Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Misplaced Morality Rots in the Roots Unconscious

The Modern Manichee
by G. K. Chesterton

He sayeth there is no sin, and all his sin
Swells round him into a world made merciless;
The midnight of his universe of shame
Is the vast shadow of his shamelessness.
He blames all that begat him, gods or brutes,
And sires not sons he chides as with a rod.
The sins of the children visited on the fathers
Through all generations, back to a jealous God.

The fields that heal the humble, the happy forests
That sing to men confessed and men consoled,
To him are jungles only, greedy and groping,
Heartlessly new, unvenerably old.
Beyond the pride of his own cold compassion
Is only cruelty and imputed pain:
Matched with that mood, a boy's sport in the forest
Makes comrades of the slayer and the slain.

The innocent lust of the unfallen creatures
Moves him to hidden horror but no mirth;
Misplaced morality rots in the roots unconscious,
His stifled conscience stinks through the green earth.
The green things thrust like horrible huge snails,
Horns green and gross, each lifting a leering eye
He scarce can call a flower; it lolls obscene,
Its organs gaping to the sneering sky.

Dark with that dusk the old red god of gardens
Still pagan but not merry any more,
Stirs up the dull adulteries of the dust,
Blind, frustrate, hopeless, hollow at the core;
The plants are brutes tied with green rope and roaring
Their terrible dark loves from tree to tree:
He shrinks as from a shaft, if by him singing,
A gilded pimp and pandar, goes the bee.

He sayeth, 'I have no sin; I cast the stone',
And throws his little pebble at the shrine,
Casts sin and stone away against the house
Whose health has turned earth's waters into wine.
The venom of that repudiated guilt
Poisons the sea and every natural flood
As once a wavering tyrant washed his hands,
And touching, turned the water black with blood.

Monday, April 27, 2026

Links of Note

 * Ryan Miller, A Metaphysics of the Common Good (PDF)

* Tuomas Tahko, Natural Kind Fundamentalism (PDF)

* James Lennox & Mariska Leunissen, Aristotle's Biology, at the SEP

* Edward Feser, Does Just War Doctrine Require Moral Certainty? at "First Things"

* Flame & Light, Hume's Sign Argument and Attributed Character

* Robert McNamara, Aquinas vs Camus, at "Dumb Oxen"

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Fields that Tingle with New Birth

April Night
by Archibald Lampman

How deep the April night is in its noon,
The hopeful, solemn, many-murmured night!
The earth lies hushed with expectation; bright
Above the world's dark border burns the moon,
Yellow and large; from forest floorways, strewn
With flowers, and fields that tingle with new birth,
The moist smell of the unimprisoned earth
Comes up, a sigh, a haunting promise. Soon,
Ah, soon, the teeming triumph! At my feet
The river with its stately sweep and wheel
Moves on slow-motioned, luminous, grey like steel.
From fields far off whose watery hollows gleam,
Aye with blown throats that make the long hours sweet,
The sleepless toads are murmuring in their dream.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Arche tou Euangeliou Iesou Christou Huiou Theou

 Beginning of the good news of Jesus Anointed, Son of God.

As it has been written in Isaiah the prophet: See, I send out my messenger before your face, who will prepare your way, voice of the one shouting in the desolation, Ready Lord's Way, build levelly his highway.

John came, the one immersing in the desolation and declaring repentant immersion for pardon of failings. And all the territory of Judea and Jerusalem were pouring out to him and were being immersed by him in the Jordan river, acknowledging their failings. And John was clothed with camel pelt and belt of hide around his loins. And he is eating locusts and wild honey.

And he was heralding, saying, The mightier than I comes after me, for whom I am not fit, having stooped, to loose the strap of his sandals. I immersed you with water, but he will immerse you with Holy Spirit.

[Mark 1:1-8, my rough translation. This is deliberately very wooden, in a crude attempt to capture the rough vividness of the passage. I have done a slightly smoother (but equally experimental) translation here, where I also commented on the attribution to Isaiah.]

Today is the feast of St. Mark the Evangelist. 

Two Poem Drafts

 Tallasaia

The sea,
salt-sprayed,
drives on rocky shores,
birthing clouds of mist;
the breeze, newly bold,
mildly cool,
is not unfriendly;
it is more curious
than piercing,
a question-asking breeze.

And I
am wandering,
shells and rocks around me
on the shores of Tallasaia.


Black Tea

Black the mug and dark the tea
like inner depth of brew-dark sea,
with silence deeper than that in me,
I catch warm scent like honeyed leaves
as steam is caught and interweaves
the air and, weaving like graceful bee,
repairs the world inside of me.


Friday, April 24, 2026

Dashed Off XIV

 The hatred of the natural seems often to be a perverted pursuit of infinity.

When we reflect on human violence, we find it to be in some way both natural and alien to us.

We know the world because we border it;
inside and out we border it.

To say that a novelist is only pretending to assert is obvious nonsense; the illocutionary acts all follow the same rules as usual, unless you assume there is no sense of truth that allows being true in a novel. Iris murdoch writing about a character commits to the truth of what she says (except in cases lik deliberately unreliable narrator) for the novel -- although assertion itself does not in fact usually require 'commitment', being often a much weaker act. As novelist, she has the ultimate possession of evidence about the novel she is writing -- although the need for assertion to involve evidence is in any case domain-specific and a norm rather than a need. And Iris Murdoch herself would, I think, hold that there is a sincerity in novel-writing, and if so, rightly -- although sincerity is a felicity condition and not a strict requirement of assertions, anyway. Apparent assertions in a novel are not defective in any way as assertions. In fact, teh opposite is the case: apparent assertions in a novel are *even more properly* assertions, because they are assertions of semi-divine kind: assertions that make the truth, and the evidence, of what is asserted, and compared to which out-of-fiction assertions can only be regarded, at least as assertions, as imperfect (although this is a comparative imperfection and not an imperfection for their kind and context).

Assertions in a novel are often perlocutionarily distinct from similar assertions in similar contexts.

If I make up a babble-language and act as if I were saying things in it, I pretend to assert. If I am putting something on the board of discourse as true, even if only in a persona or a fictional case, I am truly asserting.

the illocutionary act of writing a novel vs the illocutionary act of writing a sentence in a novel

'inter-fictional carry-over'

Truth-in-fiction is truth, in fiction.

admiring Guy Morville vs imagining admiring Guy Morville, vs pretending to admire Guy Morville in make-believe

All our imagination of what we are slips away, and all that is left is what we are.

What is good both is and ought to be treated as good.

A common problem in skeptical arguments is key terms being understood entirely in terms of the skeptic's own imaginative associations with the word; this is easily remediable, and it is often possible to build a skeptical argument that does not err this way. Unfortunately, this error is exactly the kind of error that is invisible to those who commit it.

Characterization is not accumulation of scenes but the sketched and flowing line through them. Characterization is done only by suggesting it, but in different ways suggesting a unified thing.

Worldbuilding is what characters do.

In make-believe, we socialize the world a certain way.

All comedy is based on contingency.

the sense of novelty in inquiry and Descartes on surprise

Every particular story can also be a concrete universal, forming a possible genre-region (a set of imitations), with actual genres arising out of strong overlaps of genre-regions.

Particulars can become concrete universals because of final causation.

mereological fusion as unity that rules out no kind of composition

mereological self-fusion

the courtesy of being treated as punishable

The range of architectonic ends that a human being could possibly have is limited.

1. The probability of any arbitrarily given state going to war against any other arbitrarily given state is quite small. (Qatar is unlikely to go to war against Bolivia.)
2. Two states whose countries do mutually profitable trade are slower to go to war.
3. States that require more steps to go to war are slower to go to war.
4. Since WWII, the United States has enforced peace among its allies, thus increasing the incentive for negotiated conflict resolution.
5. States that are active members of defensive leauges are somewhat less likely to be involved in wars.
--- These five seem to explain all of the so-called 'democratic peace' effect.

Music makes us about things.

In business, the difficulty is often getting the basics right; the flash and fluff, in so many cases, eat up resources while the basics languish.

checklist as one-dimensional memory palace
standard memory palaces as ways of organizing multiple related checklists

Kant on moral progress as a postulate of practical reason // Cohen on messianic community as same

locomotion as change in light-accessibility to other changes (change in communicability by way of light)

Bishops should be very careful not to turn wine into water and bread into stones.

Charity vests other virtues, both acquired and infused, bringing out their inner beauty.

"The most sublime feeling of oneself is the feeling of the harmony between oneself and the rule of the world as a whole, and thereby the highest beauty." Herder

heuristics --> best explanation for why given heuristics are heuristic --> general principles

Even accidental groupings need to be explained in terms of how the accident is possible.

A theory may be valuable for discovery (1) by being strange enough to raise interesting questions, (2) by solving genuine problems, (3) by encouraging and inspiring inquisitive pursuit.

The world is intermingled with our wills; the facts belong both to the tasks and to the performances.

The ethical is borne not merely by the will but also by the reason, and of both we may often speak.

inquiry and the creation of notings-of-facts, or, indeed, facts qua constructs (i.e., truths taken as according to art, truths formed by a means or method into something cognitively useful)

-- For every Turing machine, there is a corresponding Diophantine equation. (Matiyasevuh, Ronbinson, Davis, & Putnam)

"We have come to think of the actual world as one among many possible worlds. We need to repaint that picture. All possible worlds lie within the actual one." Nelson Goodman

Leibniz often equates 'sufficient reason' with 'aggregate of all requisites'.

Everything presuppposes all of its requisites.
Everything that exists has some definition that is instantiated.

"...there is a surface to expressive behavior that may become detached. The child who pretends,t eh actor who portrays, the mime who imitates, and the hypocrite who feigns, all attempt, in different ways, to strip expressive behavior from the character it normally reveals." Alan Tormey

Music is expressive because we can easily express by way of it; indeed, because it is sophisticated and nuanced, it is the most perfectly adapted 'language' of expression.

The expression of others impresses on us.

"Our claims is that, because musical movement can be heard as making sense and because that sense is not determined solely by the composer's intentions, musical movement is sufficiently like the human behaviour which gives rise to emotion-characteristics in appearances that musical movement may give rise to emotion-characteristics in sound." Stephen Davies, "The Expression of Emotion in Music"
"Our point is this: Anything that can wear an expression or have a gait, carriage, or bearing in the way in which a person's behaviour may exhibit those things can present the aspect of an emotion-characteristic in its appearance. Few non-sentient things will be able to meet these requirements, but, amongs those few, music will find a place."

Music is not intrinsicially representational; this is different from saying that no forms of music are used to represent, which is false.

Time (1) defines an ordinal structure that allows description of changes in terms of sequential dependencies and (2) measures the communicability of information about one change to other changes.

Walton's df of props ("Metaphor, Fictionalism, Make-Believe"): 'real-word objects or states of affairs that make propositions true in the make-believe world, i.e., 'fictional'"
-- the fictionality seems an intrusion here; nothing prevents props making factual propositions true in a make-believe world; but perhaps one could say that things can be both factual and fictional

[Noun] was [Adjective], [Noun] [Adjective]
The way was long, the days short.
The moon was bright, the shadows long.
Her face was set, her lips tight.

How reliable a map is depends in part on how you use it.

Saying things badly often interferes with progress in inquiry.

People often say something is 'subjective' when they really mean it is imperfectly determinate, involves gray areas or fuzzy regions, or requires cultivated judgment.

formal institutional facts (cf. Searle's standing declarations) vs instrumental institutional facts

making something X by declaring it X vs making something to be X by declaring X to be

nature tourism and the pursuit of specific expressivities in nature

Utilitarianism errs in not recognizing that huamn happiness has a deontic structure.

People regularly borrow from religious language whenever they want to be very serious, regardless of their own religious views.

signs as the flora of thought in somethng like the way gut bacteria are the flora of digestion

Difficulties often hit us hardest when they ease.

Pr 17:6A and Bellarmine's Note of Temporal Prosperity

One of the greatest strengths of analytic philosophy is how much room it allows for, and how many of its methods facilitate, tinkering with arguments.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Syneidesis vs Sunteresis

 I previously noted the usual idea about how the word synderesis came about: that it was originally syneidesis, and that St. Jerome in his commentary on Ezekiel probably wrote it that way, particularly given that he seems to translate it fairly directly into Latin as conscientia. St. Thomas, however, for philosophical reasons distinguishes synderesis and conscientia, while recognizing that many people don't make a distinction.

However, Sarah Byers has an interesting argument for an alternative view. Her idea is that the original word was actually sunteresis, and synderesis is just an ordinary medieval Latin spelling variant for that. Sunteresis means something like 'safeguarding, protecting, taking care of'. It's not a common version of the Greek word, which is why it's usually not regarded, although the shorter teresis is not too difficult to find. Byers argues, however, that St. Jerome is probably influenced by Origen on this point; we don't have Origen's commentary on Ezekiel, but the fragments we have suggest that he might have made use of Stoic vocabulary, in which sunteresis and its variants are sometimes found. This is fairly tenuous -- although it seems possible -- but if this is the case, then it would mean that St. Thomas's distinction between synderesis and conscientia (syneidesis) might be a return to an older distinction that was lost in other texts. Very interesting, and worth at least considering: synderesis as the natural safeguard or caretaker for the human being and human conscience.