Friday, March 06, 2026

Dashed Off VIII

This completes the notebook finished in November of 2024.

 

The death that haunts us due to original sin is not merely corporeal, but also moral, jural, and sacral. We are doomed not merely to death, but to deathly death; in dying we truly die.

From the time we are in the womb, others act on our behalf.

Poverty, chastity, etc., are preambles and preparations for charity, each being a discipline that exercises and develops capacities relevant to the ardor of charity, and each being an anticipatory sign of some aspect of charity.

Punishment needs to rehabilitate not only the offender but also the social order.

Most of the concerns about 'AI ethics' arise from thinking of AI as a consequentialist engine.

To say 'X is Y for practical purposes' is to say X and Y are at least approximatey equivalent in matters relevant to the specific practical purposes in question.

"Where reason is lively, and mixes itself with some propensity, it ought to be assented to. Where it does not, it never can have any title to operate upon us." Hume
-- Both ought and title here are peculiar. It is odd to think of reason as requiring title "to operate upon us", when it is us, and it is unclear what 'ought' could actually be established to which this title is relevant.

You have not begun to understand the problem of evil until you have looked in the mirror.

"It is a great misfortune to have learned the catechism *against* someone." De Lubac

"Grace gives us, not ony the freedom necessary for true friendship with God, but also the other condition of friendship, equality." Scheeben
"The natural consequence of the Incarnation is to confer on men the right and power to become children of God."

contrastive juxtaposition as a method of sketch writing

Hope is a sort of alliance with greater powers.

Political borders are always symbolically structured.

Utilitarianism is an ethics of symptoms.

"History is the signature of the soul's intellectuality, for the human soul is an intelligence living by motion at the level of intelligibility found in matter." Pegis

We obviously do not value people only by valuing their interests.

GDH Cole and Harold Laski on pluralism of societies

meanings of "the real world"
(1) all that of which true things can be said
(2) that which is not merely dreamed
(3) that which is not merely fictional
(4) that with respect to which responsibility is possible
-- all of these are distinct, but they are often confused

All stories are capable of enchanting history.

the draw of a tale

Dooyeweerd's criticism of cosmological arguments on the basis of a purported antinomy of causality and normative responsibility, due to the seamless chain, seems to create insuperable problems for Reformed theology of providence, which seems to require not only that God be the Origin of causality but also the ultimate cause actually causing.

existence, causality, purpose

Christianity as co-confession

The first and fundamental task of any apologist is to tell the story.

We propositionalize in order to trust and to communicate trust.

The water flows, the earth to grace,
in driving streams that interlace
like friend with friend in joining hand
to cool and freshen thirsty land.

apologetics
-- the path of theoretical reason
-- -- -- (1) demonstrative (proof)
-- -- -- (2) theoretical-dialectical (theoretical probability)
-- the path of practical reason
-- -- -- (1) practical-dialectical or deliberative (practical presumption)
-- -- -- (2) rhetorical (persuasiveness)
-- the path of reasoned imagination
-- -- -- (1) rhetorical-poetical (plausibility)
-- -- -- (2) poetical (suggestiveness)

Contingent historical truths presuppose eternal truths of reason.

(1) We experience things that are derivatively intelligible by nature.
(2) What is derivatively intelligible by nature requires what is nonderivatively intelligible by nature.
Therefore, etc.

entropy as measure of quantity of microstates associated with a classification

combinatorially possible but causally inaccessible possible worlds

eigenstates : actually possible states :: eigenvalues : probabilities

To think intuitively is to think substantively, to think as a stable being able to be completed by other stable being.

The bodies we actually experience are not merely extensive but also intensive and protensive -- that is, they are clearly not only quantiative but also qualitative and active.

The modern world is a continual chasing after the incidental rather than the substantial.

sacramentum ligni vitae fructus

the feeling of finding as a modality of our sense of novelty

testimony : longbow :: argument : crossbow (Bacon, cf. Johnson)

There is always time for patience.

apparent timelines (as experienced) + effective timelines (causally unified) --> reconciled unified timeline
-- this is a common pattern in historical work, in detective work, in some experimental work, etc.

world-building as machinery for extrinsic consistency

There are very few metrics by which modern Europe or the US are more pluralistic than the Roman Empire.

As being itself, God is exemplar principle both of res and of aliquid, of quiddity and of alterity, of integrity and of diversity.

alethic, epistemic, and deontic models/interpretations of validity

abortion as alienation of humanity, particularly with respect to humanity as situating us in an enduring community of human persons

value for a human-friendly ecosystem and the ethical implications of this value

integral human ecology & the virtue of temperance

Scientific classifications are based on functions in experiment, in model, and in theory.

Many schemes of distributive justice falsely assume that resources and money are always jural goods.

solution-finding by resemblance, by contiguity, and by causation

"People are not bound to do anything beyond their power except in a way made possible for them." Aquinas (Quodl. 2.4.1)

Children are in the moral, juridical, and sacral womb; they remain so longer than they remain in the physical womb.

Children have reason but must learn to use it.

figural goods and human sacrality

Contracts are simultaneously moral, jural, and sacral.

basic facts of human experience that serve as leverage points for apologetics
(1) living in a world
(2) being part of a community of minds
(3) being under authority (e.g., in conscience)
(4) having a sense of one's own mind
(5) the existence of the faith

Humanity is partly instrumental to itself; human nature is self-instrumentating and self-instrumentated, although necessarily it is both only to an extent.

"Fight the enemy with the weapons he lacks." Suvarov
"Train hard, fight easy."

A vow of celibacy begins as a form of honor, develops into a kind of moral integrity, and is perfected into an expression of sanctity. This is common to all religious vows, although it can sometimes be seen with particular clarity in matters of celibacy.

The concept of a field in physics cannot be formulated without assuming that we can determine some facts about the future from some facts about the past, with mathematical rigor.

Reason is the most useful tool of a cursorial hunter hunting large or dangerous prey.

Bishops and priests share the highest power with respect to the Eucharist (consecrating it), but bishops have it in a higher mode.

In civil society there are necessary roles that require *formal practices of fortitude* to systematize -- e.g., hunting, soldiering, enforcing, firefighting, civil defense, etc. The same is true of ecclesial society; hence the sacrament of confirmation.

As the baptismal character in heaven will continue to be a badge of citizenship, so the confirmational character will continue in heaven to be a badge of formal service, as will the ordinational character.

present consciousness as overlap of memory and anticipation
-- memory and anticipation are in fact not sharpy distinct, although we tend to treat them as so; what is happening now is both remembered and anticipated, although in different respects

Aesthetic responses to the problem of evil are entirely adequate where evil is conceived as the difficult or unpleasant.

In the problem of evil, aesthetic evil requires an aesthetic solution,  moral evil a moral solution, juridical evil a juridical solution, and sacrilegious evil a sacred solution. All of these are justifiable in general terms, but they are unified only in Christ.

We tend to think of potentiality in terms of time's positive numbers (after), but nothing prevents considering it in terms of time's negative numbers (before). Things have a back-potential to what they were before.

Conservation laws designate the material subject(s) of things and systems of things in relation to moving causes.

Scripture as such is a symbol of providence, of Tradition, and of Christ.

The person in the present is symbol of the same person in the past and in the future; but interestingly enough, in both ways we tend to see the symbolism as a symbolism of possibilities -- the present adult is symbol of the promise and potential (perhaps tragic potential) of the past child, and of the possibilities of the future self. (This is, I think, what makes this symbolism more than 'A standing in for A'.)

It takes rational work for the human mind to see all the truth even in obviously true things.

Literature and experiment both make extensive use of our ability to hypothesize.

forms of play in common RPG's
(1) rollplay
(2) roleplay
(3) GM narration
(4) GM-player negotiation
player experiences: competition, argument, negotiation, discovery, narration

joint attention --> referential overlap

conditions of participating in a class, of being recognizable as being in a class, of classification change

forms of game success: diversion, victory, story formation

Sun - pride; Moon - envy; Mercury - avaraice; Venus -lust; Mars - wrath; Jupiter - gluttony; Saturn - sloth

"A device is easy to use when there is visibility to the set of possible actions, where the controls and displays exploit natural mappings." Donald A. Norman
"The designer must assume that all possible errors will occur and design so as to minimize the chance of the error in the first place, or its effects once it gets made. Errors should be easy to detect, they should have minimal consequences, and, if possible, their effects should be reversible."

People have difficulty with mathematics because mathematicians do not design it for general users but for themselves.

subgames in RPG's: FIND, FIGHT, FLEE, HIDE, TRADE

Kant holds that reference to the beautiful as the symbol of the morally good is something "every man postulates in others as a duty."

Cave paintings are often of big, striking animals; herd animals and majestic predators tend to be heavily represented in comparison with all others. This suggests to me that they were either memory-recordings (that great time we saw the huge herd of horses) or storytelling instruments. The relation between paintings and cave wall structure, suggesting a pareidolic origin, perhaps indicates the latter in at least many cases, and at least in teh sense that connection to memory is only generic.

Painted hands in caves are of all kinds, and one can occasionally find children's hands on ceilings -- which is suggestive of a parenting practice we can recognize today.

force : charge :: distance : voltage

Considering trade-offs requires first establishing a point and measure for comparison.

the social intellectual power of conversation/dialogue

"One should not give assent lightly to doubtful things." Aquinas (QQ 3.4.2)

officious metonymy as a way of organizing abstractions

the poetic apparatus of a culture (e.g., Renaissance use of Greco-Roman mythology, modern use of superhero tropes, the material of national epics, the Matter of Britain, etc.)

Much modern paganism is organized on a principle of hospitality, a making-hospitable for powers and effects.

The ancient Israelites shared many customs, including religious customs, with the surrounding nations. The Torah did not forbid them all, but only the groves, the idols, the necromancies, and the sexual disruptions.

social ontology as an expression of human viceregency

Responsibility for life begins with physical union, prior even to conception.

"Only a man can develop the properties of men; ony a person can develop the properties of persons." Rhonheimer

Evidence is generally not precisely focused enough to pick out all the options in a way to give precise probabilities; for any piece of evidence, there are usually distinctions among options that are not legible in terms of it.

It is a fundamental part of any serious relationship to and wtih a person to recognize that they are more than your experiences of them.

It is friendship that teaches us how to respect human dignity.

Act in such a way as to treat every person as someone with whom one could in principle have a friendly relation.

a moral person in a moral society in a moral world

A word with an incoherent definition may be used to refer to something real.

problem compressibility: a problem that is very complex may be solved by 'compression' into simpler problem(s)
methods of problem compression:
(1) analysis into subproblems
(2) analogy to solved problems
(3) idealization (removing the secondary and minor)
(4) guess - check - rigorously examine success or failure
(5) postulation of simplifying assumptions

The human mind loves exploring systems of things; we are drawn to the combination of system and discovery.

Perception involves an already-cognition and a to-be-cognition, a receiving into memory and an anticipatory readying for response.

The pope both succeeds Peter and assists under him, being Peter's vicar in the militant service.

One of the means by which society shapes the mind is by selectively raising and lowering the cost of enunciation.

The right of vicinage primarily works by restricting the abuse of jury selection by the state and its prosecution.

Memory is always the first and most basic bureaucratic record, and much of bureaucracy is the externalization of aspects of it, for regularizing procedures and review.

Thursday, March 05, 2026

The Immobility of the Angelic Will

 There was a dispute among various scholastics about whether the angelic will was 'immobile' -- that is, whether angelic choices could be undone. St. Thomas says yes, a number of others, like Scotus and Suarez, say no. I think St. Thomas is right, for a number of reasons both philosophical and theological; I think the 'no' side over-assimilates angels to human beings when in reality, despite the things we as rational beings have in common with them, angels would have to be very alien to us.

What is this immobility like? Whenever we get beyond a very general framework, there is always a speculative element in thinking about angels, but I think of the immobility of the angelic will as being like tree rings. Angels, being intellectual creatures, have free will; but every angelic choice is a choice of what to be. Angels don't undergo constant change the way we do; the change they do have is intellectual and volitional -- their only changes are learning and choosing.  The scholastics expressed this by saying that we are temporal, but angels are aeviternal. Every change for an angel is a new age or era or epoch, an aevum. But all of this means that all angelic change is cumulative. Like a new ring in a growing tree, every angelic choice is, when added, just part of what the angel is, the angel's adding of a new aevum to its being. Wheels within wheels: every choice is a newly selected circle added to the circles that have already been selected -- a new way it is, added to the ways it already is. When an angel chooses, it chooses what it always will be. Every choice becomes part of every choice after; every choice is a choice of what kinds of choices the angel will ever make.

We have stories of angels sinning; we have none, of any value, of angels repenting their sins. When an angel falls, it has chosen to be fallen, and because it is a purely immortal being, its being fallen is contained in every other choice it will ever make.

This is not our own experience, but it is perhaps just imaginable that human beings could also have been this way. The story of the Garden gives us a sort of picture of how it could have happened. God puts Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, and allows them full rein, except that they cannot eat of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in the center of the Garden, because if they do, they will die. The words are put very strongly; we could translate it as "Dying, you shall die" or "You shall die dyingly" or "You shall really die" or "You shall die to the utmost" or "You will absolutely die".

Then, we are told, Adam and Eve did eat of the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, and the Lord God said, "Man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil." (Note the 'us'.) But lest man should put out his hand and eat of the Tree of Life and live forever, God drove man out of the Garden. 

A punishment, to be sure. But also salvation. Fallen angels do not repent their sins; their choices are as immortal as they are. But we are mortal, and we are always dying, and our choices can die in our dying. That does not mean it is easy. But if we ate of the Tree of Life and became like the angels not just in knowledge but also in life, our sins would inevitably be part of us forever, like tree rings.

It is a point that St. Thomas very, very occasionally notes, getting it ultimately from St. John Damascene: our salvation consists in God using our mortality against our sinfulness. We can repent because who we are in our choices can die and be buried. We can be saved, and raised to glory, because we can die with Christ and be raised to walk in newness of life. At least, we can until we either reach our utmost death or receive everlasting life, until we have the immobility of will that comes with spiritual death or with the completion of rebirth into undying glory. Then we will be like the angels.

Wednesday, March 04, 2026

I Got Your Letter, and the Birds

 Dear March—Come in— 
by Emily Dickinson

 Dear March—Come in—
How glad I am—
I hoped for you before—
Put down your Hat—
You must have walked—
How out of Breath you are—
Dear March, how are you, and the Rest—
Did you leave Nature well—
Oh March, Come right upstairs with me—
I have so much to tell—

 I got your Letter, and the Birds—
The Maples never knew that you were coming—
I declare - how Red their Faces grew—
But March, forgive me—
And all those Hills you left for me to Hue—
There was no Purple suitable—
You took it all with you—

 Who knocks? That April—
Lock the Door—
I will not be pursued—
He stayed away a Year to call
When I am occupied—
But trifles look so trivial
As soon as you have come

 That blame is just as dear as Praise
And Praise as mere as Blame—

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

The Honest Pleasure of Developing Knowledge for Oneself

 It seems as if Infinite Wisdom delighted in adopting with human beings the process known as the Socratic Method, by which the most difficult truths are easily elicited from the lips of illiterate persons and of children; the secret simply consisting of a few interrogatives skilfully arranged in a certain order. In this way, I believe, does God act towards His creatures. He ordains that things which are marvellous, and wholly at variance with their modes of thinking, should happen before the eyes of men, that being struck with wonder at the novelty, they may feel prompted to direct their attention to investigating the hidden causes of things. He does not wish to say everything Himself, because, being good, He does not wish His beloved creature, man, to remain idle and inert, or to be deprived of the noble gratification and merit which he can gain by instructing himself in many things. To this end, He has endowed man with the faculty of knowing, that he may enjoy the honest pleasure of developing knowledge for himself, of being in part his own teacher.

[Bl. Antonio Rosmini, Theodicy, Volume 1, p. 7.]

Monday, March 02, 2026

Links of Note

 * Gregory B. Sadler, What Precisely Is Anselm's Single Argument in the Proslogion?

* Virginia Weaver, you are the celestial love song, at "Overlong Memories"

* Fr. Christopher Poore, Who was Raïssa Maritain? The Spiritual Mother Behind Vatican II, at "Drawn from the Chalice"

* Michael Pakaluk has a brief but nice discussion of the principles of Catholic Social Teaching (scroll down).

* Raphael, Truth and Selfhood in Augustine's Thought, at "A Just Logos"

* Rhishi Pethe, How packaged salads took over America, at "Software is Feeding the World"

* Manuel Dahlquist, Temporal Propositiones and the Logic of Possibility in John Buridan (PDF)

* Danielle Coon, Sigrid Undset on the compulsion of conversion, at "Strange Veritas"

* The Austen Family Music Books -- an online collection of eighteen music books owned by the Austen family.

* Barnes, The Adjacent Case, on what it is like to be a bat and similar questions

* Edward Feser, Xenophanes and natural theology

* James Chastek, Agents are instruments of ends, at "Just Thomism"

* Dr. Andrew Higgins, Exploring Invented Languages: The Invented Tongue of Angels in In Tenga Bithnúa, at "Elvish Musings"

* Juan Garcia Torres, Leibniz on the PSR as a Regulative Principle of Rational Inquiry (PDF)

* Brad Skow, Iambic Pentameter as Chicken Sexing, at "Mostly Aesthetics"

* Jacob Allee, Till We Have Faces, at "Study the Great Books"

* Robert Keim, Gerard Manley Hopkins: Priest, Professor, Poet, at "Poetic Knowledge"

Sunday, March 01, 2026

Habitude XXVII

 To the second one proceeds thus. It seems that moral virtue is not distinguished from intellectual virtue. For Augustine says, in the book De Civ. Dei, that virtue is the craft of rightly living. But craft is intellectual virtue. Therefore moral virtue does not differ from intellectual virtue.

Further, most put knowledge in the definition of moral virtues, just as some define that perseverance is knowledge or habitude of those things that must be held or not held, and holiness is knowledge making us faithful and serving in things just before God. But knowledge is intellectual virtue. Thus moral virtue ought not to be distinguished from intellectual.

Further, Augustine says, in Soliloq. I, that virtue is right and complete reason. But this pertains to intellectual virtue, as is clear in Ethic. VI. Therefore moral virtue is not distinct from intellectual.

Further, nothing is distinguished from that which is put in its definition. But intellectual virtue is put in the definition of moral virtue, for the Philosopher says, in Ethic. II, that virtue is choosing habit existing in the mean determined by reason as the wise would determine it. Now this sort of right reason determining the mean of moral virtue pertains to intellectual virtue, as is said in Ethic. VI. Therefore moral is not distinguished from intellectual virtue.

But contrariwise is what is said in Ethic. I, that virtue is determined according to this difference, for we call some of these intellectual but others moral.

I reply that it must be said that the first principle of all human work is reason, and whatever other principles of human works are found, in some way obey reason; but in diverse ways. For some obey reason wholly under its authority [ad nutum], without any contradiction, like bodily members, if it is consistent with their nature, for immediately at the command [imperium] of reason, hand or foot is moved to work. Whence the Philosopher says, in Polit. I, that soul rules body with despotic principality, that is, as lord over slave who has no right to contradict. Thefore some have assumed that all active principles that are in a human being have themselves to reason in this way. Were this true, it would suffice that reason be complete in order to act well. Thus, since virtue is habitude by which we are completed for acting well, it would follow that it is in reason alone, and thus there would be no virtue save the intellectual. And this was the opinion of Socrates, who said that all virtues were prudences, as is said in Ethic. VI. Thus he held that the human being in whom knowledge existed was not able to sin, but whoever sinned, sinned from ignorance. 

But this proceeds from a false supposition. For the striving [appetitiva] part obeys reason not wholly under its authority [ad nutum], but with some contradiction; thus the Philosopher says, in Polit. I, that reason commands the striving with civil principality, to wit, that by which one presides over the free, who have the right to contradict in something. Thus Augustine says, on the Psalms, that sometimes understanding precedes and a slow or no affect follows, inasmuch as sometimes this is done inasmuch as passions or habitudes of the striving part act so that the use of reason is impeded. And according to this, it is somewhat true what Socrates said, that knowledge being present, one does not sin; however, only if this is extended to use of reason in particular choice [in particulari eligibili]. 

So, therefore, in order for a human being to act well, it is required that reason not only be well disposed through habitude of intellectual virtue, but also that the striving impulse be well disposed through habitude of moral virtue. Therefore, just as striving is distinguished from reason, so moral virtue is distinguished from intellectual. Hence, just as striving is the principle of human act according as it participates reason in some way, so moral habitude has the notion of human virtue, inasmuch as it conforms to reason.

To the first therefore it must be said that Augustine commonly uses 'craft' for any right reason. And so under craft is included prudence, which is right reason of enactibles, as craft is right reason of makeables. And according to this, what he says, that virtue is craft of rightly living, is essentially appropriate to prudence, but by participation to other virtues, according as they are directed by prudence.

To the second it must be said that such definitions, by whomsoever they are found to be given, proceeded from the Socratic opinion, and are to be explained in the way that was previously said with respect to craft.

And likewise this must be said to the third.

To the fourth it must be said that right reason, which is according to prudence, is put in the definition of moral virtue, not as part of its essence, but as something participated in all moral virtues, inasmuch as prudence directs all moral virtues.

[Thomas Aquinas, ST 2-1.58.2, my translation. The Latin is here, the Dominican Fathers translation is here.]

Quick Note

 As some have heard on the news, there was a mass shooting here in downtown Austin in the early morning, in which three people died and a number of others are injured. It took place at a popular bar on West Sixth Street. The FBI says there are indicators of terrorism, and it does seem to have been politically motivated in a very general sense. The shooter (who is one of the three who died) currently appears from the news to have been a Senegalese man who lives in the area, acting on his own in response to the current American bombing of Iran. Beyond that there's not much known at the present.