conseguir parar la "procesión" atea convocada para el próximo Jueves Santo, mañana queremos entregar todas las firmas a la delegada del Gobierno en Madrid, Dña. Cristina Cifuentes.
¿Puedes conseguir que tres personas más firmen esta alerta contra la "procesión" atea? Para enviar mensajes a la Delegada del Gobierno:


Entre todos hemos enviado a la Delegación del Gobierno 26.000 correos electrónicos como el que tú mandaste. Pero tenemos que conseguir al menos 40.000 para que nuestra petición sea atendida. Si la Delegación del Gobierno percibe que somos pocos, no nos hará caso.
Me repugna la idea de que un grupo de intransigentes que sueñan con genocidios religiosos vuelvan a manchar las calles de todos con sus gritos contra los creyentes, con insultos a sacerdotes, obispos y cardenales, con consignas blasfemas como las que profirieron el pasado año contra la Virgen, con alusiones a la madre de Monseñor Rouco y con invitaciones a quemar iglesias y a asaltar la sede de la Conferencia Episcopal.
¡¡Eso no puede volver a suceder!!
¿Puedes reenviar este mismo correo electrónico a tres personas que tú conozcas y que sepas interesadas en defender la libertad religiosa?
¡Muchas gracias!
Miguel y todo el equipo de MasLibres.org
For those of you who don't speak Spanish, basically last year in Madrid and other Spanish cities there were groups of militant secularists who organized a atheist Easter procession. From the website in opposition to the "Atheist Easter": 
This year they want to demonstrate again this Holy Thursday. We support freedom of expression, but not the advocacy of religious genocide. Manifestations such as those shown in this video and as the organizers announced that they now account for the crime of genocide (art. 607.2 Penal Code), an offense of incitement to religious hatred (Art. 510 PC), an offense against religious beliefs (Art. 525.1 PC).
Send this message now to the Government Delegate in Madrid:
    Señora Cifuentes: please, prevent new "atheist procession" which has been called to this Holy Thursday. Its organizers are the same as demonstrated on May 13 last year, insulting and offending the beliefs and religious symbols, suggesting the burning of churches and threatening religious genocide of the 30s.
    As mentioned, there is a petition to have the government alerted to the difficulty and to stop the protesters from promoting the burning of Churches and genocide, unlike this other "incitement" towards hatred which had absolutely no similarities.

    The man in his message above explains that they have already sent the government 26,000 petitions but they need 40,000 before the government will even consider their request.

    I suggest you sign it if you agree with it. http://www.hazteoir.org/firma/44754-no-procesiones-ateas-que-persiguen-genocidio-religioso

    Use the sharing buttons. 

    After Birth Abortion (II): Cardinal Pell Comments



    You may remember back in February the abstract composed by some Australians in favor of after birth abortion. The printed journal has strangely removed the abstract from their website. What does it have to hide? Cardinal Pell, Archbishop of Sydney, Australia has made a brief and informal comment on the abortion situation:  
    + Cardinal George Pell, Archbishop of Sydney
    11 Mar 2012
    There were 44 million abortions worldwide in 2008 according to last month’s issue of the Lancet.
    It is a huge number; big enough to worry the editor, who declared that reducing abortion “is now an urgent priority for all countries”.
    But not everyone agrees.  Also last month in another medical journal, two Australian academics opened abortion’s last frontier with a discussion of the “ethics” of “after-birth abortion”.
    The argument is simple enough.  There are persons and “potential persons”, who are in fact “non-persons” and can be killed.
    A person can value its life and have goals for the future.  If it realises what it is losing when you kill it, then killing it would be wrong.  On this definition, “many non-human animals and mentally retarded human[s]” are persons.
    A potential person cannot attribute a value to its life or form aims for the future.  If you kill it, it does not know what it is losing.   So killing it is “ethical”, is O.K.  The authors claim the unborn and newborn infants are only potential persons and can be killed.  The infant’s level of mental development “determines whether or not she is a ‘person’”.
    So it is only infanticide and wrong if you are killing a young person.  If you are killing a non-person after birth, it is after-birth abortion and O.K..
    I’m not making this up.  Unfortunately it gets worse.
    With some disabled babies, the authors claim “death seems to be in the best interest of the child”.  But “the best interest of the one who dies” is not enough.
    The best interests of “actual persons” who have to look after the child, or society which pays for its care and education, always prevail over “the alleged interests of potential persons to become actual ones, because this latter interest amounts to zero”.  All this legal-speak means that even a healthy child, even healthy babies could be killed, if they are a big nuisance!
    “Merely being human” is not enough to have the right to life, or any rights at all.  And if you don’t know what you’re missing, you can’t be harmed, even by killing.
    You are only a person if you value life, have aims, or are valued by someone else.  There are plenty for whom none of these apply.  These non-persons too would be eligible for after-birth abortion; liable to be murdered.
    It is madness, of course. But this is where the logic of abortion leads us. Source. 
    Why is 'the ability to know what you are losing' the determining factor in whether you have the right to live or die? Well, again, it goes back to the enlightenment's mechanistic approach to the world. Objects are valuable insofar as the function as a mechanism. Since we all already know that each human being is really reducible to complex interactions between cells and ultimately atoms which produces, somehow, the complex mysterious structure of consciousness, and since only conscious beings "care" about their rights, then an unconscious being maybe treated like the machine that it is, even if it will be entirely viable in the future. The reason that the Aristotelian/Thomistic and, dare I say common sense, view would counter this, is simply because it recognizes final causality, the idea that objects have imminent finality or something towards which they are oriented. the achievement of that thing toward which they are oriented is what is "good" and the further away an object gets from its perfection/ or final cause is bad. It is always good for living things to...well, live.

    Help stop abortion. You can make a difference in many ways. Here is one

    Tuesday, March 27, 2012

    Dawkins Calls for Mockery of Catholics at Reason Rally



    I want to make my readers aware of how the Reason Rally went, which I reported on a few weeks ago. Dawkins stated: "Don't fall for the convention that we're all 'too polite' to talk about religion. Religion makes specific claims about the universe which need to be substantiated, and need to be challenged and if necessary, need to be ridiculed with contempt,' he told the cheering crowd on the National Mall. I would assume he means they should be ridiculed with contempt if they aren't substantiated. I want you to substantiate your metaphysical view Mr. Dawkins. O wait...no one can substantiate first principles because they aren't a substance...I forgot. But we still all hold them including the ones he is about to call "so true that they are beautiful."

    He went on, "For example, if they say they're Catholic: Do you really believe, that when a priest blesses a wafer, it turns into the body of Christ? Are you seriously telling me you believe that? Are you seriously saying that wine turns into blood?" [Surprise is always a good way to get ahead in an argument, not that the belief isn't at all "supernatural"....it is.]

    Well, if you happen to be in that group of people that does believe the above, Dawkins suggested atheists should show contempt for believers instead of ignoring the issue or feigning respect. 'Mock them,' he told the crowd. 'Ridicule them! In public!' [Sounds like Reasonable (with a capital R) academic (or even scientific) discourse to me.]


    He recommended to the group that the best way to deal with religion is to get rid of the nominal adherents, because really underneath, very few actually believe in God. "When you meet somebody who claims to be religious, ask them what they really believe...If you meet somebody who says he's Catholic, for example, say: 'What do you mean? Do you just mean you were baptized Catholic, because I'm not impressed by that.''

    'I don't despise religious people; I despise what they stand for." Wow he is using the same distinction Catholics use --hate the sin not the sinner. Do you think he and the rest of the secularists will stop calling the Catholics "Gay-haters" now? Doubt it. 

    Later on in his commentary he mused about the same wonders that have inspired religion for ages with his own "reasonablized" version which was so much more original than any of the old writings: 
    "How is it conceivable that the laws of physics should conspire together without guidance, without direction, without any intelligence to bring us into the world?...It seems almost too good to be true, that this mechanical, automatic, unplanned, unconscious process' should produce human intelligence." 'That's not just true, it's beautiful,' he declared to cheers from the crowd of agnostics and atheists. 'It's beautiful because it's true,' said Dawkins. 'And it's almost too good to be true.' 

    He is just talking in circles there at the end. "Mechanical, automatic, unconscious process"? Seriously? Does anyone else see an oxymoron here with any of the following?: Mechanical Process, Automatic process, unplanned process, undirected yet conspiring laws of physics. Its like I put the words in his mouth...please view this post on randomness. You cannot have a "random process". Random means random and process means process or order...the opposite of random. He wants to say that the successes of randomness are what brought human intelligence about. But successes of randomness? This means nothing other than the tendency of objects to behave in a particular way. 

    Yes, Dawkins, your viewpoint is in fact too 'good' to be true. Wouldn't it be wonderful if science could be the complete and sole arbiter of truth? That would mean that we possess it. How exciting. Truth is indeed beautiful and so is the illusion of something being true, especially when you stir up certainty with Rallies and speeches which completely ignore the well known problems with a pure materialist approach to nature. I highly recommend Robert Koons' book, The Waning of Materialism, a perspective that is on its way out of serious academic consideration because it is ridden with difficulties. 

    Here is the most popular report done by Reason.TV: 
    Of course they put the most reasonable Christians, the fundamentalist protestants, on to represent the other side, who say things like "I believe evolution is a lie, its a big deception to dumb you down to get you into a new world order eventually...that's what Hitler believed in...Hitler believed in evolution." (min. 1:10). Yes. Wonderful I believe in evolution as well. There is a difference between undirected randomness and oriented objects or objects with a goal. 



    Monday, March 26, 2012

    Explanation of the Blog's New "Logo"



    From the left: Nietzsche, Marx, Russell, Kant, Descartes
    From the right: G.K. Chesterton, Aquinas, Cicero, C.S. Lewis, Plato
    I thought I would take the opportunity to explain what my bold modification of Rafael's School of Athens is meant to convey on this blog. There is nothing profound about it really. I did it because I wanted to "update" the painting to our time, instead of Rafael's time--shall we say..."modernise" it? Instead of Plato disputing with Aristotle, now Aristotle is in the same group as Plato. This is because the division has now become a debate between the classical view of the world, which generally holds that wholes are something above and beyond their parts and modern philosophy, which generally holds that wholes are reducible to their parts.

    Besides many other differences, this is the underlying contention that I have concerned the blog with philosophically, because it does in fact inevitably lead to God being about as likely as Russell's teapot (Bertrand Russell famously stated that God is as likely as an invisible Chinese teapot floating around out in outer space somewhere). 
    • The modern philosophical view has implications which are sociological (Nietzsche), logical (Russell) and epistemological (Kant and Descartes). In a view of the world that everything is reducible merely to its parts we are compelled to a mechanical approach to the world where we must study as many parts as we can, crudely put, to disabuse ourselves of the illusion of our "natural perception" of the world which often causes us to see something in reality which is not there (in the parts)--like form and purpose. The real cause of everything is merely the material and efficient cause (matter and motion). So, metaphorically, what is two? It is in the strictest sense, one plus one, two itself, or 1.5 plus 0.5--but 0.3 + 0.7 + 0.4 + 0.6 is even better/more descriptive. But ontologically, they are all exactly the same and any difference we perceive is merely in our minds. Want to know about why animals migrate? Break the animals down into parts and discover the mechanism behind it. What causes the animals to migrate is mechanical factors X, Y and Z--the nerves sense cold causing discomfort. Any perception that there is something above and beyond X,Y and Z which causes the animal to migrate is an idea that we impose on the animal from our minds based on past experiences and is not really inherent in the animals migration. Migration is merely a mechanism of certain habits which allowed those animal possessing the habit to continue living more than others by "failing less often"--evolution. There no question reducing wholes to their parts is more useful when it comes to developing technology, but that does not mean that it is truer or closer to the good of all. 
    • The classical philosophical view generally holds that objects/wholes are not ontologically identical with their parts. Again, in a metaphor, what is two? Two in the strictest sense, is two. One plus one can be used to describe two but two is in itself something other than 1.5 plus 0.5. How does this metaphor translate? When someone asks why do animals migrate, any of the above men would acknowledge than X, Y and Z are the means by which migration happens but that there is something more than just the material and efficient cause/mere coincidence, there is also a formal and final cause. The objects behave that way because that "tendency" is perfective of is their natures, however it developed. There is an actual inherent purpose in the moving of the animals that supercedes the idea that the migration took place by mere elimination of the non-migrators. This view of the world has been largely misunderstood after the rise of modern philosophy in what it was originally saying. Aristotle would not deny the mechanism (X,Y and Z) which brought about the animals migration (the quantifiable and useful results of scientific inquiry) he merely wished to maintain that common sense tells us that all objects are no so redicible to their mechanical parts. 
    How many words does it take to describe a word in the dictionary perfectly, such that you must include every instance of its both past and possible usage? It is quantifiable, but do the quantities of usage tell us anything at all about how the word actually applies to the world around us? Though words and the above numbers seem very much dependent upon the state of our minds, we cannot deny that these numbers and words have actual application to reality. Why? Stay tuned, or if you can't take a look at: 
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