THE PLAY FOUNDATION (Play is a meta intelligence) The philosophical, psychological, emotional, social, physical ,environmental and creative value of Play. |
|
As you read below hold on to your Lego Brick. hold on to the idea that Meta is playing and that A meta Model is not only behind The world of Physics it is together with physics and changes the world of physics James
Findlay (play is a Meta Intelligence)
Metaphysics
is that portion of philosophy which treats of the most general and
fundamental principles underlying all reality and all knowledge. I. THE NAME The
word metaphysics is formed from the Greek meta ta phusika,
a title which, about the year A.D. 70, was related by Andronicus of
Rhodes to that collection of Aristotelean
treatises which since then goes by the name of the "Metaphysics".
Aristotle
himself had referred to that portion of philosophy as "the
theological science" (theologikê), because it
culminated in the consideration of the nature
of God,
and as "first philosophy" (prôtê philosophia),
both because it considered the first causes of things, and because,
in his estimation, it is first in importance. The editor, however,
overlooked both these titles, and, because he believed that that
part of the Aristotelean corpus came
naturally after the physical treatises, he entitled it "after
the physics". This is the historical origin of the term.
However, once the name was given, the commentators sought to find
intrinsic reasons for its appropriateness. For instance, it was
understood to mean "the science of the world beyond
nature", that is, the science of the immaterial. Again, it was
understood to refer to the chronological or pedagogical order among
our philosophical studies, so that the "metaphysical sciences
would mean, those which we study after having mastered the sciences
which deal with the physical world" (St. Thomas, "In Lib,
Boeth. de Trin.", V, 1). In the widespread, though erroneous,
use of the term in current popular literature, there is a remnant of
the notion that metaphysical means ultraphysical: thus, "metaphysical
healing" means healing by means of remedies which are not
physical. II. DEFINITION The
term metaphysics, as used by one school of philosophers, is
narrowed down to mean the science of mental phenomena and of the
laws of mind, In this sense, it is employed, for instance, by
Hamilton ("Lectures on Metaph.", Lect. VII) as synonynous
with psychology. Hamilton holds that empirical psychology, or the
phenomenology of mind, treats of the facts of consciousness,
rational psychology, or the nomology of mind, treats of the laws of
mental phenomena, and metaphysics, or inferential psychology, treats
of the results derived from the study of the facts and laws of mind.
This use of the term metaphysics is unfortunate because it
rests on Descartes's false assumption that the method in metaphysics
is subjective, in other words, that all the conclusions of
metaphysics are based on the study of subjective, or mental,
phenemona. Taking
a wider view of the scope and method of metaphysics, the followers
of Aristotle
and many who do not acknowledge Aristotle
as a leader in philosophy define the science in terms of all
reality, both objective and subjective. Here five forms of
definition are offered which ultimately mean one and the same thing:
(1)
Metaphysics is the science of being as being. This
is Aristotle's
definition (peri tou ontos ê on) -- Met., VI, 1026 a, 31).
In this definition metaphysics is placed in the genus
"science". As a science, it has, in common with other
sciences, this characteristic that it seeks a knowledge of things in
their causes. What is peculiar to metaphysics is the difference
"of being as being". In this phrase are combined at once
the material object and the formal object of metaphysics. The
material object is being, the whole world of reality, whether
subjective or objective, possible or actual, abstract or concrete,
immaterial or material, infinite or finite. Everything that exists
comes within the scope of metaphysical inquiry. Other sciences are
restricted to one or several departments of being: physics has its
limited field of inquiry, mathematics is concerned only with tbose
things which have quantity. Metaphysics knows no such restrictions.
Its domain is all reality. For instance, the human soul and God,
because they have neither colour nor weight, thermic nor electric
properties, do not fall within the scope of the physicist's
investigation; because they are devoid of quantity, they do not come
within the field of inquiry of the mathematician. But, since they
are beings, they do come within the domain of metaphysical
investigation. The material object of metaphysics is, therefore, alI
being. As Aristotle
says (Met., IV, 1004 a, 34): "It is the function of the
philosopher to be able to investigate all things." Its formal
object is also "being", or "beingness." The
formal object of any science is that particular phase, quality, or
aspect of things which interests that science in a specific way.
Man, for instance, is the material object of psychology, ethics,
sociology, anthropology, philology, and various other sciences. The
formal object, however, of each of these is different. The formal
object of psychology is mental phenomena and the subject of them;
the formal object of ethics is man's relation to his ultimate
destiny; that of sociology is man's relation to his fellow-men in
institutions, laws, customs, etc.; that of anthropology is the
origin of man, distinction of races, etc.; that of philology is
man's use of articulate speech. The formal object of the physical
group generally is the so-called physical properties of bodies, such
as light, sound, heat, molecular constitution, in general, etc. The
formal object of the mathematical group is quantity; what interests
the mathematician is not the colour, heat, etc., of an object, but
its size or bulk. Similarly the metaphysician is interested in a
specific way neither in the physical nor the mathematical qualities
of things, but in their entity or beingness. If, then, physics is
the science of being as affected by physical properties, and
mathematics is the science of being as possessing quantity,
metaphysics is the science of being as being. Since the material
object of metaphysics is all being, the metaphysician is interested
in everything that is or can be. Since the formal object of his
study is, again, being, the point of view of metaphysics is
different from that of the other sciences. The metaphysician studies
all reality; still, the resulting science is not a summing up of the
departmental sciences which deal with portions of reality, because
his point of view is different from that of the student of the
departmental sciences. (2)
Metaphysics is the science of immaterial being. The
first science", says Aristotle
(Met., VI, 1026 a, 16), "deals with things which are both
separate (from matter) and unmovable". In this connection the
scholastics (cf. St. Thom., ibid.), distinguished two kinds
of immaterial:
Metaphysics,
in so far as it treats of immaterial beings, is called special
metaphysics and is divided into rational psychology, which treats of
the human soul, rational theology, which treats of the existence
and attributes
of God,
and cosmology, which treats of the ultimate principles of the
universe. Metaphysics in so far as it treats of immaterial concepts,
of those general notions in which matter is not included, is called
general metaphysics, or ontology, that is, the science of Being.
Taking the term now in its widest sense, so as to include both
general and special metaphysics, when we say that metaphysics is the
science of the immaterial, we mean that whatever exists whether it
is an immaterial being or a material being so long as it offers to
our consideration immaterial concepts, such as substance or cause,
is the object of metaphysical investigation. In this way, it becomes
evident that this definition coincides with that given in the
preceding paragraph. (3)
Metaphysics is the science of the most abstract conceptions.
All science, according to the scholastics deals with the abstract. The
knowledge of the concrete individual objects of our experience, with
their ever changing qualities and the particular individuating
characteristics which make them to be individual (for instance, the
knowledge of this tree, of that flower, of this particular animal or
person) may be very useful knowledge, but it is not scientific.
Scientific knowledge begins, when we abstract from what makes the
thing to be individual, when we know it in the general principles
that constitute it. The first degree of abstraction is found in the
physical sciences which abstract merely from the particularizing,
individuating characteristics, and consider the general laws, or
principles, of motion, light, heat, substantial change, etc. The
mathematical sciences ascend higher in the scale of abstraction.
They leave out of consideration not only the individuating qualities
but also the physical qualities of things, and consider only
quantity and its laws. The metaphysical sciences reach the highest
point of abstraction. They prescind, or abstract, not only from
those qualities physics and mathematics abstract from, but also
leave out of consideration the determination of quantity. They
consider only Being and its highest determinations, such as
substance, cause, quality, action etc. "There is a
science", says Aristotle
(Met. IV 1003 a, 21) "which investigates being as being, and
the attributes which belong to this in virtue of its own
nature" (ta toutô huparchonta kath hauto). The
objection therefore, that metaphysics is an abstract science would,
in the estimation of the scholastics, militate not only against
metaphysics but against all the other sciences as well. The
peculiarity of metaphysics is not that it is abstract, but that it
carries the process of abstraction farther than do the other
sciences. This, however, does not make it to be unreal. On the
contrary, what is left out of consideration in metaphysics namely
individuating qualities, physical movement and specific quantity,
derive whatever reality they have as conceptions from the coneept,
Being, which is the object of metaphysics. Metaphysics, in fact, is
the most real of all the sciences precisely because by abstracting
from everything eise, it has centred, so to speak, its thought on
Being, which is the source and root of reality everywhere else in
the other sciences. (4)
Metaphysics is the science of the most universal conceptions. This would follow from the
consideration offered in the preceding paragraph because, by a well
known law of logic, the less the comprehension the greater the
extension of a term or concept. The science which deals with the
most abstract conceptions must, therefore, be the science of the
most universal conceptions. Among our ideas the most universal are
Being, and the determinations of it which are called transcendental,
namely unity, truth, goodness, and beauty, each of which is
coextensive with being itself, according to the formulas, "Every
being is one", "Every being is true", etc. Next in
universality come the highest determinations of Being in the supreme
genera, substance and accident, or, if Being be analyzed in the
order of metaphysical constitution, essence and existence, potency
and actuality. Very high up in the scale of extension will be cause
and effect. All these are included within the range of metaphysical
inquiry, and are dealt with in every scholastic manual of
metaphysics. "Being in its highest determinations" is,
then, another way of describing the object of metaphysics. Where,
however, shall we draw the line? What determinations are not highest?
For instance, are space and time determinations of Being, which are
general enough to be considered in metaphysics? The answer to these
questions is to be decided according to the dictates of practical
convenience. Many of the problems sometimes included in general
metaphysics may conveniently be treated in special parts, such as
cosmology and psychology. (5)
Metaphysics is the science of the first principles.
This definition also is given by Aristotle
(Met. IV, 1003 a, 26). Every science is an inquiry into the causes
and principles of things; this science inquires into the first
principles and highest causes, not only in the order of existence,
but also in the order of thought. It belongs, then, to metaphysics
All
these definitions are expressions of the Aristotelean
doctrine that metaphysics, like physics and mathematics, is a
science of reality, it being beyond the scope of metaphysics to
inquire whether reality is, or is not, given in experience. This
question, which is a fundamentally important one in modern
philosophy was discussed by the scholastics in that portion of logic
which they called critical, major logic, or applied logic, but which
is now generally called epistemology (see LOGIC). Nowadays however,
the epistemological problem, by a fatal mistake of method, is
assigned to metaphysics, and the result is a confusion between the
two branches of philosophy, viz. metaphysics and epistemology. In
works like Fullerton's "System of Metaphysics" (New York,
1906) and Hodgson's "Metaphysics of Experience" (London,
1898) no attempt is made to separate the two. III.
THE REJECTION OF METAPHYSICS The Rejection of Metaphysics, by many schools of philosophy in modern
times, is one of the most remarkable developments of post-Cartesian
philosophy. A difference in the point of view leads to a very great
divergence in the estimate based on metaphysical studies. On the one
side we have the verdict that metaphysics is nothing but
"transcendental moonshine", on the other, the opinion that
it is "organized common sense", or "an unusually
obstinate effort to think accurately". Materialism, naturally,
objects to the claim of metaphysics to be a science of the
immaterial. If nothing exists except matter, a science of the
immaterial has no justification. Materialists, however, forget that
the assertion, "Nothing exists except matter", is either a
summing up of the individual experience of the materialist himself,
meaning that he as never experienced anything except matter and
manifestations of matter, and then the assertion is merely of
biographical interest; or it is an affirmation regarding possible
human experience, a declaration of the impossibility of immaterial
existence, and in that sense it is a statement which in itself has a
metaphysical import. Materialism is, in fact, a metaphysical theory
of reality and is a contribution to the science which it professes
to reject. Philosophical agnosticism, which is derived ultimately
from Kant's
doctrine of the unknowableness of noumenal reality (Ding an sich),
rejects metaphysics on tbe ground that while the immaterial does,
indeed, exist, it is unknown and must remain unknowable to the
speculative reason. Kant
maintained that all metaphysical reasoning, since it attempts by
means of tbe speculative reason to go beyond experience, is doomed
to failure, because the a priori forms which the
understanding imposes on the empirical data of knowledge modify the
quality of that knowledge by making it to be transcendental, but do
not extend it beyond the realm of actual sense experience. The
followers of Kant
stigmatize as intellectual formalism the view that the speculative
reason does actually attain ultra-empirical knowledge. This is the
contention of the modernists
and other Catholic writers who are more or less influenced by Kant.
These decry rational metaphysics and offer as a substitute a
metaphysics based on sentiment, vital activity, or some other
non-rational foundation. The answer to this line of thought is a denial of its fundamental tenet,
the doctrine, namely, that the rational faculty cannot attain a
knowledge of the essential or noumenal natures of things. Gratuitous
assertion is often best refuted by categorical denial. The rejection
of metaphysics by the materialist and the Kantian
agnostic does not meet the full approval of the idealist. Instead of
banishing metaphysics from the republic of the sciences, the
idealist, having deprived it of its scientific character, elevates
it to the rank of aesthetic preeminence side by side with poetry. He
considers that it furnishes a point of view from which to
contemplate the beauty, harmony, and value of those things which
science merely explains. He holds that it is not the province of
metaphysics to assign reasons or causes, but to furnish motives for
action and enhance the value of reality. For him, its uplifting and
regenerating function is entirely independent of its alleged ability
to explain: he considers metaphysics to be, not an ontology, or
science of reality, but a teleology, or application of the principle
of purpose. That this is a function of metaphysics no one will deny.
It is only one function, however, and unless the doctrine of final
causes has its foundation in a doctrine of formal and efficient
causes, teleological metaphysics is a castle in the air. Finally,
the positivist, and the scientist whom the positivist has influenced,
reject metaphysics because all our knowledge is confined to facts
and the relations among facts. To attempt to go beyond facts and the
succession or concomitance of facts is to essay the impossible.
Causes, essences, and so forth, are terms which clothe in fictitious
garb our ignorance of the real scientific explanation. The whole
gist of positivism is contained in Hume's verdict that "it is
impossible to go beyond experience". This psychological dictum
is accepted by the philosophical positivist, as the death sentence
of metaphysics. With the scientist, however, other considerations
weigh more than the psychological argument. The scientist points to
the present condition of metaphysics; he calls attention to the fact
that, while the physical sciences have advanced by leaps and bounds,
metaphysics is still grappling with the most fundamental problems
and has not even settled the questions on which its very existence
depends. The condition of metaphysics is, indeed, such as to invite
the contempt and provoke the disdain of the scientist; the fault,
however, may lie not so much in the claims of metaphysics as in the
vagaries of the metaphysicians. IV.
RELATION OF METAPHYSICS TO OTHER SCIENCES The consideration of the
relation in which metaphysics stands, or ought to stand, to the
other sciences should result in a refutation of the positivist
contention that metaphysics is useless. In the first place,
metaphysics is the natural co-ordinating science which crowns the
unifying efforts of the other sciences. It accomplishes in the
highest plane of knowledge that process of unification towards which
the human mind tends irresistibly. Without it, the explanations and
co-ordinations attained in the lower sciences would be, perhaps,
satisfactory within the limits of those sciences, but would fail to
meet the requirements of that unifying instinct which the mind tends
to apply to knowledge in general. So long as the mind of the knower
is one, it is impossible not to attempt to bring under the most
general conceptions and principles the conclusions of the various
sciences. That is the task of metaphysics. Whenever we look around
among the contents of the mind and try to discover order and
hierarchical arrangement among them, we are attempting a system of
metaphysics. In the next place, the process of explanation which
belongs to each of the lower sciences, if pursued far enough, brings
us face to face with the demand for a metaphysical explanation. Thus,
the chemical problem of atomic or proto-atomic constitution of
bodies leads inevitably to the question, "What is matter?"
The biological problem of the nature and origin of life brings us to
the point where it is imperative to answer the query, "What is
life?" The questions: "What is substance? What is a cause?
What is quantity?" are additional examples of problems to which
physics, mathematics, etc., finally lead. Indeed, the world of
science is completely surrounded by the metaphysical world, and
every path of investigation brings us to a highroad of inquiry which
sooner or later crosses the border and leads us into metaphysics.
When therefore, the scientist rejects metaphysics, he suppresses a
natural and ineradicable tendency of the individual mind towards
unification and, at the same time, he tries to put up in every
highway and byway of his own science a barrier against further
progress in the direction of rational explanation. Besides, the
cultivation of the metaphysical habit of mind is productive of
excellent results in the sphere of general culture. The faculty of
appreciating principles as well as facts is a quality which cannot
be absent from the mind without detriment to that symmetry of
development wherein true culture consists. The scientist who objects
to metaphysics, rightly condemns the metaphysician who disdains to
consider facts. He himself, unless he cultivate the metaphysical
powers of his mind, is in danger of reaching the point where he is
incapable of appreciating principles. Both the empirical talent for
ascertaining facts and the metaphysical grasp of principles and laws
are necessary for the rounding out of man's mental powers, and there
is no reason why they should not both be cultivated. V.
RELATION OF METAPHYSICS TO THEOLOGY The nature of metaphysics determines its essential and intimate relation
to theology. Theology, it need hardly he said, derives its
conclusions from premises which are revealed, and in so far as it
does this it rises above all schools of philosophy or metaphysics.
At the same time, it is a human science, and, as such, it must
formulate its premises in exact terminology and must employ
processes of human reasoning in attaining its conclusions. For this,
it depends on metaphysics. Sometimes, indeed, as when it deals with
the supernatural mysteries of faith, theology acknowledges that
metaphysical conceptions are inadequate and metaphysical formulae
incompetent to express the truths discussed. Nevertheless, if
theology had no metaphysical formularies to rely upon, it could
neither express its premises nor deduce its conclusion in a
scientific manner. Again, theology relies on metaphysics to prove
certain truths, called the preambula, which are not revealed
but are nevertheless presupposed before revelation can be considered
reasonable or possible. These truths are not the foundation on which
we rest our supernatural faith. If they should fail, faith would not
suffer, though theology should then be rebuilt on another foundation.
Furthermore, metaphysics, as Aristotle
pointed out, culminates in the discussion of the existence
and nature
of God.
God
is the object of theology. It is only natural, therefore, that
metaphysics and theology should have many points of contact, and
that the latter should rely on the former. Finally, since all truth
is one, both in the source from which it is derived, and in the
subject, the human mind, which it adorns, there must be a kinship
between two sciences which, like theology and metaphysics, treat of
the most important conceptions of the human mind. The difference in
the manner of treatment, theology relying on revelation, and
metaphysics on reason alone, does not affect the unity of purpose
and the final harmony of the conclusions of the two sciences. But, while theology thus derives assistance from metaphysics, there can
be no doubt that metaphysics has derived advantages from its close
association with theology. Pre-Christian philosophy failed to arrive
at precise metaphysical determinations of the notions of substance
and person. This defect was corrected in part by Origen, Clement,
and Athanasius, and in part by their successors, the scholastics,
the impulse in both cases being given to philosophical definition by
the requirements of theological speculation concerning the Blessed
Trinity. Pre-Christian philosophy failed to give a coherent,
satisfactory account of the origin of the world: Plato's myths and Aristotle's
doctrine of the eternity of matter could not long continue to
satisfy the Christian
mind. It was, once more, the Alexandrian School of Christian
metaphysics that, by elaborating the Biblical conception of creation
ex nihilo, gave an explanation of the origin of the universe
which is satisfactory to the metaphysician as well as to the
theologian. Finally, the Catholic doctrine of Transubstantiation, as
discussed by the scholastics, gave occasion for a more definite and
detailed determination of the metaphysical conception of accident in
general and of quantity in particular. VI.
THE METHOD OF METAPHYSICS Among the objections most
frequently urged against metaphysics, especially against scholastic
metaphysics, is the unscientific character of its method. The
metaphysician, we are told, pursues the a priori path of
knowledge; he neglects or even condemns the use of the a
posteriori empirical method which is employed with so much
profit in the investigation of nature; he spins as Bacon says, the
threads of his metaphysical fabric from the contents of his own
mind, as the spider spins her web from the substance of her body,
instead of gathering from every source in the world around him the
materials for his study, and then working them up into metaphysical
principles, as the bee gathers nectar from the flowers and
elaborates it into honey. In order to clear up the misunderstanding
which underlies this objection, it is necessary to remark that there
are three kinds of method:
The
second method is pre-eminently the method of the Cartesians, who,
like their leader, Descartes, strive to build the whole edifice of
philosophy on the foundation furnished by reflection on our
thought-processes: Cogito, ergo sum. It is also the method of
the Kantians,
who, rejecting the psychological basis of metaphysics as unsafe,
build on the moral basis, the categorical imperative: their line of
reasoning is "I ought, therefore I am free", etc. The
third is the method of those who, rejecting the Aristotelean
conceptions, essence, substance, cause etc., substitute so-called
empirical conceptions of force mass, and so forth, under which they
attempt to subsume in a system of empirico-critical metaphysics the
conceptions peculiar to the various sciences. The first method is
admittedly unscientific (in the popular sense of the word) and is
adopted only by those philosophers who, like Plato, consider that
the true source of philosophical knowledge is above us not in the
world around and beneath us. If the formula universalia ante rem
(see UNIVERSALS) is taken in the exclusive sense, then we may not
look to experience, but to intuition of a higher order of truth, for
our metaphysical principles. It is a calumny which originated in
ignorance perhaps, more than in prejudice, that the scholastics
followed this a priori method in metaphysics. True, the
scholastic philosopher often invokes such principles as "Agere
sequitur esse" "Quidquid recipitur per modum recipientis
recipitur" etc. and therefrom deduces metaphysical conclusions.
If, however, we examine more closely, if we go back from the
"Summa", or text-book, where the adage is quoted without
proof, to the "Commentary on Aristotle" where the axiom is
first introduced, we shall find that it is proved by inductive or
empirical argument, and is therefore a legitimate premise from which
to deduce other truths. In point of fact, the scholastics use a
method which is at once a priori and a posteriori, and
the latter both in the objective and the subjective sense. In their
exposition of truth they naturally use the a priori, or
deductive, method, In their investigation of truth they explore
empirically both the world of mental phenomena within us, and the
world of physical phenomena without us, for the purpose of building
up inductively those metaphysical principles from which they proceed.
It may be conceded that many of the later scholastics are too ready
to invoke authority instead of investigating; it may be conceded,
even, that the greatest of the scholastics were too dependent on
books, especially on Aristotle's
works, for their knowledge of nature. But, in principle, at least,
the best representatives of scholasticism recognized that in
philosophy the argument from authority is the weakest argument, and
if the circumstances in which they lived and wrote made it
imperative on them to master the contents of Aristotle's
writings on natural science, it must, nevertheless, be granted by
every fair minded critic that in metaphysics at least they improved
on the doctrines of the Stagyrite.
VII.
HISTORY OF METAPHYSICS The history of metaphysics naturally falls into the same divisions as the
history of philosophy in general. In a brief outline of the course
which metaphysical speculation has followed, it will be possible to
consider only the principal stages, namely (1)
Hindu philosophy, (2) Greek
philosophy, (3)
Early Christian philosophy, (4)
Medieval philosophy, (5)
Modern philosophy. (1)
Hindu Philosophy
Of all the peoples of
antiquity, the Hindus were the most successful in rising immediately
from the mythological explanation of the universe to an explanation
in terms of metaphysics. Apparently without passing through the
intermediary stage of scientific explanation, they reached at once
the heights of the metaphysical point of view. From polytheism or
monotheism they proceeded very early to pantheism, and from that to
a monistic metaphysical conception of reality. Their starting-point
was the realization that man is born into a state of bondage and
that his chief business in life is to deliver himself from that
condition by means of knowledge. The knowledge, they taught, which
avails most in the struggle for freedom is this: the world of sense
phenomena is an illusion (mâya), all real things are
identical in the one supreme substance, the soul is part of this
real substance, and will ultimately return to the Whole. The real
substance is, as Max Müller remarks, spoken of as a neuter, and in
this doctrine "is contained in nuce a whole system of
philosophy" ("Six Systems of Indian Philosophy",
London, 1899, p. 60). The first, and most important of all truths,
then, is that reality is one, and each of us is identical with the
All: "That art thou" is the highest expression of
self-knowledge, and the gate to all salutary truth. Thus, the
Hindus, actuated by an ethical, or ascetic, motive, attained a
metaphysical formula to which they reduced all reality. (2)
Greek Philosophy
The first Greek
philosophers were students of nature. They were actuated not by an
ethical motive, but by a kind of scientific curiosity to know the
origins of things. There was no metaphysician among the Ionians (see
IONIAN SCHOOL OF PHlLOSOPHY). Out of the problem of origins, however,
the metaphysical problem was developed by the Eleatics and
Heraclitus. These philosophers considered that the explanations of
the Ionians -- that the world originated from water or air -- were
too naïve, relied too much on the verdict of the senses.
Consequently, they began to contrast the real truth which the mind (nous)
sees, and the illusory truth (doxa) which appears to the
senses. The Eleatics, on the one hand, asserted that the permanent
element, which they called Being, alone exists, and that change,
motion, and multiplicity are illusions. Heraclitus, on the other
hand, reached the conclusion that what mind reveals is change, which
alone is real, while permanency is only apparent, is, in fact, an
illusion of the senses. Thus, these thinkers thrust into the
foreground the problem of change and permanency. They themselves,
were not, however, wholly free from the limitations which confined
the earlier Ionians to a physical view of the problems of philosophy.
They formulated metaphysical principles of reality, but both in the
language which they used and in the mode of thought which they
adopted, they seemed to be unable to rise above the consideration of
matter and material principles. Nevertheless, they did immense
service to metaphysics by bringing out clearly the problem of change.
Socrates was primarily an
ethical teacher. Still, in laying the foundation of ethics he
formulated a theory of knowledge which had immediate application to
the problem of metaphysics. He taught that the contrast and
apparently irreconcilable contradiction between the verdict of the
mind and the deliverance of the senses disappear if we determine the
scientific conditions of true knowledge. He held that these
conditions are summed up in the processes of induction and
definition. His conclusion, therefore, is, that out of the data of
the senses, which are contingent and particular, we may form
concepts, which are the elements of true scientific knowledge. He
himself applied the doctrine to ethics. Plato, the pupil of
Socrates, carried the Socratic teaching into the region of
metaphysics. If knowledge through concepts is the only true
knowledge, it follows, says PIato, that the concept represents the
only reality, and all the reality, in the object of our knowledge.
The sum of the reality of a thing, is therefore the Idea.
Corresponding to the internal, or psychological, world of our
concepts is not only the world of our sense experience (the
shadow-world of phenomena), but also the world of Ideas, of which
our world of concepts is only a reflection, and the world of sense
phenomena, a shadow merely. That which makes anything to be what it
is, the essence, as we should call it, is the Idea of that thing
existing in the world above us. In the "thing" itself, the
phenomenon presented by the senses, there is a participation of the
Idea, limited, disfigured and debased by union with a negative
principle of limitation called matter. The metaphysical constituents
of reality are, therefore, the Ideas as positive factors and this
negative principle. From the Ideas comes all that is positive,
permanent, intelligible, eternal in the world. From the negative
principle come imperfection, negation, change, and liability to
dissolution. Thus, profiting by the epistemological doctrines of
Socrates, without losing sight of the antagonistic teachings of the
Eleatics and of Heraclitus, Plato evolved his theory of Ideas as a
metaphysical solution of the problem of change, which had a baffled
his predecessors. Aristotle
also was a follower of Socrates. He was influenced, too, by the
theory of Ideas advocated by his master, Plato. For, although he
rejected that theory, he did so after a study of it which enabled
him to view the problem of change in the light of metaphysical
principles. Like Plato, he accepted the Socratic doctrine that the
only true knowledge is knowledge of concepts. Like Plato, too, he
inferred from this that the concept must represent the reality of a
thing. But unlike Plato, he made at this point an important
distinction. The reality, he taught, which the concept represents is
in the thing which it constitutes, not as an Idea, but as an essence.
He considers that the Platonic world of Ideas is a meaningless
duplication of things: the world of essences is in, not above, nor
beyond, the world of phenomena: there is, consequently, no
contradiction between sense experience and intellectual knowledge:
the metaphysical principles of things are known by abstraction from
those individuating qualities, which are presented in sense
knowledge; the knowledge of them is ultimately empirical, and not to
be explained by an intuition which we are alleged to have enjoyed in
a previous existence. In the essence of material things Aristotle
further distinguished a twofold principle, namely the Form, which is
the source of perfection, determinateness, activity and of all
positive qualities, and the Matter, which is the source of
imperfection, indetermination, passivity and of all the limitations
and privations of a thing. Coming now to the borderland of
metaphysics and physics, Aristotle
defined the nature of causality, and distinguished four supreme
kinds of cause, Material, Formal, Efficient and Final (see CAUSE).
In addition to these contributions to the solution of the problem of
change, which had, by historical evolution, become the central
problem of metaphysics, Aristotle
contributed to metaphysics a discussion of the nature of Being in
general, and drew up a scheme of classification of things which is
known as his system of Categories. He is least satisfactory in his
treatment of the problem of the existence
and nature
of God,
a question in which, as he himself admits, all metaphysical
speculation culminates. After the time of Aristotle,
philosophy among the Greeks became centered in problems of human
destiny and human conduct. The Stoics and the Epicureans, who were
the chief representatives of this tendency, devoted attention to
questions of metaphysics, only in so far as they considered that
such questions may influence human happiness. As a result of this
subordination of metaphysics to ethics, the pantheistic materialism
of the Stoics and the materialistic monism of the Epicureans fall
far short of the perfection which the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle
attained. Contemporaneously with the Stoic and Epicurean schools, a
new school of Platonism, generally called Neo-Platonism, interested
itself very much in problems of asceticism and mysticism, and, in
connection with these problems, gave a new turn to the drift of
metaphysical speculation. The Neo-Platonists, influenced by the
monotheism of the Orientals, and, later by that of the Christians,
took up the task of explaining how the manifold, diversified,
imperfect world originated from the One, Unchangeable, and Perfect
Being. They exaggerated the Platonic doctrine of matter to the point
of maintaining that all evil, moral as well as physical, originates
from a material source. At the same time, they ascribed to the
spiritualized Ideas which they called daimones (spirits) all
actuality, intelligence, and force in the whole universe. These
intelligences were derived, they said, from the One by a process of
emanation, which is akin to the "streaming forth" of light
from the illuminating body. This system of metaphysics teaches,
therefore, that the One, and intelligences derived from the One, are
the only positive principles, while matter is the only negative
principle of things. This is the system which was most widely
accepted in pagan circles during the first centuries of the Christian
era. (3)
Early Christian Philosophy
The first heretics among the Christian
thinkers were influenced in their philosophy by Neo-Platonism. For
the most part, they adopted the Gnostic view (see GNOSTICISM) that
in the last appeal, the test of Christian
truth is not the official teaching of the Church or the exoteric
doctrine of the gospels, but a secret gnosis, a body of doctrine
imparted by Christ to the chosen few. This body of doctrine was in
reality a modified Neo-Platonism. Its most salient point was the
theory that evil is not a creation of God
but the work of the devil.
The problem of evil thus came to occupy an important place in the
philosophical systems of orthodox Christian
thinkers down to the time of St. Augustine. Other problems, too,
claimed special attention, notably the question of the origin of the
universe. From the theological controversies concerning the
mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation, arose the discussion
of the meaning of nature, substance, and person. From all these
sources sprang the Christian
Neo-Platonism of the great Alexandrian School, which included
Clement and Origen, and the later phase of Christian
Platonism exemplified by St. Augustine. In the philosophy of St.
Augustine we have the greatest constructive effort of the Christian
mind during the Patristic Era. It is a philosophy which centres in
the problems arising from the nature
of God,
and the nature and destiny of the human soul: The most crucial of
these problems is that of the existence of evil. How can evil exist
in a world created and governed by a God,
Who is at once supremely good and all-powerful? Rejecting the
Manichean theory that evil has an origin distinct from God,
St. Augustine devotes all his efforts to showing, from the nature of
evil, that it does not demand a direct efficient act on the part of God,
but only a permissive act and that this toleration of evil is
justified by the gradation of beings which results from the
existence of imperfection, and which is essential to the harmony and
variety of the universe in general. Another question which attains a
good deal of prominence in St. Augustine's metaphysics is that of
the origin of the world. All things, he teaches, were created at the
beginning, material creatures as well as angels, and the subsequent
appearance of plants, animals, and men in a chronological series is
merely the development in time of those "seeds of things"
which were implanted in the material world at the beginning. However,
St. Augustine is careful to make an exception in the case of the
individual human soul. He avoids the doctrine of preexistence which
Origen had taught, and maintains that the individual soul originates
at the same time as the body, although he is not prepared to decide
definitively whether it originates by a distinct creative act or is
derived from the souls of the child's parents (see TRADUCIANISM). (4)
Medieval Philosophy
The first scholastic philosophers devoted their attention to the
discussion of logical problems arising out of the interpretation of
the texts which were studied in the schools, such as Porphyry's
"Isagoge", and Boethius's translation of portions of Aristotle's
"Organon". From these discussions they passed to problems
of psychology, but it was not until the end of the twelfth century,
when Aristotle's
metaphysical treatise and his works on psychology became accessible
in Latin, that scholastic metaphysics rose to the dignity and
proportions of a system. By way of exception, John the Scot (see
ERIUGENA), as early as the first half of the ninth century,
developed a highly wrought system of metaphysical speculation
characterized by idealism, pantheism, and Neo-Platonic mysticism. In
the eleventh century the school of Chartres, under the influence of
Platonism, discussed in a metaphysical spirit the problems of the
nature of reality and the origin of the universe. The philosophy of the thirteenth century, represented by Alexander of
Hales, St. Bonaventure, Roger Bacon, Albert the Great, St. Thomas,
and Duns Scotus, accorded to metaphysics its place as the science
which completes and crowns the efforts of the mind to attain a
knowledge of things human and divine. It acknowledged the importance
of the relation which metaphysics bears, on the one hand, to the
other portions of philosophy, and, on the other hand, to the science
of theology. Fundamentally Aristotelean
in its conception of method and scope, the metaphysics of the golden
age of scholasticism departed from Aristotle's
teaching only to supply the defects and correct the faults which it
detected in Aristotle's
philosophy. Thus, it worked out on Aristotelean
lines the problems of person and nature, substance and accident,
cause and effect; it took up and carried to higher systematic
development St. Augustine's reconciliation of evil with the goodness
of God;
it elaborated in detail the question of the nature of matter and the
origin of the universe by God's
creative act. At the same time, the metaphysics of the schools was
obliged to face new problems which were thrust on the attention of
the schoolmen by the exegetical and educational activity of the
Arabians. Thus, it drew the line of distinction between Theism and
Pantheism, discussed the question of fatalism and free will, and
rejected the Arabian interpretation of Aristotle
which jeopardized the doctrine of personal immortality. Towards the
end of the scholastic period the appearance of the anti-metaphysicai
nominalism of Occam, Durandus, and others had the effect of driving
some of the later schoolmen to adopt an extreme a priorism in
philosophy, which more than any other single cause contributed to
bring about the antagonism between metaphysics and natural science,
which marks the era of scientific discovery. This condition, though
widespread, was not, however, universal. Men like Suarez and other
great commentators continued down to the seventeenth century to
present in their metaphysical treatises the best traditions of the
scholasticism of the thirteenth century. (5)
Modern Philosophy
At the beginning of the
modern era we find a divergence of opinion concerning the scope and
value of metaphysical speculation. On the one hand, Bacon, while
himself retaining the name metaphysics to designate the science of
the essential properties of bodies, is opposed to the metaphysical
philosophy of the scholastics, and chiefly because that philosophy
gave too much prominence to final causes and the study of the mind.
On the other hand, Descartes, while declaring that "philosophy
is a tree, which has metaphysics for its root", understands
that the science of metaphysics is based exclusively on the data of
the subjective consciousness. Spinoza accepts this restriction,
implicitly at least, although his explicit main philosophy is
ethical, namely to present that view of reality which will lead to
the deliverance of the soul from bondage. Leibniz takes a more
objective view. He tries to adopt a definition of reality which will
reconcile the idealism of Plato with the results of scientific
research, and he aims at harmonizing the materialism of the atomists
with the spiritualism of the scholastics. Locke, by limiting all our
knowledge to the two sources, sensation and reflection precludes the
possibility of metaphysical speculation beyond the facts of
experience and of consciousness. In fact, he maintains (Essay, IV,
8) that all metaphysical formulae, when they are not merely
tautological and, therefore "trifling", have only a
hypothetical formulae. This line of thought is taken up by Hume who
emphatically declares that "it is impossible to go beyond
experience", and by Mill, who maintains the hypothetical nature
of all so-called necessary truth, mathematical as well as
metaphysical. The same position is taken by the French sensists and
materialists of the eighteenth century. Berkeley, although his
professed aim was merely "to remove the mist and veil of words"
which hindered the clear vision of the truth, passed from empirical
immaterialism to a system of Platonic mysticism based on the
metaphysical principle of causality. Beginning with Kant,
the question of the existence and scope of metaphysical science
assumes a new phase. Metaphysics is now the science which claims to
know things in themselves, and as Kant
sees it, all post-Cartesian metaphysics is wrong in its
starting-point. Kant
holds that both the empiricist's rejection of metaphysics and the
dogmatist's defence of it are wrong. The empiricist is wrong in
asserting that we cannot go beyond experience: the dogmatist is
wrong in affirming that we can go beyond experience by means of the
theoretical reason. The practical reason, the faculty of moral
consciousness, can alone take us beyond experience, and lead us to a
knowledge of things in themselves. Practical reason, therefore, or
the moral law, of which we are immediately conscious, is the only
foundation of metaphysical science. Tbe successors of Kant,
namely, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Schopenhauer, and Von Hartmann, no
matter how much they may differ in other respects, hold that the aim
of metaphysics is to attain the ultra-empirical, or absolute,
reality, whether this be called self (Fichte), the absolute of
indifference (Schelling), the dynamic absolute, spirit or Idea
(Hegel), the Will (Schopenhauer), or the Unconscious (Von Hartmann).
Another group, the empiro-critics, who also acknowledge their
dependence on Kant,
assign to metaphysics the task of discussing the fundamental
principles of knowledge by means of a critical examination of
experience. Finally, there is among German philosophers of our own
day an inclination to use the word metaphysics to designate any view
of reality which, transcending the limits of the particular sciences,
strives to combine and relate the results of those sciences in a
synthetic formula (Weltanschauung). English philosophers either
define metaphysics in terms of mental phenomena, as Hamilton does,
or restrict its field of inquiry to the problem of the value of
knowledge, thus confounding it with epistemology, or go over to the
Hegelian point of view that metaphysics is the science of the
genesis and development of dynamic categories of reality. The
evolutionist school, represented by Herbert Spencer, while they deny
the cogency of "metaphysical reasonings", attempt a
general synthesis of all truth under the evolutionist formula, which
is in reality metaphysics in disguise. Their effort in this
direction is, at least, an acknowledgement of the justice of the
scholastic claim that there must be a hegemonic science which
unifies and co-ordinates in an articulate system the conclusions of
the various sciences, and which corrects the tendencies of those
sciences towards a specialization which ends in fragmentation. In so far as pragmatism, represented by James, Dewey, and Schiller,
rejects absolute truth, it may he said to cut the ground from under
metaphysics. Nevertheless, the latest phase of pragmatism, in which
interest is shifted from the epistemological problem to the question,
What is reality? is manifestly a step towards a rehabilitation of
metaphysics. An analysis of reality is followed inevitably by an
attempt to synthesize. The pragmatic synthesis, naturally, will have
for its foundation neither the law of entity, as that being is being,
nor the law of contradiction, that being is not not-being, but some
principle of "value", akin to that of the Werth-Theorie
of Lotze. Of quite special interest is the attempt on the part of
Professor Royce to interpret reality in terms of loyalty. With the
exception, then, of Trendelenburg's "Studies", and
critical expositions of the text of Aristotle,
the only philosophical literature in recent times which adopts the Aristotelean
view of the nature and scope of metaphysics, is that which has come
from the pens of the Neo-Scholastics. The Neo-Scholastic doctrine on
at least one point in metaphysics is given in the following
paragraph. VIII.
DOCTRINE OF BEING The three ideas which are
most important in any system of metaphysics are Being, Substance,
and Cause. These have a decisive influence, and may he said to
determine the character of a metaphysical system. Substance and
Cause are treated elsewhere under separate titles (see CAUSE and
SUBSTANCE). It will, therefore, be sufficient here to give the
outlines of the scholastic doctrine of Being, which, indeed, is the
most fundamental of the three, and decides, so to speak, beforehand,
what the scholastics teach regarding Substance and Cause. (1)
Description of Being
Being cannot he defined (a)
because a definition, according to tbe scholastic formula, must be
"by proximate genus and ultimate difference", and Being,
having the widest extension, cannot be included in any genus; (b)
because a definition is the analysis of tbe comprehension of a
Concept, and Being, having the least comprehension, is, as it were,
indivisible in its comprehension, resisting all efforts to resolve
it into simpler thought elements. Nevertheless, Being may be
described. Tbe word "Being", taken either as a participle
or as a noun, has reference to the "act" of existence.
Whatever exists, therefore, is a Being, whether it exists in the
mind or outside the mind, whether it is actual or only potential,
whether it requires a subject in which to inhere or is capable of
subsisting without a subject of inherence. Thus, the broadest
division of Being is into, notional, which exists only in the mind (ens
rationis), and, real, which exists independently of the created
world (ens reale). Real Being is further divided into tbe
potential and the actual. This is an important point of scholastic
teaching, which is sometimes overlooked in the exposition and still
more in the criticism of scholasticism. For the scholastics, the
real world extends far beyond the actual world of our experience or
even of possible experience. Beyond the realm of actually existing
things they see a world of tendencies, potencies, and possibilities
which are truly real. The oak is really present, though only
potentially, in the acorn; the painting is really, though only
potentially, present, in the mind of the artist; and so, in every
case, before the effect becomes actual it is really present in the
cause in the measure in which its actual existence depends on the
cause. (2)
Relation of Being to Other Concepts
Scholastic psychology, adopting Aristotle's
doctrine that all our ideas are acquired through the senses, teaches
that the first knowledge which we acquire is sense-knowledge. Out of
the material furnished by the senses the mind elaborates ideas or
concepts. The first of these ideas is the most general, the poorest
in representative content, namely, the idea of "Being". In
this sense, therefore, the idea of being, or, more correctly,
perhaps, the idea of "something", is the first of all our
ideas. Turning, now, to the
logical relation, how, ask the scholastics, is the idea of Being
predicated of the lower or less general concepts, such as substance,
accident, body, plant, tree, etc.? In the first place, the predicate
being is never univocally affirmed of lower concepts, because it is
not a genus. Neither is it predicated equivocally, because its
meaning when predicated of substance, for example, is not entirely
distinct from its meaning when predicated of accident. The
predication is, therefore, analogical. What, then, is the relation,
in comprehension, between Being and the lower concepts? It is
obvious that the lower concept has greater comprehension than Being.
But can it be said that the lower concept adds to the comprehension
of Being? Manifestly, that is impossible, because if anything
distinct from being is added to being, what is added is nothing, and
there is no addition. The schoolmen, therefore, teach that the lower
concept simply brings out in an explicit manner a mode or modes of
being which are contained implicitly but not expressed in the higher
concept, Being. The comprehension, for example, of substance is
greater than that of being. Nevertheless it is not correct to say
that, Substance = Being + a; for if a is distinct from the term
Being, to which it is added, it must be Nothing. The truth, then, is
that Substance brings out explicitly a mode (namely the power of
existing without a subject in which to inhere) which is neither
explicitly affirmed nor explicitly denied but only implicitly
contained in the concept of Being. (3)
Being and Nothing
Being, therefore, has a comprehension, which, though it is the least of
all comprehensions, is definite. It is not a bare, empty concept,
and, therefore, equal to "nothing", as the Hegelians teach.
This doctrine of the scholastics is the line of demarcation between Aristoteleanism
on the one hand and Hegelianism on the other. Aristotle
teaches that being has a definite comprehension, that, therefore,
the fundamental law of thought as well as the basic principle of
reality is the identity of Being with itself: Being = Being, A is A,
or Everything is what it is. Hegel does not deny that this Aristotelean
principle is true. He holds, however, that Being has an
indeterminate comprehension, a comprehension which is dynamic or, as
it were, fluent. Therefore, he says, the principle Being = Being, A
is A, or Everything is what it is, is only part of the truth, for
Being is also equal to Nothing, A not-A, Everything is its opposite.
The full truth is: Being is Becoming; no static or fixed formula is
true; everything is constantly passing into its opposite. The
consequences which follow from this fundamental divergence of
doctrine regarding Being are enormous. Not the least serious of
these is the Hegelian conclusion that all reality is dynamic and
that God
Himself is a process. (4)
Being, Existence, and Essence
As wisdom (sapientia) is that by which a person is wise (sapere),
so essence (essentia) is that by which a thing is (esse).
If one inquires what is the intrinsic cause of a person being wise,
the answer is, wisdom; if one asks what is the intrinsic cause of
existence, the answer is, essence. Essence, therefore, is that by
which a thing is what it is. It is the source of all the necessary
and universal properties of a thing, and is itself necessary,
universal, eternal, and unchangeable. The act to which it refers is
existence, in the same way as the act to which wisdom refers, is the
exercise of wisdom (sapere). Both existence and essence are
realities, the one in the entitative order, the other in the
quiddative order. Of course, the existence of a notional being (ens
rationis) is only notional; its essence, too, is notional. But
in the case of a real, created Being, the existence is one kind of
reality, a real actuality, and the essence is another kind of
reality, a reality in the potential order. This doctrine of the real
distinction between essence and existence in real created beings is
not admitted by all scholastic philosophers. Suarez, for instance,
and his school, hold that the distinction is only logical or
notional; the Scotists, too, maintain that the distinction in
question is less than real. The Thomists, on the contrary, hold that
in God
alone essence and existence are identical, that in all creatures
there is a real distinction, because in creatures existence is
participated, diversified, and multiplied, not by reason of itself
but by reason of the essence which it actualizes. There is much
controversy not only over the question itself, but also concerning
the interpretation of the words of St. Thomas, although there seems
very little ground for denying that in the work "De Ente et
Essentia" the Angelic Doctor holds a real distinction betwecn
essence and existence. (5)
Transcendental Properties of Being
Equally extensive with the
concept of Being are the concepts good, true, one, and beautiful.
Every being is good, true, one, and beautiful, in the metapysical
sense, or as the scholastics expressed it, Being and Good are
convertible, Being and True are convertible, etc. (Bonum et ens
convertuntur, etc.). Goodness, in this sense, means the fullness
of entity or perfection which belongs to each being in its own order
of existence; truth means the correspondence of a thing to the idea
of it, which exists in the Divine Mind; oneness means the lack of
actual division, and beauty means that completeness, harmony or
symmetry of essential nature which is only an aspect of truth and
goodness. These properties, goodness, trnth, oneness, and beauty,
are called transcendental, because they transcend, or exceed in
extension, all the lower classes into which reality is divided. (6)
The Categories
Real Being is divided (not by strict logical division, but by a process
analogous to it) into Finite and Infinite. Finite Being is divided
into the supreme genera, Substance and Accident. Accident is further
divided into Quantity, Quality, Relation, Action,
"Passion", Place, Time, Posture, and Habit (or possession).
These nine Accidents, together with the supreme genus, substance,
are the ten Aristotelean
Categories into which, as supreme classes, all Being is divided.
|
|