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The
Philosophical Test of the Revelations of Religious Experience
Scholastic
philosophy has put forward three arguments for the existence of God. These arguments,
known as the Cosmological, the Teleological, and the Ontological, embody a real
movement of thought in its quest after the Absolute. But regarded as logical
proofs, I am afraid, they are open to serious criticism and further betray a
rather superficial interpretation of experience.
The cosmological
argument views the world as a finite effect, and passing through a series of
dependent sequences, related as causes and effects, stops at an uncaused first
cause, because of the unthinkability of an infinite regress. It is, however,
obvious that a finite effect can give only a finite cause, or at most an infinite
series of such causes. To finish the series at a certain point, and to elevate
one member of the series to the dignity of an uncaused first cause, is to set
at naught the very law of causation on which the whole argument proceeds. Further,
the first cause reached by the argument necessarily excludes its effect. And
this means that the effect, constituting a limit to its own cause, reduces it
to something finite. Again, the cause reached by the argument cannot be regarded
as a necessary being for the obvious reason that in the relation of cause and
effect the two terms of the relation are equally necessary to each other. Nor
is the necessity of existence identical with the conceptual necessity of causation
which is the utmost that this argument can prove. The argument really tries
to reach the infinite by merely negating the finite. But the infinite reached
by contradicting the finite is a false infinite, which neither explains itself
nor the finite which is thus made to stand in opposition to the infinite. The
true infinite does not exclude the finite; it embraces the finite without effacing
its finitude, and explains and justifies its being. Logically speaking, then,
the movement from the finite to the infinite as embodied in the cosmological
argument is quite illegitimate; and the argument fails in toto. The teleological
argument is no better. It scrutinizes the effect with a view to discover the
character of its cause. From the traces of foresight, purpose, and adaptation
in nature, it infers the existence of a self-conscious being of infinite intelligence
and power. At best, it gives us a skilful external contriver working on a pre-existing
dead and intractable material the elements of which are, by their own nature,
incapable of orderly structures and combinations. The argument gives us a contriver
only and not a creator; and even if we suppose him to be also the creator of
his material, it does no credit to his wisdom to create his own difficulties
by first creating intractable material, and then overcoming its resistance by
the application of methods alien to its original nature. The designer regarded
as external to his material must always remain limited by his material, and
hence a finite designer whose limited resources compel him to overcome his difficulties
after the fashion of a human mechanician. The truth is that the analogy on which
the argument proceeds is of no value at all. There is really no analogy between
the work of the human artificer and the phenomena of Nature. The human artificer
cannot work out his plan except by selecting and isolating his materials from
their natural relations and situations. Nature, however, constitutes a system
of wholly interdependent members; her processes present no analogy to the architects
work which, depending on a progressive isolation and integration of its material,
can offer no resemblance to the evolution of organic wholes in Nature. The ontological
argument which has been presented in various forms by various thinkers has always
appealed most to the speculative mind. The Cartesian form of the argument runs
thus:
To
say that an attribute is contained in the nature or in the concept of a thing
is the same as to say that the attribute is true of this thing and that it may
be affirmed to be in it. But necessary existence is contained in the nature
or the concept of God. Hence it may be with truth affirmed that necessary existence
is in God, or that God exists.1
Descartes
supplements this argument by another. We have the idea of a perfect being in
our mind. What is the source of the idea? It cannot come from Nature, for Nature
exhibits nothing but change. It cannot create the idea of a perfect being. Therefore
corresponding to the idea in our mind there must be an objective counterpart
which is the cause of the idea of a perfect being in our mind. This argument
is somewhat of the nature of the cosmological argument which I have already
criticized. But whatever may be the form of the argument, it is clear that the
conception of existence is no proof of objective existence. As in Kants
criticism of this argument the notion of three hundred dollars in my mind cannot
prove that I have them in my pocket.2 All that the argument proves
is that the idea of a perfect being includes the idea of his existence. Between
the idea of a perfect being in my mind and the objective reality of that being
there is a gulf which cannot be bridged over by a transcendental act of thought.
The argument, as stated, is in fact a petitio principii:3 for it
takes for granted the very point in question, i.e. the transition from the logical
to the real. I hope I have made it clear to you that the ontological and the
teleological arguments, as ordinarily stated, carry us nowhere. And the reason
of their failure is that they look upon thought as an agency working
on things from without. This view of thought gives us a mere mechanician in
the one case, and creates an unbridgeable gulf between the ideal and the real
in the other. It is, however, possible to take thought not as a principle which
organizes and integrates its material from the outside, but as a potency which
is formative of the very being of its material. Thus regarded thought or idea
is not alien to the original nature of things; it is their ultimate ground and
constitutes the very essence of their being, infusing itself in them from the
very beginning of their career and inspiring their onward march to a self-determined
end. But our present situation necessitates the dualism of thought and being.
Every act of human knowledge bifurcates what might on proper inquiry turn out
to be a unity into a self that knows and a confronting other that
is known. That is why we are forced to regard the object that confronts the
self as something existing in its own right, external to and independent of
the self whose act of knowledge makes no difference to the object known. The
true significance of the ontological and the teleological arguments will appear
only if we are able to show that the human situation is not final and that thought
and being are ultimately one. This is possible only if we carefully examine
and interpret experience, following the clue furnished by the Qur«n which
regards experience within and without as symbolic of a reality described by
it,4 as the First and the Last, the Visible and the Invisible.5
This I propose to do in the present lecture.
Now experience,
as unfolding itself in time, presents three main levels - the level of matter,
the level of life, and the level of mind and consciousness - the subject-matter
of physics, biology, and psychology, respectively. Let us first turn our attention
to matter. In order exactly to appreciate the position of modern physics it
is necessary to understand clearly what we mean by matter. Physics, as an empirical
science, deals with the facts of experience, i.e. sense-experience. The physicist
begins and ends with sensible phenomena, without which it is impossible for
him to verify his theories. He may postulate imperceptible entities, such as
atoms; but he does so because he cannot otherwise explain his sense-experience.
Thus physics studies the material world, that is to say, the world revealed
by the senses. The mental processes involved in this study, and similarly religious
and aesthetic experience, though part of the total range of experience, are
excluded from the scope of physics for the obvious reason that physics is restricted
to the study of the material world, by which we mean the world of things we
perceive. But when I ask you what are the things you perceive in the material
world, you will, of course, mention the familiar things around you, e.g. earth,
sky, mountains, chairs, tables, etc. When I further ask you what exactly you
perceive of these things, you will answer - their qualities. It is clear that
in answering such a question we are really putting an interpretation on the
evidence of our senses. The interpretation consists in making a distinction
between the thing and its qualities. This really amounts to a theory of matter,
i.e. of the nature of sense-data, their relation to the perceiving mind and
their ultimate causes. The substance of this theory is as follows:
The
sense objects (colours, sounds, etc.) are states of the perceivers mind,
and as such excluded from nature regarded as something objective. For this reason
they cannot be in any proper sense qualities of physical things. When I say
"The sky is blue," it can only mean that the sky produces a blue sensation
in my mind, and not that the colour blue is a quality found in the sky. As mental
states they are impressions, that is to say, they are effects produced in us.
The cause of these effects is matter, or material things acting through our
sense organs, nerves, and brain on our mind. This physical cause acts by contact
or impact; hence it must possess the qualities of shape, size, solidity and
resistance.6
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[See
Notes]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:03:03 AM
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