hylomeric quasi-substances
(1) supersubstantial systems (society, ecosystem, cosmos)
(2) subsubstantial aggregates
Systems are unified in terms of the relation of the whole system to substance.
taste and emotional interpretants
emotional interpretant
Diamond: sense-of
True: actual feel
Box: taste qua perception (perceptive taste)
energetic interpretant
-- theoretical
-- -- Diamond: judgment
-- -- True: judging
-- -- Box: judicative taste
-- practical
-- -- Diamond: endeavor/tendency
-- -- True: trial
-- -- Box: practical hope
the differences of signs in each category of being
The category of habitus presupposes all the other categories.
In definitions of sign which have the structure of 'something signifying something to something', the 'to something' is often ambiguous -- the to-ness is sometimes treated as purely cognitive and sometimes as causally determinative (cf. Peirce's 'determining the interpretant to conformity with the object').
In creation, God extrinsically constitutes Himself as an object, e.g., as Lord.
waiting, assessing, and contextualizing interpretants
the existence of a cosmos as a presupposition of nomological necessity
It is an essential part of being a human person to have the potential to become a human person.
precedent for imitation vs precedent for extrapolation
successful idealization as a sign of final causes
Truth does not lie in a mean, but reasonableness does.
One thing is needed in a church, absolutely speaking, and that is Christ; and a church succeeds best when it most truly -- not necessarily most comfortably -- guides to Christ.
subsidiarity as aiding citizens in developing political prudence (Budziszewksi)
In creating the world, God creates it not only in its being and its order, but in its moral, jural, and sacral status, as with Him, under Him, and about Him. The created world has functionality and function with respect to its Lord and Creator.
Reading of historical texts is always an attempt at co-reading of some kind -- with the author, or the original audience, or the traditionary audience, or one's contemporaries
All evidence we have indicates that the 'Johannine Community' or the 'Markan Community' are diffuse, corresponding and often traveling, dynamic personal networks rather than geographically constrained communities.
Mark's translations indicate that it is a bridging text across different communities (differing, e.g., by at least principal language).
Petros as moral, jural, and sacral office and title
'beloved son' in Mark: Mk 1:11 (Baptism), Mk 9:7 (Transfiguration), Mk 12:6 (Parable of Talents)
'God's son': Mark 1:1 (Opening of Gospel), Mk 3:11 (impure spirit), Mk 5:7 (demoniac), Mk 15:29 (Centurion's Exclamation); cf. Mk 14:61-62, 'the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One' (High Priest's Interrogation)
'the Holy One of God': Mk 1:24 (impure spirit)
'Son of Man': (1) role clarifications (authority, Lord, Servant): Mk 2:10 (Healing of Paralytic), Mk 2:28 (Lord of Sabbath), Mk 10:45 (not to be served but to serve); (2) Prophetic Predictions: Mk 8:31 (prediction of Passion), Mk 8:38 (shame of Son of Man), Mk 9:9,12 (Transfiguration -- prediction of Passion and Resurrection), Mk 9:31 (Prediction of Betrayal), Mk 10:33 (prediction of Betrayal, Death, and Resurrection), Mk 13;26 (coming in clouds), Mk 14:21 (sop), Mk 14:41-42 (Son of Man betrayed), Mk 14:62 (right hand and coming in clouds)
'Christ': Mk 1:1 (Opening of Gospel), Mk 8:29 (Confession of Peter), Mk9:41 (cup of water), Mk 12:35 (Is Christ the Son of David or David's Lord?), Mk 14:61-62 (High Priest's Interrogation), Mk 15:32 (mockery of priests)
Mark puts 'Son of David' and 'King of the Jews' into a state of ambiguity
Mk 1:1 -- The author regards Jesus as Christ.
Mk 8:29 -- The disciples regard Jesus as Christ.
Mk 9:41 -- Jesus implicitly identifies Himself as Christ.
Mk 14:62 -- Jesus explicitly identifies Himself as Christ.
Mk 15:32 -- Priests and scribes regard Jesus as having claimed to be Christ.
The phenomenal expresses and symbolizes the noumenal.
'the right hand of the Father' as a moral, jural, and liturgical office
If we use Daniel 7:13 to interpret Mark's 'Son of Man', we have to take the latter as a short form of 'One like/as a son of man' (hos huios anthropou).
Patience is handmaiden to prudence.
Mark explicitly links the interpretation of the walking on water to the miracle of the loaves (Mk 6:52).
the cry from the cross in Mark as part of the Gospel's arc of interpreting the 'Son of David' title
Even fools carry a wisdom beyond their capacity.
For X to resist Y in a strict and proper sense requires that X and Y both act and Y have some sort of passive capacity. (Mutual interaction is required for resistance.)
"Since God became Man, all human attempts to create gods in the image of man or mankind in the image of God, have appeared comically prosaic, doomed to signal failure." Sigrid Undset
For Christ is a sewing-needle
and He pulls a Spirit-thread
that stitches in and out
through the living and the dead.
Many political views founder on a refusal to recognize one of two counterbalancing truths: tribal loyalties are inadequate to man as a civil being and sometimes tribal leaders are absolutely necessary for survival or resistance to evil.
Irenaeus has a text with Acts 8:37 (Adv Haer Bk 3, ch. 12, sect. 8).
Language as the expression of spiritual perception and judgment.
the Erotes
Eros: desire-love
Anteros: return of love
Himeros: love without return
Pothos: intoxicating yearning
[Phthonos: jealousy]
Hymen: marriage
Hermaphroditus: union
That is graceful which blooms with shining joy.
In the fullness of love, one experiences the seasons of blossom, growth, and harvest simultaneously; it is this feature that most suggests the timelessness of eternity.
The problem with reading Mark as having a 'low Christology' is that the consistent theme of Mark is that everyone underestimates and underplays what Jesus is, even when right.
"In the Memra the redemption will be found." Targum Zech. 12.5
Markan Christology is primarily a negative Christology, i.e., a Christology by remotion.
"Everything in war is simple, but the simplest thing is hard." Clausewitz
Kant's natural purposes & the 'sense of cosmos', i.e,. the experience of the world as an order
intrinsic and extrinsic intelligibility
Human purposes are such that we recognize that they presuppose a greater system of purposes, which makes it possible for them to be and to be fulfilled.
From the fact that somethingis in a domain, we can directly conclude that it ought to be appropriately considered in study of that domain.
Oughts are required means to posited ends.
genius/ingenium as a symbol of moral endowments
We are capable of analogizing the universe to a machine or a to an organism only because we already recognize it as an ordered system; and therefore the latter does not derive from the analogies.
Classifiability presupposes stable manifestation.
objective purposiveness as presupposing objective expressiveness
variables that only take ranges of values, not particular values
invariance across all means of measurement
Time is the mathematizability of change relative to other changes.
The only direction of time is the order of before and after, and this is a measurement of incompleteness of change by counting. Without an account of completeness of change, no temporal measurement is possible.
There is no reason to think that temporal measurements can only have one direction; i.e., we have no reason to reject the idea that you can have temporal measurements that are related by a kind of rotation, i.e., befores and afters not related to each other purely by before and after.
the social ontology of play objects
"Play is a way of making an object, for present and personal purposes, *what it might be*; and being for 'personal purposes', it takes on, in a great variety of cases, personal form." J. M. Baldwin
myth as communal intuition
A closed shape one in which every toward-boundary is an away-from boundary and vice versa. (? -- this needs specification for complicated (jagged) boundaries)
argument by organized accumulation of signs
subjective, respective, objective
A faculty is a natural power susceptible of use by will.
"If two physicists A and B agree to discuss a physical experiment, their agreement implies that they admit, in some sense, a common world in which the experiment is supposed to take place." A. A. Robb
reciprocity as a general regulative principle of human rights
A state is always limited in what it can 'know', i.e., in the information its apparatus can process. But proposed policies often fail to take this into account. There is perhaps a need for a 'critical epistemology for the state'.
better-not permissions
When nations do not use weapons, and in particular allow them to be banned for use in war, this is always because they are seen as being of little tactical use or as being of negative strategic or operational value given the nation's particular military structure. Nations ban weapons for themselves for which they no long have definite use. And jsut as large corporations lobby for regulations thatye rather than their competitors can easily accommodate, so teh bans are generally for limiting the options and creating hurdles for otehr nations. The West, for instance, supports restriction of certain weapons so that enforcement mechanisms for apparent violations can be used to keep other nations in line. It also forces other, less wealthy nations, either to defer in military matters or use more expensive options rather than trying to use tactics and strategies with cheaper means.
The tendency of post-medieval nations is to develop systems that, while more consistently effective, are also massively more expensive in time, money, and effort to maintain and sustain.
Actuality is known by the fact that it perfects the intellect.