|
|
|
Topics from the history
of thought
|
|
These are topics that have
general significance but are secondary to the main development
|
|
Philosophy and
metaphysics
|
|
What is perhaps the
problem of the nature of philosophy is—includes—that it has come to have
specialized and limited connotations as in analytic and continental circles
via its history and relation to other disciplines. What is the status of
these limited connotations? Are they necessary?
|
|
The response is that the
Universal metaphysics shows that self and externally imposed limits on
philosophy can be and are transcended and, further, in the ultimate character
of the metaphysics goes beyond anything thought and earlier recorded.
Although there are intimations of elements of content and the ideas of the
method, the various elements and ideas have not been put together
before—either separately as content and as method or combined as
content-method—and the dynamic result is a system of immense consequences
that is new, ultimate—in depth of understanding and breadth of being
revealed; and surprising—perhaps even intoxicating
|
|
The surprise lies not only
in the ultimate character but also in the economy of the development
|
|
However, a focus on hastily
thought out reflections based on suggestion from limited contexts is
reflected in the recent history of academic philosophy in which every
generation barely refers to the work of the previous while the works and
questions of the seminal thinkers remain fundamental
|
|
In paragraphs that follow,
some possible reasons for the uncritical acceptance of suggested limits will
be given
|
|
Critical philosophy has the
following uses. First, it attempts to eliminate error. This is important.
However, elimination of error, even though we accept its fundamental
importance, can be overrated—for errors of method do not invariably imply
errors of content… and it is often important to act even in the presence of
error or in the absence of knowledge that error has been eliminated. A second
use of critical philosophy, one in which criticism is not an end in itself,
is that it may suggest or force the overcoming of error and the development
of methods of greater power than available previously. As we have seen, even
neurotic criticism may be of immense value. All too often, however, criticism
is seen as an end in itself and philosophy and thought then suffer a
self-imprisonment in which they labor under falsely held and, paradoxically,
uncritically critical ideals
|
|
In any case, the present
development, demonstrates the possibility of overcoming the critical momentum
of recent thought and simultaneously realizes that possibility in the
ultimate Universal metaphysics
|
|
Therefore consider the
following
|
|
Metaphysics
|
|
Metaphysics is the
discipline whose concern is the outer limits of being; whose
method—the method of the rational or empirical-logical analysis of
experience-meaning—shows how to study at those outer limits; and which is
revealed as a study of being of ultimate depth and variety
|
|
The goal of metaphysics may
be said to be to bring all experience—and intention and action—including the
forms of experience into a single coherent system of description of the
universe. The final concept will not include all forms because, due to consistency
the requirement, there is no Object that is the referent object of all forms.
However, the final Object will implicitly contain all forms of
experience-in-themselves, i.e. as concepts. Metaphysics may be said to be the
result of this goal
|
|
Philosophy
|
|
It is now possible to see
philosophy as the discipline whose limits are the outer limits of being;
whose method shows how to study within those limits—the method of metaphysics
and the interactively modified methods of less general contexts; and which is
revealed as a study of meaning but also of fact and significance and a study
in lateral analysis but also in analysis via depth. The firmness of the
foundation of metaphysics is carried over to the foundation philosophy where
the limit of firmness or certainty is the modified firmness or certainty of
the special context or discipline
|
|
Where philosophy has been
seen as limited on account of its boundaries in relation to other
disciplines, such boundaries may be seen as contingent or Normal. The Normal
boundaries may be seen as apportioning of subject matter, division of labor,
territorial concerns. We do not claim that the apportioning of subject has no
basis—only that it is and cannot be absolute and this has been shown. That
philosophers occasionally show naïveté regarding science shows the naïveté of
the person and not a necessary limitation; the physicist even as physicist
occasionally needs to turn to philosophical concerns that overlap the
physical
|
|
Philosophy has been held to
be ‘merely’ conceptual. However, as has been seen here the conceptual is not
‘mere’ in any sense but is fundamentally empirical at root
|
|
Certain movements in
Continental philosophy have abandoned the ‘grand narrative.’ If ‘grand
narrative’ refers to the positing of a vast speculative scheme then there is
some validity this abandonment (the validity is not entire because there may
be value in a grand speculation.) Modern thought reveals the emptiness of
certain grand narratives of the past as does history. What history may show,
however, is that certain speculative schemes are empty; and modern
thought itself has been shown here to be immensely contingent even though it
regards itself as natural—which is the case with the thought of every age.
What history cannot show, however, is that systematic and
comprehensive metaphysics is impossible. History may suggest this
impossibility and the suggestion may turn out to be valid or not. Perhaps,
then, reason may show the impossibility of systematic-comprehensive
metaphysics. Since Kant it has been thought to have been demonstrated that
this is in fact the case. The implicit error in this thinking has been shown.
It is, first, that while there is an aspect of detail in which the central
metaphysical concepts ‘all,’ ‘part’ and ‘absence’ may be incapable of being
known by a—finite—being, the abstract versions of these concepts, i.e. the
versions devoid of detail, are supremely, necessarily, and precisely
empirical and faithful; in fact it is only in the case of such concepts that
faithfulness has explicit meaning. The second part to the error in the
anti-metaphysical thinking is the supposition that no absolute
(non-relativist yet non-substance) demonstration is possible; such
demonstration has indeed been performed here with the result that the Law of
the Universe is Logic
|
|
It may be a failure of
nerve, a self-aggrandizement, a parochialism that generalizes from—e.g.
historical—sequence to concept; the thinker who so generalizes commits the
error that he criticizes. It may have been a similar failure to think from
empiricism and Kantianism that no systematic-comprehensive (Universal)
metaphysics is possible—it is perhaps the case that the implicit errors in
empiricism-Kantianism were neglected in the parochial and self-aggrandizing
rush to abandon the Universe in favor of the backyard. Perhaps we should not
be critical; perhaps we should think, simply, that certain details were not
noticed, certain lucky inspirations were not had—for it is not clear to the
writer whether the present developments have occurred because of attention to
detail and luck or due to persistence and insight
|
|
Here, we have developed an
immense view of the variety and connectedness of being which is not grand in
the sense that it emerges from a simple view of the elements of being, in
that it is not posited, not speculative
|
|
Extensions
|
|
An extension to these
thoughts on metaphysics and philosophy is implicit in Journey. This
extension may be called the reflective life which is not one of pure
reflection but one in which reflection and action interact to enhance and
illuminate one another in greater realization and meaning
|
|
Problems of metaphysics
|
|
It is clear that numerous
classical and modern problems of metaphysics have received illumination and
resolution. Such problems include identity, mind-body, substance, the
fundamental problem of metaphysics, the possibility of metaphysics… The
problems and their resolutions are catalogued at http://www.horizons-2000.org
|
|
The essential problems of
the discipline of metaphysics concern the nature of the objects—and
categories—identified above and the problem of fitting them into a coherent
(consistent) system. A review of the actual problems reveals this to be the
case and it is not necessary to re-list the problems to prove the point
|
|
What are the important
Objects? First are the important metaphysical Objects taken up earlier—being,
all being, void, identity, mind, matter, human being… Second are the Objects
of intrinsic importance to human beings, e.g. knowledge, peace, love (it sometimes
seems that love does better without analysis although some clarifications and
removal of confusions of sophistry might be useful—there is perhaps a twofold
philosophy of emotion or feeling, first, in the integration of
cognition-feeling performed here and in greater detail in other essays of
http://www.horizons-2000.org and, second, in a two-way ‘conversation’ between
cognition and the emotions in which each learns from the other; this would,
perhaps, be vastly better than any attempt to bring emotion under the rule of
thought or the alternative abandonment of reason altogether in the domain of
pure feeling.) The two classes of Object are not distinct; the analysis of
the first is exhaustive; that of the second cannot and perhaps should not be
exhaustive but attention to it eclectic (except of course as noted that the
system of concerns is not decomposable into Objects to be addressed in
isolation.) A final Object is the meta-Object such as metaphysics itself that
is also addressed
|
|
Some significant problems
addressed and resolved in the present development
|
|
The problem of final or
ultimate explanation. The problem of grand narratives—the problem is not
of the actuality but that of positing such a narrative for, if such a
‘narrative’ emerges in cold Rationality there can be no stand against it
except cold argument
|
|
The problem of a
non-relativist philosophy without substance… of final or ultimate
explanation. An encapsulation of the resolution is to recognize the sense in
which such explanation is possible and actual. First, it is explicit with
respect to depth—the foundations are trivial even though immense and profound
in implication; and, of course, seeing the foundation is not at all a trivial
endeavor. Second, the ‘final and ultimate’ explanation is implicit with
respect to breadth—All Being is its implicit Object; however, the discovery
and Experience—Capitalization implies becoming the Object rather than merely
conceiving it—is a process, a journey
|
|
The nature of the
ultimate breadth and depth of metaphysics, i.e. of the Universal
metaphysics or Metaphysics of immanence
|
|
The problem of ultimate
explanation that has no application. This problem is resolved, first, in
revealing the falsity of the practical / theoretical / immediate / ultimate
dichotomies; and then in showing, in their common meanings, both
applicability and application
|
|
The problem of mere being.
There is no mere being—except as approximation. Human being is not ‘mere;’
animal being is anything but ‘mere.’ Greatness does not require being greater
than
|
|
The fundamental problem
of metaphysics. This is the problem of why there is anything. Its
resolution; its fundamental character is rendered trivial. The fundamental
problem becomes ‘What things exist?’
|
|
The idea of method
|
|
This is discussed adequately
above
|
|
A system of human
knowledge
|
|
The scheme is and numbering
is that of the Britannica—15th edition; the letter scheme is introduced here.
The Britannica scheme is significantly enhanced as noted next
|
|
As a consequence of the
Universal metaphysics, each discipline assumes a form that has an ultimate
aspect that is limited of course by the Normal Object of concern
|
|
Such limits should not be
thought of as entirely the result of limited faculties but at least partially
in the nature of the—Normal—Object. While improvement in understanding
is possible and often good, the search for perfect understanding of Normal
Objects may stand in the way of adventure in the infinite Object, i.e. the
Universe. When we sense the presence of an Object it does not follow that it
is entirely determinate. When an Object is incapable of precise
understanding, there is no value to the search for such understanding—put
this way this is of course obvious: it is the present development that has
made this understanding—of understanding—obvious
|
|
Symbols and Knowledge
|
|
10a. Symbols and signs;
semiotics—the study of signs and sign behavior. Symbolic Systems
including language, logic, and mathematics. 10b. The Humanities and Philosophy;
Study of Science and History
|
|
The Universe
|
|
1a. Metaphysics and general
cosmology, nature and unlimited variety and extent of Being, which
includes Logic, Value or ethics and aesthetics, epistemology;
nature and varieties of Knowledge, where, note, Belief is
fundamental and the varieties of belief include Faith as (primarily)
Belief-Action, Knowledge as Belief-Justification; 1b. Physical science,
nature, behavior of energy and varieties of force and material object
including physics, physical cosmology, and chemistry; 2.
Geology; 3. Biology, life—its nature and variety and origins of
life and variety; Medicine; 4. Mind as the study of psyche in
its integration and its ‘functions;’ nature of mind; 5. Society,
nature, institutions (groups) and change… and aspects including culture
(institution of knowledge,) economics, political science and
philosophy (and Law;) and 6. History
|
|
Artifact
|
|
7. Art, nature and
varieties of (literature, music, painting, sculpture,
architecture…;) 8. Technology (elements: energy, tools and
machines… and fields: agriculture, transportation, information, earth
and space exploration…; Engineering; and 9. Faith, literal and
nature and varieties of non literal meaning and non meaning functions; religion,
its nature and varieties: religions of the world—hunter gatherer and
agriculture based societies, throughout pre-history and history. The concept
of religion as knowledge and negotiation of the entire universe by the
entire individual in all its faculties and modes of being. The relation
of this concept to possible and potential realizations of as yet unnamed and
un-thought ideational form
|