Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Cyrillus Hierosolymitanus

 Today is the feast of St. Cyril of Jerusalem, Doctor of the Church. From his Catechetical Lecture 15):

We preach not one advent only of Christ, but a second also, far more glorious than the former. For the former gave a view of His patience; but the latter brings with it the crown of a divine kingdom. For all things, for the most part, are twofold in our Lord Jesus Christ: a twofold generation; one, of God, before the ages; and one, of a Virgin, at the close of the ages: His descents twofold; one, the unobserved, like rain on a fleece ; and a second His open coming, which is to be. In His former advent, He was wrapped in swaddling clothes in the manger; in His second, He covers Himself with light as with a garment. In His first coming, He endured the Cross, despising shame; in His second, He comes attended by a host of Angels, receiving glory. We rest not then upon His first advent only, but look also for His second. And as at His first coming we said, Blessed is He that comes in the Name of the Lord , so will we repeat the same at His second coming; that when with Angels we meet our Master, we may worship Him and say, Blessed is He that comes in the Name of the Lord. The Saviour comes, not to be judged again, but to judge them who judged Him; He who before held His peace when judged , shall remind the transgressors who did those daring deeds at the Cross, and shall say, These things have you done, and I kept silence. Then, He came because of a divine dispensation, teaching men with persuasion; but this time they will of necessity have Him for their King, even though they wish it not.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

In the Brightness of the Sun

From the Confession of St. Patrick (sect. 59-60):

And if at any time I managed anything of good for the sake of my God whom I love, I beg of him that he grant it to me to shed my blood for his name with proselytes and captives, even should I be left unburied, or even were my wretched body to be torn limb from limb by dogs or savage beasts, or were it to be devoured by the birds of the air, I think, most surely, were this to have happened to me, I had saved both my soul and my body. For beyond any doubt on that day we shall rise again in the brightness of the sun, that is, in the glory of Christ Jesus our Redeemer, as children of the living God and co-heirs of Christ, made in his image; for we shall reign through him and for him and in him. 

 For the sun we see rises each day for us at [his] command, but it will never reign, neither will its splendour last, but all who worship it will come wretchedly to punishment. We, on the other hand, shall not die, who believe in and worship the true sun, Christ, who will never die, no more shall he die who has done Christ’s will, but will abide for ever just as Christ abides for ever, who reigns with God the Father Almighty and with the Holy Spirit before the beginning of time and now and for ever and ever. Amen.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Links of Note

 * Bryan Pickel & Brian Rabern, A Compositional Semantics for Venn Diagrams (PDF)

* Curry Kennedy, A Special Regard for Life, on rhetoric and the moral life, at "Wisdom Speaking"

* Ruth Boeker, Mary Astell on Self-Improvement, Friendship, and Religion (PDF)

* David Oks, Why ATMs didn't kill bank teller jobs, but the iPhone did

* Eric Snyder, Stewart Shapiro, & Richard Samuels, A strengthened argument to realism about numbers (PDF)

* Mark Windsor, Collingwood's Everday Aesthetics (PDF)

* Hollis Robbins, The Great Syllabus Stagnation, at "Anecdotal Value" and Timothy Burke, How Do Syllabi Align?, at "Eight by Seven"

* Cristina L. Wilkins, Cathrynne Henshall, Amy D. Lykins, et al., The teleonome: a framework for understanding animal welfare integrating adaptive capabilities, affective regulation, agency, and environmental affordances

* Paul Lodge, Leibniz's Justification of the Principle of Sufficient Reason (Mainly) in the Correspondence with Clarke (PDF)

* Esther Berry, A Vague Feeling of Unease Will Be the Last Thing You Remember, on trusting your gut, at "The Literate Woman"

* Robin Jean Harris, Baptism as Dramatization, and Baptism as Seal and Spiritual Birth, on St. Cyril of Jerusalem's metaphors for baptism

* Lukas J. Meier, Can Thought Experiments Solve Problems of Personal Identity (PDF)

* Ronald W. Dworkin, Savage care, on the sharp limitations of bioethics for actual medical practitioners, at "Aeon"

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Incense Under Trees

 There was no truth, nor sympathy, mercy and love for neighbor, nor knowledge of God in the land. All three are connected with each other and follow one another, with the last as the beginning. Wherever we have the greatest confluence of people, these three sources of happiness are in many ways buried more quickly. In 4:12 it is said: "My people seek advice from a piece of wood and their staff gives them revelations"; it is their prophet, for the spirit of prostitution, of apostasy from God, leads them into these errors. They offer incense under trees, because their shade is good. In gratitude to the shade of the tree, they show it divine honor and forget the living God, his judgments, his name, his prophets.

[Johann Georg Hamann, The Complete London Writings, Kleinig, tr., Lexham Academic (Bellingham: 2025) p. 238. This is a comment on Hosea 4:1, although it actually covers most of this chapter. The reading here is interesting; Hamann seems (more or less plausibly) to interpret the trees comment in 4:13 as giving a general template for how apostasy develops -- finding the protection of something to be good and pleasant, people begin out of gratitude to show it honor that should be reserved to God, and then slowly stop giving such honor to God.]

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Habitude XXVIII

 To the third one proceeds thus. It seems that human virtue is not sufficiently divided according to moral and intellectual virtue. For prudence seems to be some mean between moral and intellectual virtue, since it is enumerated with intellectual virtue in Ethic. VI, and also is commonly enumerated by all among the four cardinal virtues, which are moral, as will be obvious below. Therefore virtue is not sufficiently divided according to moral and intellectual as immediate.

Further, continence and perseverance and patience are not reckoned among intellectual virtues. Nor are they moral virtues, because they do not have a passional mean, but passions abound in them. Therefore virtue is not sufficiently divided according to intellectual and moral.

Further, faith, hope, and charity are sorts of virtue. But they are not intellectual virtues, for these are only five, to wit, knowledge, wisdom, intellection, prudence, and craft, as was said. Nor are they moral virtues because they are not about passions, which moral virtues are chiefly about. Therefore virtue is not sufficiently divided according to intellectual and moral.

But contrariwise, the Philosopher says in Ethic. II that virtue is twofold, the one intellectual and the other moral.

I reply that it must be said that virtue is a sort of habitude completing a human being for working well. Now the source [principium] of human action is only twofold, to wit, intellect or reason and striving, for these are the two movers [moventia] in the human being, as is said in De Anima III. Thus any human virtue should be the completing of one of these sources. If, therefore, it is a completing of speculative or practical intellect for good human action, it will be intellectual virtue, but if it is a completing of the striving part, it will be moral virtue. Thus by elimination [relinquitur quod] every human virtue is either intellectual or moral.

To the first it must be said that prudence according to its essence is intellectual virtue, but according to its matter it converges on [convenit cum] the moral virtues, for it is right reason for enactables, as was said above. And according to this it is enumerated with the moral virtues.

To the second it must be said that continence and perseverance are not completions of the sense-relevant striving power. This is obvious in the fact that, in the continent and persevering, passions super-abound in them, which would not be if sense-relevant striving were completed by some habitude conforming it to reason. Now containing, or persevering, is a completion of the rational part, which holds itself against passions lest it be drawn off. But it falls short of the notion of virtue, for intellectual virtue that has itself [se habere] well about morals presupposes right striving for the end, so that it has itself [se habeat] rightly about sources, that is, ends from which we reason, which is lacking from continence and perseverance. Nor can there be complete working proceeding from two powers unless each power is completed by due habitude, just as the complete action does not follow from one acting instrumentally if the instrument is not well disposed, however complete the principal agent may be. Thus if sense-relevant striving that is moved by the rational part is not complete, then however complete the rational part, the following action will not be complete. So neither will the source of the action be virtue. And because of this, continence from delights and perservance from sorrows are not virtues, but are something lesser than virtue, as the Philosopher says in Ethic. VII.

To the third it must be said that faith, hope, and charity are above human virtues, for they are virtues of a human being so far as he is made participant of divine grace.

[St. Thomas Aquinas, ST 2-1.58.3, my translation. The Dominican Fathers translation is here, the Latin is here.]

Sufficio is the verb for supplying or providing, so 'sufficiently divides' means that the division, taken together as a division (without overlapping) supplies the whole.

Note that this article doesn't just divide human virtues into intellectual virtues and moral virtues, but also relates them to what is immediately below them (reply to objection 2) and what is directly above them (reply to objection 3). It also deals with the most obvious puzzle case for taking the division to be a strict division, namely, prudence, which seems to fall on both sides; in fact, prudence is an intellectual virtue, but it is the intellectual virtue about the whole field of what moral virtues are about, so it is counted as a moral virtue.

Up and Running

 Let us do penance, brothers, let us do penance right away, because we no longer have any extended period of time, the very hour is quickly coming to an end for us, and the imminence of judgment is already preventing us from the opportunity to make amends. Let your penance get up and running, so that judgment may not outrun it, since the fact that the Lord has not yet come, that he still waits, and that he delays, means that his desire is for us to return to him and not to perish.

[St. Peter Chrysologus, Selected Sermons, Volume 3, Palardy, tr. Catholic University of America Press (Washington, DC: 2005), Sermon 167, section 5.]

Friday, March 13, 2026

Dashed Off IX

This is the beginning of the notebook started in November 2024.


 Most explanations involve making assumptions that are justified only in terms of an assessment of what is required for an adequate explanation.

explanandum -> explanant profile -> evidence for explanatory factors -> profile-filling abductions

science fiction and the magical reification of measurements

All human desert presupposes elements of good fortune.

In the long run, taxes seem eventually to undermine democratic governance.

The actual laws of physics must be such that actual physics is possible.

Music as a fine art is concerned with the suggestion of rhythm, rather than metronomic rhythm, with the suggestion of notes, rather than exact notes.

No one can understand political equality before they understand political dignity.

scientific progress as an example of rational tradition

In the virtue of prudence we are provident both for ourselves and for others.

"A quest is always an education both as to the character of that which is sought and in self-knowledge." MacIntyre

Naturalism cannot make specific predictions in the absence of specific natural evidences.

When people say that a field, sociology, say, is about 'is' and not 'ought', what they in fact mean is that the oughts of sociology are second-order.

common law as diffused practical jurisprudence

Critical Legal Studies is fundamentally an exploration of legal systems as interactions of practices, objects (reifications), and values (tilts), albeit one that has not always had honest intentions.

mathematical functions as abstractions of terms, sets as abstractions of formulas (Lorenzen)
"Since sets are abstracted from formulas, and formulas are built up by means of logical particles, corresponding operations arise for sets."

You should always be wary of anything that gives you a satisfying feeling of righteousness; the feeling and the thing come apart easily and even when not, the feeling is often associated with release from what would ordinarily be restrictive -- which may be one's actual moral obligation as to means. This is why it is often associated both with hypocrisy and with immoderation.

prevention, prepared countermeasure, prepared mitigation

the Binding of Isaac as a picture of consecration

Divine reason is autonomous by nature; human reason is autonomous only by participation.

Intersubjective testing of religious experience requires something like a church; it also requires having already determined the conditions of validity of religious experience.

Series, unlike sets, are always something more than just their members. (Note that Edwards in his Eskimo example explicitly depends on a series being the same as a group.)

As the abstract principles governing the behavior of the universe do not share the directionalities of the universe, the directionalities must derive from the moving cause.

Clifford's argument against belief without evidence would, if it worked, also work as an argument against fiction, pageantry, advertisement; the love of fiction increases the risk of being affected in one's belief by them, fictions adoring things unevidenced with tinsel splendor, forming them into cloud-castles, making us half-believe through pleasant plausibilities.

causality > responsibility > complicity > culpability

the dipping method of philosophy -- taking a passage by chance and reflecting on it and the association it brings

Talk of social construction often confuses cases where we construct through social interaction with cases where we are constructed by way of social interaction.

Direct accessibility is a causal notion.

We always in practice take intelligible abstract objects to be part of the common environment shared with others.

learning by co-laboring

When people talk about agreement in the sciences, they generally talk about families of things that are in fact interpreted in very different ways; when people talk about disagreement in philosophy, they usually are talking about very particularly and distinctly conceived positions that include particular interpretations.

stage persons and play persons (e.g., in role-playing games or video games)

To say that God created the world for His glory is to say that He created it for the union of intelligent creatures to Himself.

light as 'the form of first acting body, by which lower bodies act'

sequential causation
(1) simultaneous causation; A causes B in particular respect x
(2) identity through time of B in respect x
(3) simultaneous causation: B in respect x causes C in respect y
-- thus C in respect y preserves a dependence on A despite temporally measurable gap
-- waves seem particularly suitable for an explaantion of roughly this sort

Kant's claim about the sovereign in the MM can only properly apply to God; all human sovereigns have rights because they have duties, and there are conditions under which they can be forced to do the latter, and no human legislation is the highest legislation except secundum quid.

It is pointless to criticize, rather than simply correct, the scientific inaccuracies of the past, because no one who does so is in fact free of scientific inaccuracy, and certainly not free of inaccuracies not yet discovered by the sciences.

extension, intension, limitation (partition from negative complement)

Kant's categories as the logical ways judgments about reality can be related to temporal measurements

"A purely passive being knows not, and cannot know, either itself or any other thing." Cousin
"Kant has fallen into a grave error, in thinking that the questions raised in the antinomies necessarily require teh same method of solution, viz. reasoning." 
"What are the characteristics of a moral law? Necessity and universality. But are not these the characteristics of all the principles which Kant has recognized in the metaphysics, of the principle of contradiction, for example?"

'What begins to exist has a cause' as a condition for applying mathematics to the physical world

An advocate who did not have different arguments for different judges, but only repeated the same thing regardless of court and context, would be incompetent; and pretending that having many reasons for a conclusion makes it less certain, is a sign of stupidity.

the transcendental conditions of consensus gentium and consensus sapientorum

We calibrate individual reason in light of the reason of others.

All of the principles of speculative reason are relevant to practical and moral action, always contextually and sometimes with respect to the practical action as such.

"A merely logical philosophy may die of inanition, and a sensational philosophy of paralysis; but the nature of the disease that killed it matters little to the corpse." Edward Caird

Kant's Humean 'awakening' was only possible because Kant was already tending in that direction, and Hume broke some final restraints.

the co-worldedness of individual substances

Besides space and time, the forms of sense would have to include something like forcefulness/robustness/realness, where this is understood as structuring how we sense things with respect to other things.

"Substance, causality, and reciprocity are only imperfect expressions of that conception of unity in difference, which, in a higher form, appears as the idea of final cause, and which ultimately reveals itself as the idea of self-consciousness. In determining inorganic objects, we may not find it necessary to use any but the first order of categories; when we come to the organic world we require, as Kant himself maintains, the second order: and when we react the spiritual world, we can accomplish our purpose of making it intelligible with nothing less than the third." E. Caird
(This seems very strong and defensible *as a reasponse to Kant*; Caird is right that Kant's own principles and approach sometimes suggest something like this.)

Organisms can only be understood in terms of systems of possibilities formed by causal processes and constraints of actually existing things.

Regulation of changing things requires either enduring barrier to deviation or recurring correction of deviations or both.

Our conception of what happens is a conception of something 'being happened'.

Human beings require friendship to solidify their pursuit of virtue.

In roleplaying games, optimizing practices arise from running very specific parties through very generic stories. (This is precisely how D&D structures itself, giving lots of framework for character building and much less assistance to storybuilding, which is largely limited by the DM's ingenuity in using very constraining character mechanics.)

The only way to interpret other human beings is to interpret them as having a generic aptitude to truth, and we cannot inquire without taking ourselves to have it.

the opinion-clashing method of philosophizing

liberalism as rpg politics: 'the most interesting play possibilities to the greatest number of participants for the longest period of time possible' (Gygax)

Some things, like the laws of nature, or the decline of civilization, or the Last Things, belong to frameworks much larger than themselves, and are related to our moral judgments as background context, not as falling under the scope of their authority.

Natural religion diversifies by custom and vow.

vow -> covenant -> grace
(note that each transfigures the previous rather than merely replacing it) (note also that each is a natural candidate for final cause of the previous)

'Encounter' is itself more primitive than vow; it is something that sometimes leads people to vow. Treating it as paradigmatic to the regime of grace is a grotesque error. 'Encounter' is useless unless it is transfigured into the covenant of friendship. Christianity is not an experience but something both more fundamental and higher than any human experience can be.

The argument from moral evil is ultimately a tendentious asking of the question, "Why is it necessary to be carefully and deliberately moral?"

We don't only just have secondary beliefs about secondary worlds (in Tolkien's sense), but also secondary beliefs about the primary world.

We are saved by faith but also inspired by it.

the contingency of philosophers relative to the faith (Gilson)

"In our own lifetime, in the names of how many doctrines, since abandoned by their very authors, have we been summoned to abandon the teaching of the Church?" Gilson
"What is common to Athens and Jerusalem is the human being."
"That a nation experiences the need to promote the development of the arts and sciences does not keep art and science from essentially belonging to an order that transcends that of the nation."
"There is Christendom where there is Christian civilization, and there is Christian civilization where there is Christian thought."

Christendom as a sign and partial healing of the broken commonwealth of humanity

The Socratic approach to philosophy is not a dogmatic commitment to ignorance, and yet this seems lost on some people.