7. Dudley, Understanding Germany Idealism (25 Mar 2021)

German idealism, commencing with Kant’s initiative to defeat Humean skepticism and determinism and culminating in Hegel’s efforts to ground philosophy in an unassailable base, simultaneously pursued rationality and freedom in ways overlooked by European Enlightenment and English empiricism.
Hume asserted metaphysics must be grounded in scientific demonstration (i.e., fact) not Spinozan geometry (relationship). Induction is circular and so lacks rational justification; causal inference must rest on custom (past experience). Empiricism shows the individual incapable of rational self-determination and also epistemological, moral, and political autonomy – freedom.

For Kant, matters of fact can be known by reason alone. His response to Hume is tantamount to Copernicus’ astronomical revolution: instead of knowledge conforming to the world as it is (noumena), the world conforms to the structure of the mind. Metaphysics is saved by reexamining the subject’s capacity for representation and experience, provided we are agnostic about that which transcends our experience. Such agnosticism is justifiable only in respect of free will: we cannot know, which creates license to act as if we are free. Hence freedom is the keystone to pure reason. Pure concepts of understanding do not derive from impressions, but their application in experience is legitimated (the transcendental argument), leading to synthetic a priori knowledge. A central claim of critical philosophy is arguments about the soul, freedom, and God cannot yield knowledge because they transcend experience and play no role in making it possible. Further, ideas of reason (‘pure’ ideas) which derive from the mind’s operation do not lead to knowledge but transcend illusion. Because we can’t know if there is immortality, freedom, or God, Kant considers the possibility that remains defeats skepticism. Rational willing for Kant is borne of the nature of reason, it cannot be contingent. Morality depends exclusively on what we do in full knowledge and motive. Doing one’s moral duty for its own sake establishes dignity and rationality of man, and therefore establishes freedom. The use of practical reason, especially in moral resolutions, both demands and generates ‘rational faith’, belief in God and a human soul, to which theoretical reason must agnostic. To appreciate aesthetics, we must abstract from cognition and sensory satisfaction. Only through disinterested appreciation of the object and its appeal to desires can we appreciate the form of qualities for their own sake. Nature is purposive only if we regard it as intelligently designed: God has arrayed matters seen of science is such a way that they orient toward the emergence of rational creatures. Seeing the world as governed by providence bridges the gap between nature and freedom: nature’s purpose is to create conditions for humanity exercising freedom for moral ends.

Transcendentalism distinguishes between the possibility of experience and of being (subjective idealism), seeking to define conditions of the former, the conditions of synthetic a priori. Transcendental idealism presumes experience can be explained only by supposing the external world. This was disputed: Jacobi asserted Kant’s philosophy is an idealism that makes all knowledge dependent on faith in the senses and is thus dependent on finitude of humanity. Reinhold, the bridge to Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel, each of whom argues over unconditional, self-determining starting points, sought to defend transcendental idealism; but concluded Kant’s foundation lacked an explanation of how cognition works (i.e., understanding the senses). He recognized Kant’s cognitive capacities – sensibility, understanding, reason – as well being modes of receiving or processing mental representations; but concludes Kant has not established a ‘science of representation’. Whereas rationalism commences from defined terms and axiomatic principles, but a lacks defensible starting point.

Fichte: the core problem is the basis of synthetic a priori, not explaining things-in-themselves, which we can’t know. Philosophy cannot take Reinhold’s representation as a foundation, but must deduce the necessity of representation from more basic self-consciousness. The former is contingent, the latter necessary. Philosophy is concerned solely with necessary operations of mind, making it a closed system, unlike all other senses: constitutive elements of consciousness are generated by the mind itself. This has the effect of rejecting transcendental deduction of categories, since the world of objects is constituted by the conditions which make experience possible. Fichte’s influence foundered on the difficulty of his argument. NB: it was Fichte, not Hegel, who invented the thesis-antithesis-synthesis dialectic, not Hegel.

The primary appeal of practical (political) philosophy is concern with freedom of the individual in a sociopolitical setting, as determined by individual use of reason. But Fichte substitutes Kant’s individual (uncaused cause) with a communitarian ideal: if rational agents are well-ordered among one another, then they are free. For Kant, by contrast, freedom is a metaphysical postulate which underpins moral obligations: politics serves morality, as does education and religion. For Fichte, freedom is not given but an end in itself, available only to certain communities (i.e., with certain characteristics): thus, economic resources and opportunities become involved in what we now call social justice. Fichte’s revision of the categorical imperative means there can be no truly human persons without just communities fostering the individual’s capacity for rationality. Sociopolitical relations are a prior condition to moral agency, a view embraced by Hegal and Marx.

Schelling changed his mind thrice, albeit honestly. Hegelians often him a waystation, while critics take his final rejection of metaphysics as a precursor to Kirkegaard, Marx, Heidegger, and postmodernism. He first sought epistemological grounds, then abandoned the search in favor of the ontological – from Kant to the Spinozan tradition. Kant has insisted we could not treat ideas of reason as if they can inform us of the world, asking the epistemological question ‘How is it possible to know anything to be true that is not an analytic, conceptual relation?’ Schelling replied asking an ontological question ‘How is it possible for there to be differentiated subjects and objects, without which there would be no need for a cognitive synthesis?’ Philosophy is to explain how anything emerges from an undifferentiated subject, and to reconcile this all-encompassing subject with the freedom of individual subjects, he thought, breaking with Kant and Fichte and anticipating Heidegger. That is, the objective is not understanding cognition but essence / being. Kant would have replied the ontological question is outside the scope of transcendental idealism, because it is beyond rational inquiry. In his middle period Schelling contrasted idealism which commences with the subject and ‘philosophy of nature’ which starts with objective or natural world to determine why self-conscious subjects should emerge. His paradigm of the object is math, such as the concept of triangles: science determines not merely how we think but how they must be. He tried to reconcile a philosophy of identity, but could not and so abandoned the a priori system. It was a pursuit akin to speculative physics, in which the first problem is to explain the absolute cause of motion.

More Schelling: latterly, he asserted the product (content) of true art is the absolute identity. It is the pinnacle of human activity, the unconscious element of acting and producing, generating identity via consciousness. His idea of freedom comes from Spinoza: that which is free acts according to laws of inner being, unimpeded by anything else. He tries to reconcile this freedom with the emergence of everything from the absolute being. (Whereas (to repeat) Kant’s assertion that the cognizing subject cannot conform to the object of cognition, if there is to be metaphysical knowledge, was transcendental idealism’s Copernican revolution, its point of departure. The object must be understandable by the subject.) The French Revolution theorists argued freedom is impossible if the populist must conform to ruling authorities, and so sought to establish an entirely rational polity with no such authorities.

Hegel, following Schelling, denies that Kant (and Fichte) established an identity of subject-and-object; Hegel calls true identity ‘reason’ – actuality must be rational. The Phenomenology claims rational cognition is possible only if the determinations of thinking and being can be established; this is to reject Kant’s view that philosophy is incapable of rational cognition; he joins Schelling in restoring metaphysics as queen of the discipline, rejecting Kant’s view that thinking cannot determine the truth of being. Therefore his project is ontological, an account of what it is to be.

For Hegel, ‘consciousness’ means self-understanding: knowledge requires the thinking subject to truly appreciate the realm of objectivity it confronts and distinguish itself from it. Dualism is suspended, one achieves knowing by result of the subject undermining one’s assumptions via synthesis achieving reason (‘science’). While Fichte and Schelling accepted selfhood (consciousness) as a fact, Hegel in Phenomenology describes how consciousness seems; how it can only be determined by dialectical reason.

To appreciate ancient skepticism is to suspend the Cartesian subject-object dualism. Presuppositionless knowledge (i.e., phenomenology), or presuppositionless philosophy is a systematic philosophy beginning with indeterminate being of thought and unfolding as logic, or what must be thought of being, and ontology, what must be of being. Thought can only be self-determining if it allows immanent dialectic to emerge; otherwise it is beholden to the subject. However, the natural world exists independent of thought and also thinking subjects; but Hegel is an idealist in that nature has a structure which thinking can comprehend. The rational is actual and vice versa, but all is implicit, not empirical.

There is a limit to systematic philosophy’s explanation of the natural world – we know there are contingencies, such as the form matter will take. Thus Hegel is not totalizing. The systematic philosophy provides an account of being and comprehends rational aspects of empirical phenomena but stops at contingency and chance. Hegel rejects Kant’s view that freedom transcends nature; freedom depends on thinking being the achievement of reconciliation with the natural world from which it differs. Hegel sees, as does Fichte, the moral will is self-certain and hence capable of evil by mistaken conclusion – there is no objective standard. It is not objective freedom. The will cannot reconcile with the natural world: ethics and purpose (of the subject) do not guarantee freedom. Only spirit (geist), art, religion, and philosophy can reconcile. Peoples with different understandings of freedom develop different sociopolitical arrangements and customs. Philosophy is first of equals because of spirit, the interpretation of which is philosophy’s job.

For Kant, freedom is transcending natural causes and acting purely from rationality and moral law it imposes. Since all of his conclusions depend on an account of cognition, his successors pursued refinement of criticality – unassailable foundations. Fichte pursued self-consciousness and relations to the object. Schelling replaced dualism with a single indeterminacy. Hegel thought the defeat of skepticism turned on systematic examination of necessary structure of thought, the dialectic. He was the last idealist to attempt Kant’s project based on a priori grounds. The Romantics succeeded this idealism, asserting philosophy’s limitations were fulfilled by art. Romantics deemed such rationality could justify moral and ethical commitments, prompting Hegel’s violently disagreement.

26. Leroy, Why We Think What We Think (20 Dec 2024)

Surveys the course of philosophy from the Pre-Socratics to the present era, contending the modern concentration on epistemology has severed reason and faith, undercutting the discipline’s value for humanity. Science confronts questions it cannot answer while automatically rejecting answers which theology might supply. The wrong turn began with William of Ockham as well as Duns Scotus, each of whom undermined Thomistic reconciliation, and accelerated with the Enlightenment. Most moderns sought to make ‘more sense than God’, and to define freedom as escaping natural limits of God and nature. The author is less concerned with science’s claims to autonomy that skepticism’s role in abandoning man to uncaring, everchanging universe. In sketching this decline, the author does not address the Straussian view that human things too must be at the center of consideration. What is the arbiter of natural law and natural rights?

The Socratic method first turned philosophy from metaphysics to ethics and epistemology. Plato’s universals are a limit on freedom: humans can’t define certain topics, so the Good measures mankind. Aristotle’s final cause (purpose) is another reminder of man’s limited freedom. Skepticism foreshadowed relativism.

Augustine asserted God does not author evil but allows it via free will. A city is a community of rational people united by agreement of interests and passions for the most important things. Boethius, the first scholastic, distinguished reason from faith. Al-Ghazali’s attack on Avicenna closed Islam to science. Aquinas held reason could be trusted but not everything could be reasoned, the converse of the position that all knowledge is suspended until proven. Distinguishing between essence and existence, as Aristotle had done (and al Farabi resurfaced) with the concepts of actuality and potentiality, leads back to the first mover: what started the chain of events is pure existence. There are three common arguments for God’s existence: cosmological (first mover), teleological (the order of the universe suggests purpose), and ontological (the conception of the highest being). Aquinas rejected the latter as relying on essence to prove existence, since once can’t start from a definition.

Ockham: acts have no intrinsic moral qualities, but are dependent on intent (voluntarism). Will takes precedence over reason. Thus an act isn’t good because one is trying to do God’s will but good because God wills it; but one can’t know God’s will, so religion becomes faith alone. This conceptualism does the work of nominalism: universals are just names, there are no shared essences. Further, knowing purpose in an Aristotelian sense is impossible. Ockham’s denials gave rise to radical empiricism, wherein all is continent, nothing necessary, and there is no explaining God but only physical processes. Ockham’s conclusions were perverse. The church could not simultaneously eradicate error while being denied the ability to define the truth. Christianity was cut off from the ability to defend faith using reason; the Protestants were comfortable with this personalized justification.

After Bacon, science was no longer to understand nature for the sake of knowledge but for control, utility, and power. Hobbesian determinism asserted every event has a cause, and all valid explanations are mechanistic, given in terms of shape, size, motion, etc., but purpose is an unacceptable explanation. Descartes (again) turned the focus of philosophy to epistemology (i.e., how can we know?). Pascal’s views also confronted faith; his ‘wager’ is an orthodox Christian view of rationalism. Hume distinguished between impressions (empirical) and ideas (mental copies of impressions, the result of evaluating sense data), and concluded that to eliminate doubt about knowledge, only impressions could be admitted, resulting in radical doubt of ideas. Further, since it was impossible to define causation, as all that is valid is sensory, so it’s best to make educated guesses in favor of custom. Smith: morality develops from human sentiments: the ultimate standard of right and wrong is the standard of the impartial spectator (not the divine will).

Rousseau’s legislator replaces the messiah, as politics is the center of humanity, and he can solve problems by creating new kinds of men. Whereas Burke thought ancient legislators commenced from human nature. Kant: humans create reality by applying mental templates to objects we encounter, but we wouldn’t know the states of our minds were we not aware of permanent substances outside the mind. The existence of the world around us proves minds are working: rationalism (a priori template of the mind) and empiricism (the template translates sense data) results in transcendental idealism. Knowing the world beyond senses is transcendence, understanding the mind’s processes is idealism. Nietzsche’s understanding that weakened belief in Christianity led to disbelief is the culmination of Ockham-cum-Luther view that God can only be known by faith. From Ockham and Duns Scotus to Descartes to Hume and Kant, the emphasis was what we couldn’t know – doubt is the basis of epistemology – for the purpose of ‘freeing’ the individual.

Unlike the moderns, but equally in pursuit of individual liberation, the postmoderns rejected both reason and science. Husserl’s phenomenology focused not on the object in itself but on its perception. Preconceptions are to be ‘bracketed’ because our thoughts are intentional. The result reopens the Cartesian mind-body problem, so Husserl solves the solipsism by empathizing with others, which reveals the shared life-world. Heidegger disagrees, focusing on existence not knowledge, ontology not epistemology. Sartre: man has no essence prior to existence: the project of a lifetime is to determine one’s own essence. Derrida, following Saussure, uses binary opposition of terms (e.g., white-black) to turn every statement into its opposite, thus creating instability, not revealing it. Almost all of the things that matter most cannot be expressed by language, contrary to the view that language subsumes power. (Popper: we can’t prove ultimate truths but can show untruths. The open society embraces criticism in the spirit of intellectual excellence, but unlimited tolerance to the intolerant extinguishes criticism.)

Karol Wojtyla (John Paul II) followed Aquinas in combining reason and the senses. ‘Action constitutes the specific moment when the person is revealed’; ‘the body, and it alone, is capable of making visible what is invisible; the spiritual and the divine’. Alasdair McIntyre asserted a new dark age has arrived, for the moral life is already opposed by Westerners. Nietzsche’s call for ubermensch fails if Aristotle was right to emphasize ethics as natural and foundational. There are people as they are in nature, people as they could be, and the link is virtue.

24. Adamson, Classical Philosophy (7 Dec 2024)

Explicates the continuum of pre-Socratic, Socratic and Platonic, and Aristotelian philosophy, from the first systematic inquiries into nature and man’s nature until the end of Hellenistic period, generally presenting matters on their own terms rather than in context of future history of philosophy.

Pre-Socratic: The theme of constant, dynamic opposition against underlying unity preoccupied the departure from mythology and religion. Pythagoras preceded Plato’s forms (and also Descartes’ cogito) with a dualist theory of soul and also the representational power of numbers. Parmenides debuted the precedence of reason (rationalism) over empirical evident, and the role of being (ontology) in argument and consequence. But the problem of non-being was unresolved. Democritus considered that science banished the common-sense experience of the world (whereas moderns consider science more an extension or an enhancement). Anaxagoras embodied the pre-Socratics’ system-building efforts, whereas post-Aristotelians (Skeptics, Stoics, Cynics, Epicureans) were essentially ethicists, seeking to live an untroubled life. Empedocles married religious trappings to a rational cosmology. Medicine and philosophy were closely related in the Greek world, as in the Hippocratic oath.

The Sophists, embodied by Protagoras, were not dispassionately seeking truth, contra Gottlieb, but foreshadowed relativism in their pursuit of ‘making the weaker argument the stronger’ or in ‘man is the measure of all things’. Sophism assimilates virtue to what is advantageous, pace Thrasymachus, since morality is no more than social convention. Gorgias doubted the reality of being itself, the better to operate at the level of seeming than to pursue knowledge.
Socrates invented the view of philosophy as a pursuit of how men should live, versus the pursuit of metaphysics. Epistemology and ethics, though distinctly separate in modern philosophy, cannot be so if virtue is knowledge. In Meno, the Platonic Socrates asks not for a list of virtues but what they have in common. New theories are to be subjected to the test of consistency with itself (i.e., if nothing is true, is that itself true?)

Plato, considering the soul immortal, thereby explains how it knows of immortal forms (i.e., the so-called theory of recollection). Forms are standards of judgment, guideposts in human knowledge. ‘Good’ is the super-form; thereafter come being, change, rest, sameness, difference. Being is pervaded by difference, thereby disposing of the problem of being arising from not being; for what is not is false, not nothing. To be explanatory, the cause must give rise of the outcome; the true cause should not be consistent with other effects (i.e., largeness does not produce smallness). Knowledge is always true whereas belief can be true or false, and ignorance is always false. More elaborately: imagination < belief < thought < understanding < knowledge. Dialectic is the process of hypothesizing and then discovering the principles which support the hypothesis. The dialectician divides the inquiry’s evidence along ‘natural joints’ of categorization. Language is built on a presumption of stability, of shared meaning (convention), even if usage changes just as substance changes. It is a likelihood not a permanence. Phaedo and Republic utilize unchanging forms and changing things that participate in them. Timaeus introduces the demiurge, the mover. Aristotle saw dialectic more simply as argument from agreed premises. Logic is categorical: statements relate subject to predicate, in order to proceed to the syllogism. A demonstrative syllogism shows not only that something is (or is not) the case but why. The premises of demonstrative syllogisms must identify essential features of the things in consideration. ‘Accidental’ features (a giraffe with a broken toe) are not significant, contra modern science. For Aristotle, epistemology is fairly the same as the philosophy of science (systematic exploration), save that episteme encompasses all disciplines. Also in contrast to modern empiricism (e.g., Hume): though sense experience stops the regress of endless demonstration, rational or even plausible deduction is permissible even though they may be overturned. Items in the world are primary, not derivative of forms: without beautiful things there's no such thing as beauty. Changes involves the nature or property, called form, and the underlying substance, matter. The four causes are the material (substance), the formal (definition or determination), the efficient (the dynamic) and the final (purpose). Substance has potential to actually become something else. As to ethics, one seeks not only the ideal life but the good life that earns the admiration of others. Virtue is achieved by those raised well – by habituation. The virtuous action lies between the extremes, the rational discernment or perception of right action in the circumstance; but there is the problem of ‘moral luck’, ethics as a product of happenstance, as a luxury. Only the virtuous can have friends, who share interests and right action. Sensation isn’t the same as imagination, which is closer to preliminary thinking; yet it is short of belief. Adamson’s treatment of Aristotle’s political philosophy is shallow.

12. Scruton, Short History of Modern Philosophy (19 May 2024)

Explicates European philosophy from Descartes to Wittgenstein: modern pursuits commenced with the identification of the subject, were borne along by detachment of the object, and concluded when the subject became knowable in light of the object. As in phenomenology, the author treats the big questions as regarding certainty and doubt.

To be part of the history of philosophy, an idea must have been significant in the train of philosophic thought, whereas history of ideas is concerned only with an idea’s influence on human affairs, for what distinguishes philosophic thought is its primary concern with possibility, necessity, and truth (validity), not actuality.

Dispute over universals was an important distinction between empiricism and rationalism, the measurable / demonstrable versus the deductible. This in turn pointed up the importance of language. Abstraction, the concern of practical methodology prior to modernity, turned on either Platonic objects or intellectual criticism of methodology.

Bacon rejected Aristotelian deduction in favor of induction, and postulated universal laws based on observed instances, marrying empirical and rational. This ended scholasticism and paved the way for Descartes. (The ontological argument that God is proven because no greater entity can be held from Aristotle through St Anselm though the medieval schoolmen naturally favored Platonic ideas versus skepticism.) The Frenchman held human knowledge is a tree, the trunk being physics and the roots metaphysics. Philosophy ought to commence with a method of doubt in order to arrive at undoubted propositions. These must be at least as much real in cause as effect (cosmology versus ontology). This radical break with scholasticism renewed both rationalism and empiricism. Not the Renaissance but the birth of modern philosophy in the early 17th century is the origin of the modern West. Science and philosophy went hand in hand. Descartes sought for fundamental laws so general as to explain all, yet a prior (i.e., not demonstrable by experiment), deductively departing from metaphysics.

Spinoza: the more active a man in respect of behavior, the more his consciousness understands cause. The more man grasps the cause of causes, the more free he is. Leibniz’s rationalism turns on the principle of contradiction (that which opposes false is true) and the principle of sufficient reason (for every truth there is a threshold of evidence that’s enough). Rationalism assumes man possesses ideas which outstrip experience (e.g., God, cause, self). The existence of innate ideas is not necessary for language, as Locke showed: possession of a concept does not equal the power to acquire it. Locke (tabula rasa) and Leibniz (monads) were arguing over the possibility of a priori ideas. Shaftesbury thought love of beauty is animated by perception of happiness, which is much the same as the tendency to admire virtue (in others). Bishop Joseph Butler asserted, borrowing from Cicero, the distinction between power and authority: conscience is a steady force that is both maker of law (common to men) and provider of notice to obedience. There is no such thing as a love of injustice or oppression. Hume’s naturalism (i.e., close connection with human nature) led to preferring custom over reason whenever choice is not obvious. Skepticism is more empirical use of reason than deductive, reason being the subordinate of passions; if reason were superordinate, we would be driven to radical skepticism whenever reason had no competence. Thus reason should cede to custom, the exemplar of human nature. The Philosophes were rooted in Cartesian skepticism, born of metaphysics, but added nothing to philosophy: theirs was more polemics, to ridicule rather than generate new understandings.

Kant asserted the legitimacy of rational deduction (including its limits). Skepticism doesn’t hold because deduction allows for understanding the object, and the principles of science allow for a priori knowledge. Science is a posteriori, based in experience, but rests on axioms and principles which cannot be demonstrated, what he called synthetic a priori or necessary truth. Neither empiricism nor rationalism provides a coherent theory of knowledge, which is achieved through the synthesis of concept and experience, and which synthesis can never be observed as a process but must be presupposed as a result. ‘Transcendental’ means to overcome through rationalization what argument must presuppose. Experience conforms to ‘categories’ of understanding which are a priori (e.g., table < artifact < object < substance). Kant like Descartes begins from self-consciousness but rejects the priority of the first person (subjectivity), which precludes empiricist epistemology. Metaphysics is superior to epistemology, because the former enables the senses to deliver. The tendency of reason to outstrip intelligibility is the dialectic of reason, a concept which influenced Hegel. Kant revived the ancient distinction between theoretical and practical reason, setting the stage for German idealism. Theoretical (pure) reason guides belief, practical reason guides action. The former aims at truth, the latter at rightness. The former can lead to understanding or standing on reason; however practical reason, being a judgment of imperatives (i.e., objective conditions), does not automatically generate morality. This points to the categorical imperative, the universal, unconditional treatment of humans as ends in themselves. The idea conclusively undermines Hume’s skepticism, since reason is no longer inert, subject to desire: the moral law is not only universal but necessary, for there’s no way of practical thinking can ignore these features. This is a priori – but Kant left open a gap in metaphysics and ethics by omitting proof of objective necessity – practical reason cannot demonstrate how things are (e.g., that God exists or the soul is immortal) but only how things ought to be. No moral law is intelligible without freedom; to act in concert with the law out of coercion does not prove the law, but the actor must choose to comply from the premise of reason, conscious of his autonomy. No one has argued more for the objectivity of morality, but Kant’s aesthetics, which form a picture of relation of the mind to experience, accommodates subjectivity. Morality cannot be observed by experience but must be treated as so because of the ‘pressure of reason’. Fichte thought understanding knowledge is a free, self-producing object which knows itself by determining itself, realizing freedom in an objective world. This view of venturing outward, alienating the self (that is, thesis-antithesis), to emerge with synthetic self-consciousness and understanding of order, runs through Hegel, Marx, Heidegger, and others. Hegel sought to replace Aristotelian logic by starting not from the structure of argument but the nature of being: logic is not preserving truth (formality) but telling what truth is (substance). (Modern logic advanced so as to set both aside, by adopting conditionality.) While Kant saw the dialectic as propensity to fall into contradictions, for Hegel it was the likelihood of surmounting them. Concepts are true or false. The historical process is dialectic, but is logic a science of relations among ideas, or an intellectual operation whose relations are to be discovered? (The character of any ontological proof is demonstrated in procession from concept to reality.) Hegel’s genius for abstraction inevitably leads away from subject of thought to thought itself, resulting in metaphysical blurring of the distinction between thought and reality – the principal characteristic of idealism. Hegel tries to show knowledge of the self as the subject presupposes not only knowledge of objects but also knowledge of the public (social) world which possesses moral order and civic trust - that is, the basis of the categorical imperative. This re-abolishes Kant’s separation of practical and theoretical wisdom, since the subject is not constrained to acknowledge the other (the object). The real subject, as in the phenomenological view, is Geist not the solipsistic self. Hegel’s metaphysics is largely independent of epistemology, avoiding Descartes’ first person. The dialectic of reason works through ontology: nothing exists which is not pure being, derived from rational synthesis of concept. The ‘cunning of reason’ is the world discovering that the seemingly contingent is in fact necessary – the real is rational, the rational real. Consequences in history, politics, art criticism and so on have been disastrous. Hegel was truly a philosopher of modernity, though like Bertrand Russell, who saw only exterior of thought, missed the import of the profound spiritual crisis which he sought to describe, the crisis of a society newly understanding God was its own creation. Schopenhauer: one’s self-awareness consists of knowing one’s own will, but only as a phenomenon, that is, in a given space and time. Though disappointed w Hegel’s popularity, he made Kant’s system more understandable: it jibed with Romanticism and Christian Germany, and prefigured Wagner and Nietzsche, who chose will over resignation, thereby foreclosing romanticism in Germany philosophy. Kierkegaard criticized Hegel for transferring religious faith from Christian god to philosophy of history. This was a necessary outcome but false because logic, the science of inference, cannot provide its own premises and also the Hegelian universal subject is in fact the absence of subject. Kierkegaard moved back toward the Cartesian subject. Nietzsche, despite a very different style, was highly Aristotelian, seeing good in ordering passions the right way, into self-mastery; these were not located in religion. Trying to forestall nihilism, not to promote it, his radical critique of identifying the ‘will to believe’ in orthodoxy has been beloved of the West’s leftist critics. Hobbes’ assertion that man’s obligations to political society stem from himself is the most important idea promoted by the philosophes. Rousseau’s general will comes about from men coming into civil society: it is not the will of all, though notoriously it can force men to be free. One of Hegel’s most important innovations in political thought is the state as an entity (as compared with civil society). He denied the social contract: individual autonomy can only be defined in reference to society. His civic obligations stem from piety to the polis, and the individual finds freedom in self-discovery commencing with the family (itself another innovation – recognizing a private institution as a political but also not contractual). Marx thought the nature of man isn’t fixed but laws are intended, like property, to be permanent, thus discouraging fluidity (toward the ends of equality) in social relations and ensuring the subject’s alienation from the self. This is laid out in German Ideology, which seeks to undermine the moral and political order of capitalism. Alienation (false consciousness) is necessary to correct errors of perception in the social world. Ultimately the nature of man, the movement (philosophy) of history, and the conception of economic value are each attempts to define what determines man’s consciousness. They are all material (substantive) and social, and all ‘labor’ in that this is the heart of a political philosophy which sees the common man as supporting the superstructure of society (i.e., the labor theory of value). Burke’s roots were in the moral psychology of the 18th century. The Utilitarians were fundamentally concerned with the nature of political freedom, but the concept of the rational agent, present from Plato to Kant, disappears in the ‘greatest good for greatest number’ formulation. Mill demonstrated the difference between logic and science in distinguishing between deduction and induction. His individual is anarchic, subject to impulse, and lacking the north star of freedom, as Arnold’s Culture and Anarchy pointed out. The practical response is embodied in the British idealism of FH Bradley, who saw the individual inherently operating in a social milieu. Since Kant assigned metaphysics to synthetic a priori, giving math as the preeminent exemplar, Frege’s demonstration that math is analytic opened the way for the modern rejection of metaphysical argument. Frege, who had overturned Aristotelian, syllogistic logic, showed math is not concerned with the properties of objects but the second-order properties of properties of objects, vindicating the Kantian assertion that existence is not an Aristotelian predicate. Statements of identity are not statements which predicate the property of an object. Venus is the morning star can be reversed, but Socrates is wise cannot, so the distinction between subject and predicate is the ability to assign properties to the object (otherwise everything is an arbitrary determination). Frege’s views allow for extension (i.e., truth value) and intention (truth conditions) in sentences. Extensions are detachable, and so independent existence is possible for objects. Phenomenology, credited mainly to Husserl, is the necessary preliminary to science of the mind – psychology – since it locates prior to description, classification, or explanation in the individual’s mental acts. It is the access to meaning created by these acts, the world becoming present to individual consciousness. Phenomenology is the understanding of essences, therefore an a priori science. Hermeneutics searches for reasons not causes, understanding texts as expression of the creator’s rational activity (i.e., understandings of the author’s intentions better than he does). The classifications aren’t scientific, are not disprovable, and so an axiomatic authority. Husserl’s work revived efforts to distinguish between human real (of meaning) from the natural realm (science); his Lebenswelt showed science had invaded where its power is groundless, but nonetheless results in a moral vacuum, for Lebenswelt collapses when not sustained by reflection on human matters. Of the existentialists, Heidegger was most concerned to counter the role of science, addressing time in the Kantian notion of the form of an inner sense. Satre would later pick up the thread, both he and Heidegger following Hegel in complicated means of distinguishing things from persons. Heidegger addressed the modern problem of self-knowledge via ontology, based on self-consciousness. After him, philosophy’s detour from logic, metaphysics, and epistemology allowed it to (again) stray into the psychology: moral exhibitionism is logical end of existentialism. Satre, following suit, proposed existence precedes essence: there is no human nature, since there’s no God to have conceived nature; essences vanish with the human mind that created them. Descartes cogito is transformed by Husserl’s phenomenology: all consciousness is intentional, the subject-object relation arises in ways that defy common-sense description. Sartre introduced nothingness as an entity, making logical mistakes and consequently forcing him to strain language. Like Socrates, his discussion (e.g., of Pierre not being in a café) introduces aporia. He leads to the inability to distinguish objects from subjects, an anguished path to ethical subjectivism. Any attempt to establish a system of values represents an attempt to transfer individual freedom to the objective world, which is to cede freedom for nothing, since there is no valid order. Sartre seeks to preserve Kant’s ethic of moral autonomy while divesting it o commitment to a moral law: he cannot transcend the impasse of paradox and dialectics. Wittgenstein, who concluded Heidegger evidenced a ‘bewitchment of intelligence’ in his use of (convoluted) language, was the most important philosopher of the 20th century. He saw truth as extension that is vital to logic and analysis. Logic must be transparent, while analysis (analytical philosophy) assumes the surface form of language to contain hidden logical structures. His philosophy ended the tradition of inquiry premised on the subject which started with Descartes, refuting the possibility of pure phenomenology, since nothing can be learned from the study of the first person alone (Cartesian examination). The first person distinction between being and seeming collapses, nothing can be certain, only a common public language determining first-person ‘knowledge’: I know things because others agree the premise. The condition of self-knowledge is a knowledge of others; the third person takes priority. The first person certainty of Descartes (rationalism) and Hume (empiricism) had been displaced, and with it modern epistemology and metaphysics. The ambitions of Kant and Hegel to remove the self from the core of knowledge have been achieved. What is the relation between logic and dialectics (science of deduction)? NB: Bertrand Russell thought the worse one’s logic, the more interested the consequences.

7. Badiou, Adventure of French Philosophy (14 May 2023)

Collected essays of a 2d-tier postmodern paladin, demonstrating French philosophy has run itself up the political dead ends of power as determinative and nihilism. Badiou asserts 20th-century existentialism – from Sartre in the 1940s to Deleuze in the 90s, including Bachelard, Merleau-Ponty, Levi-Strauss, Althusser, Foucault, Derrida, and Lacan – rivals ancient Athens and 19th-century German idealists (but not Republican Florence, which says something of the political bent).
Finitude is intended to deprecate the possibility of universals. Truth is a process or labor, not the pursuit of veracity of proposition. Postmoderns confuse scientific advances and consequent revision with the impossibility (futility) of settlement, and so surrender to nihilism (the point at which ‘enjoyment and dying are indistinguishable’). That calculus advances does not compromise arithmetic. But postmoderns prefer to seek profundity in paradox, though enigmas borne of logic chopping are not signposts to wisdom.
Consciousness implies unconsciousness, which is to be considered part of the subject and its intentions; subject do not imply objects. Plato’s subject is detached from ideas; Descartes’ is not because reason (thinking) is required. If we deemphasize the humanity of the subject we should not ne surprised activities such as politics are becoming inhuman.
Badiou’s though moved from dialectical (in which the event identifies the subject) to mathematical (formalism). His primary interlocutors are Plato and Hegel; his opponent Kant. A Maoist, he seeks to make a virtue, a practical theory of irrational behavior of the mob: several essays lament the ‘failures’ of 1968, when the French failed to follow the Red Guards; the ‘actually existing’ didn’t conform to the philosophy of history. Interestingly, deconstruction was a disaster for philosophy, a preoccupation with words and etymology overlooks that French language depends on syntax.
On the basis of implications, there is ever so much to disagree with – the margins are littered. In fairness, however, this book isn’t a postmodern primer.

4. Klibansky and Paton, ed., Philosophy and History (27 Feb 2020)

A festschrift for Ernst Cassirer treating philosophy, history of philosophy and history of ideas, historiography, and related pursuits. Author names are given in underline:

    Alexander

: the permanent features of things appear at different times in different forms; it’s permissible to think of forever in terms of now so long as we consider essence not surface characteristics. Novelty is the essence of history, explanation is the work; determinism in history means asserting pre-arranged necessity instead of changes in form over time.

    Webb

: philosophy is different from history, science, etc. in declining to accept precepts; but it may settle on some and proceed from these. Consciousness, such as religious consciousness, is finite. Yet philosophy cannot ignore religious consciousness because of finitude: Athens cannot disprove Jerusalem.

    Gilson (one of the better essayists)

: there is no great scientific discovery dating to the Middle Ages. Science rose in opposition to medieval philosophy and theology. Save the Aristotelian Leibniz, all chose between science or scholasticism. But they are not irreconcilable: scholastic philosophy has only to become true to itself to reconcile with science.
Descartes converted ideas to mathematical models, bereft of discourse, representing reality itself. Scholastic ideals could not be reduced to expressible content; they are something other. His successor was Hobbes: the effects of Cartesian metaphysics spread to proto-sociology. And thence to political philosophy – servitude to all powerful state derived from liberties!
The antinomy of philosophy consists of 1) the irrationality of building the collective (the state) from irreducible individuals versus 2) man is nothing, humanity is everything. Aquinas and Duns Scotus held they are reconciled in the real: the antinomy is manmade. In the other words, the error is Cartesian reduction to science (mathematics), which decrees a priori thee real is the sum of the real.
Aristotle’s mistake was to biologize the inorganic; Descartes’ to mathematize physics, chemistry, biology, metaphysics, and moral theory. Every ‘nature’ requires a formal principle, but not every form is living. Then metaphysics is the science above natural sciences, and its problem of defining existence is superior. For this reason, Christianity cannot allow metaphysics to expire

    Groethuysen

: reflection on the self occurs in different forms: religion, art, philosophy.

    Gentile

: historical fact is not presupposed by history. ‘Ideas without facts are empty; philosophy which is not history is the value’s abstraction’. The truth of the past lies not in facts but in imaginative use of what happened (or was happening). Does this trend toward existentialism?

    Stebbing

: without time there is no causation; without causation there is no time. The possibility of causal order is the sole condition for a time sequence in nature

    Medicus

: the final problem of the Kantian system is the unity of object and subject, of nature and freedom, which is treated in

    Critique of Judgment

. How does it assert itself? ‘Intransferable uniqueness’ is one’s calling, according to Cassirer; an era has it too – but neither are usually well defined – more usually they are in a form of questions. The historian is the servant of a culture’s self-awareness, not in obsequious search of power but truth. ‘The longest view is always from the heights’. For Cassirer, the object of history is the fulfillment of humanity.

    Brehier

: the history of philosophy commenced in the 17th century from Cartesian thought, and circa 1930 needs reworking. Documentary evidence, standing in for tradition, stands in the way of understanding what happened. Historical truth does not involve truth of the thought in question

    Hoffman

: The Platonic idea is behind Augustine’s philosophy of History

    Levy-Bruhl

: Descartes attacked the authority of tradition because it could not be demonstrated by scientific method. History was lumped together with religion

    Saxl

: veritas filia temporis – truth reveals itself over time. Art struggles with abstract concepts such as truth. The scientific age settled the war between the ancients and moderns on the side of the moderns, which admitted no abstract truth.

    Wind

: there are several commonalities at the intersection of history and science. The information which a document reveals requires presupposition of understanding the contents themselves in the first place. The observer of events is an intruder, and the dividing line between observer and participant is difficult to fix. Until recently historians and scientist were cloistered; now their discoveries could be world-changing

    Pos

: Philosophy is never deductive like math. Knowledge is relative in the sense that it’s open to interpretation and permeated by ‘alien’ (unproven) concepts

    Gundolf

: the two predominant objectives of historiography are to preserve the past as it actually was (Ranke) and whether to interpret the past in light of a) providence or b) universal laws.The pattern recurs in German historiography: German practice springs from the philosophically minded Herder, and thence to Ranke

    Ortega y Gasset (another standout)

: the most decisive changes in humanity are those of belief.
Historical reason is more demanding than scientific reason, which does not understand what it’s saying, only that it can be proven true. Science’s loss of the ability to express truths is mortal to civilization. Reason, in modern times degraded to mean the play of ideas, was in Greece and the 16th century understood as being in contact with the order of the cosmos / providence. It was itself a faith.
German idealism represents the attempt to place man before nature, like positivism. Hegel in particular demonstrates the lack of intellectual responsibility, evidencing a bankrupt moral climate.
Philosophy since Kant has been a ‘second apprenticeship’, pursuit of discovering authentic reality. Thought has its own form and projects these onto the real: man cannot escape. We must de-intellectualize the real to be faithful to it. But: nature is a transitory interpretation of what man finds around him. He has no nature; but he has history. Only under the pressure of events (history) do we differentiate between what we are and what we imagine ourselves to be: we become compact, solid.

    Klibansky

: history can be described as a science inasmuch as philosophic precepts (e.g., Kantian regulative principle or Platonic sense of normative pattern from ideas) order its proceedings

3. Scuton, Modern Philosophy (5 May 2014)

Modernist philosophy, which since Descartes has sought to posit individuality (‘the self’) as naturally independent and transcendent, fails because ‘to be a self is simply to be a person’ – a member of the community. In the process of finding against existentialists, poststructuralists, and the like, Scruton surveys four centuries of thought by evaluating thinking about such concepts as truth, cause, and science. The thematic groupings also manage a rough chronological order, an impressive feat. Scruton’s hero is Kant for the categorical imperative: treat others as having inherent value, as ends not means. An excellent work.

4. Dudley, Understanding German Idealism (1 Jun 2014)

Surveys the trajectory of German philosophy 1780-1830, a formative period roughly from Kant’s setting out to prove reason trumps empirical determinism to the passing of Hegel. Kant, the protagonist, sought to establish a priori knowledge (what can I know? what should I do? what may I hope?), and concluded knowledge is bounded by the subject’s understanding of objects. His categorical imperative remains vital in modern society: treat fellow humans as you would yourself, and as ends not means. Subsequent German idealists challenged his principles of first knowledge, changing a critical understanding into absolute viewpoints. Hegel determined subject-object falsely limits understanding of appearances, and moved from knowing to being, thereby concluding man’s reconciliation with the natural world is the primary objective. Religion, art, and philosophy are the practices par excellence. Clear but difficult.

18. Hyde, Five Great Philosophies of Life (30 Sep 2019)

            Characterizes Epicurean, Stoic, Platonic, Aristotelian, and Christian philosophy, seeking to demonstrate the latter encompasses the best traits of the first four. The Epicurean view is to look for happiness in one’s appetites and passions, to find pleasure in what you’ve got. Its shortcoming is the greatest pleasures come from enduring struggle: there’s no development of character. Stoicism resolves to control temperament no matter the external effects. It founders on the suffering of others (i.e., the problem of evil). Further, the Stoic tends to be concerned with the universal rather than the local, where altruism ought to begin. Platonism seeks the perfection of virtue through subordinating parts to the whole, the lower to the higher. Appetites are to obey reason, spirit to be steadfast but secondary to the ruling of right reason. Family and property are subordinate to character development and the state’s role in creating virtue. Half of the Republic is given to education, outlining lifelong pursuit of proper subordination. Platonism fails in supposing universals are obtainable by all. The Aristotelian approach emphasizes sense of proportion, the ‘golden mean’, which is relative to context, and so locates personal virtue in the ability to choose the best alternative. One develops by displaying the courage of resolve, resilience in failure, and progress toward the objective: these are the basis of physical skill, mental power, moral virtue, and personal excellence. Friendship, based on shared interests, is the ideal evidence of virtue obtained. Aristotle failed, however, in blithely excluding more than half the populace (i.e., slaves) and was also too austere. The Christian exhibits love for everyone, universal fellowship, which is both a more exacting standard and also more realistic because it promotes focus on sympathy for those below. Over half of Hyde’s work is given to a refined ‘muscular Christianity’. There is no discussion of the distinction between philosophy qua philosophy and religion as philosophy; thus there is no discussion of the consequences of theology, mystery, or ceremony for Christian life.

20. Collingwood, Essay on Metaphysics (27 Oct 2019)

            Metaphysics is the study of absolute presuppositions which underpin contemporary scientific inquiry. Invented by Aristotle, who erroneously conceived it as a science of being (‘ontology’ to Collingwood), the subject’s birth simultaneously gave rise to science: for to think scientifically is to answer a question; questions require presuppositions; and all such questions and presuppositions must somehow be grounded. (Propositions seek to answer ‘is it true’ or similar queries; facts, from Bacon onward, are things that answer questions.) All metaphysical questions are historical questions: what was the contemporary view?

Mistaking the certainties of one’s age for the certainties of all ages is a fundamental error. It is religion’s role to promote the development of absolute presuppositions. Thus Collingwood concludes the Christian church has been the guarantor of Western science. He shows how the doctrine of the trinity corresponds with modern science, which rests of absolute presupposition of nature as one, and therefore science as one in corresponding to law.

‘Antimetaphysics’ is an irrational, unscientific view of life, to which Collingwood ascribes various personas. Deductive metaphysics is a constellation of absolute presuppositions which are without conflict, like coherent mathematics; but metaphysics (i.e., history of ideas) is never without internal tensions. Logical positivism, which seeks to prove presuppositions (and all else) as fact, is the most prominent example of the pair of enemies of metaphysics; in actuality it treats fact in a medieval manner.

By targeting metaphysics, positivism continues the 18th-century attack on classical Greek thought. Separately, psychology, which purports to be the science of how we think, cannot claim dominion over metaphysics because it does not uniquely do so (so too does logic) and since it makes no recourse to truth and falsehood and thus to self-criticism which is the end of thinking (i.e., was my thought successful?). Theoretic thought is logic, practical thought is ethics. Psychology in actuality is not cognitive (as the ancients thought); it is the science of feeling; lacking not only self-criticism but also a science of the body and also an understanding of truth, it is no science at all. Psychology is a pseudo-science which cannot supplant metaphysics and other sciences because it ignores procedure: it is the propaganda of irrationalism, which is not a conspiracy but an epidemic undermining the scientific pursuit of truth.

Elsewhere, Collingwood treats the sequence of physics from Newton (all events have causes) to Einstein (all events are governed by laws, but most have no cause). Physicians escaped the anthropomorphic problems of the 19th century – nature causing things – by concluding there are few causes only behavior according to law. But philosophers and positivists alike extended Kant’s view that every event has a cause. Kant himself considered metaphysics as ‘god, freedom, immortality’. Of his categories of modality – possibility, actuality, necessity – possibility (i.e., something that could be) is a major stumbling block for positivism. The scholastics considered that pagans ended Roman civilization, but it was really the loss of faith in Latin absolute presuppositions.