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Welcome to Maverick Philosopher

My name is William F. Vallicella, I have the doctorate in philosophy (Boston College, 1978), and I have published a couple of books and 70 or so articles in the professional journals. A confirmed blogger in the grip of cacoethes scribendi, I’ve been online since May 2004 on various platforms.  This is MavPhil Gen IV.  I publish online here, at Substack, on Facebook, and at X.  I began posting at Substack in early 2021 under the rubric “Philosophy in Progress.” The Substack entries are intended to assist educated non-philosophers in clarifying their thinking about matters of moment.  My PhilPeople page links to my Substack articles and provides a list of my professional publications. 

Two-line biography:  I taught philosophy at various universities in the USA and abroad. At the relatively young age of 41 I resigned from  a tenured position to live the eremitic life of the independent philosopher in the Sonoran desert. 

Interests: Everything. Homo sum: humani nihil a me alienum puto. (Terentius) “I am a man: I consider nothing human foreign to me.” 

Motto: “Study everything, join nothing.” (Paul Brunton)

Comment Policy: This site is not a discussion board.  Comments must address directly what the author says or what the commenters say.  Other comments will not be allowed to appear. Comments should be pithy and to the point. In these hyperkinetic times, the regnant abbreviation is TL;DR.  If you are a cyberpunk needing to take a data dump, please relieve yourself elsewhere.

My politics?  From Democrat to Dissident

Political Burden of Proof: As contemporary ‘liberals’ become ever more extreme, they increasingly assume what I will call the political burden of proof. The onus is now on them to defeat the presumption that they are so morally and intellectually obtuse as not to be worth talking to.

Much more below the fold. Best wishes to all men and women of good will who love truth, seek it, and strive to incorporate it in their lives.

 

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Mental Change and the Potency-Act Distinction: Response to Tom Carroll

Tom Carroll comments:

Moments ago I imagined a red sailboat. Now that imagined sailboat is blue. Immaterial things change constantly, rapidly, ceaselessly. So there *must* be a principle of change operating at the immaterial level. Potency — understood as the principle of change — must apply beyond the matter/form of the mundane world.

In an earlier comment, Tom had written,

[Gavin] Kerr says, “In bringing the potentially existing essence into existence, esse is not received in some distinct pre-existing essence bringing about a change therein, but actuates the essence whole and complete… [W]hen God creates, He brings into existence the essence-esse composite all at once.”

The earlier comment got me thinking about whether it makes sense to apply the potency-act distinction, which first surfaces in Greek philosophy in an attempt to understand change in the material world, to the problem of divine creation, given that creating, though not a material process, has as one of its products the material world of space, time, and change.   In classical theism, the main representative of which I take to be Thomas Aquinas, divine creation is creatio ex nihilo, not ex possibilitate.  Accordingly, God creates out of nothing, not out of mere possibles.

Although Kerr is surely right that on classical theism God does not create out of mere possibles, he seems to hold, in line with traditional doctrine, that divine creating is an actuating of potencies.  This raises the question of the difference between the actuating of mere possibles and the actuating of potencies, which in turn raises the question of the difference between mere possibles and potencies.  It occurred to me that this might involve an illicit metabasis eis allo genos, which is something like a Rylean category mistake, where a term is transferred from a sphere where it belongs to a sphere where it doesn’t belong.  Can we legitimately speak of change, i.e., the conversion of potency  into act, with respect to a spiritual (and thus immaterial) process such as divine creating?  Again, the creating of a material world is not a material process.

The problem assumes an even sharper form when we consider that God creates not only  material things, but also immaterial spirits.  He creates angels  — which in their ‘natural and proper state’ are unembodied — and he creates human beings — which in their ‘natural and proper state’ are embodied, but possibly such as to exist in a disembodied state between death and resurrection.

Angels are contingent beings, which is why they need creating.  Now if the creating of an angel is the actuating of a potency, and not the actuating of a pre-existent essence (a mere possible),  what and ‘where’ is the potency which, when actuated, becomes the angel Gabriel, say, or for that matter, the angel Lucifer, the light-bearer?  Don’t potencies need to be grounded in something actual?  And what might that be in the case of angels? Closer to the ground, what might that be in the case of material things?  If there are no ‘free-floating’ mere possibles, then how could there be ‘free-floating’ unactuated potencies?  Are we forced to say that these potencies are grounded in God? But then we are drifting toward the heretical view that divine creation is creatio ex Deo.

The orthodox — miniscule ‘o’ — position is creatio ex nihilo.  It aims to avoid three competing views: creatio ex Deo; demiurgic creation out of a pre-existent uncreated stuff; creatio ex possibilitate.

This is all  very tricky, but to a guy like me unutterably fascinating.  It lurks in the background of my conversation with Tom.  I will now address Tom’s first comment above. He is attempting to refute my suggestion (not a dogmatic pronunciamento — that the potency-act distinction is legitimately deployed only in the analysis of change in the material world and thus not in the analysis of divine creating which, again, is not a material process like the calcification of the aortic valve.

RESPONSE TO TOM CARROLL

First of all, is a boat an immaterial thing?  No, a boat, whether merely imagined or real, is a material thing.  I of course grant that there are immaterial things.  But a boat is not one of them. A merely imagined boat is not an immaterial thing, but a nonexistent material thing.  I do not grant that to exist is to be material. And so I do not grant that not to exist is to be immaterial.

Second, how does Tom know that the blue boat he imagines at time t* (t*> t) is numerically the same as the boat he imagined at t?  Suppose Tom owns a red boat, which he then paints blue.  In this case we naturally say that numerically one and the same boat that was red is now blue. A scholastic would call this a case of accidental (as opposed to substantial) change. I call it diachronic alterational change and distinguish it from diachronic existential change, as when a thing first comes into existence and then later passes out of existence. That too is change, but surely not an accidental or alterational change.  Before a thing comes to exist it is not there to undergo a change, and the same holds after it ceases to exist. On either end there is no substrate of alteration. No substrate, no alteration of a substrate.

But in the case of the merely imagined red boat and the merely imagined blue boat, the natural thing to say is that the two boats are numerically distinct. They are numerically distinct merely intentional objects. They are numerically distinct because they differ property-wise: one is red while the other is blue (and therefore not red).  I am assuming the Indiscernibility of Identicals, a principle than which no more luminous can be conceived. Roughly formulated, it states that if x = y, then x, y share all properties.  Contrapositively, if x, y are such that x has a property that y lacks, or vice versa, then it is not the case that x = y. Call it the Discernibility of the Diverse. The two principles are logically equivalent. And note that despite the traditional terminology, eith its epistemic flavor, neither are epistemological principles.  Both are ontological.

I am making the following points against Tom. First, merely imagined material things are not immaterial but nonexistent. Second, there is no reason to think that a merely imagined red boat is numerically the same as a merely imagined blue boat, even if all the non-color properties of the boats are imagined to be the same. Third, no alteration of one and the same item has taken place in his example. Fourth, the view that alterational change is the conversion of potency into act is just one theory of such change among others and cannot just be assumed but must be argued for.  Fifth, the very notion of potency is unclear especially if thought to float free of an actual item in which it is grounded.

 

Kenny, Geach, and the Perils of Reading Frege into Aquinas

Stack leader.

I have been studying Anthony Kenny, Aquinas on Being (Oxford UP, 2002). I cannot report that I find it particularly illuminating. I am troubled by the reading back of Fregean doctrines into Aquinas, in particular in the appendix, “Frege and Aquinas on Existence and Number.” (pp. 195-204) Since Kenny borrows heavily from Peter Geach, I will explain one of my misgivings in connection with a passage from Geach’s important article, “Form and Existence” in God and the Soul.

Truth, Accuracy, and the Delusional Al Gore

Over at Real Clear Energy:

Twenty years ago, in 2006, former Vice President Al Gore released his film, “An Inconvenient Truth,” which included ominous and even hysterical warnings about a coming climate apocalypse if mankind did not dramatically change its ways. In the two decades since its release, the film’s most dire warnings have proven to be inaccurate.

I have nothing good to say about Al Bore and his boiling oceans. What caught my eye, pedant that I am, is the author’s confusion of truth and accuracy, a distinction I explain both truly and accurately in the appropriately appellated Substack article, Truth and Accuracy.

The confusion is very common, yet another sign of the Decline of the West. Or am I exaggerating, just for fun? It is 2:55 AM local time, the coffee is coming in, the adrenalin is surging, and the old man is having a blast. I’ve been up since midnight; finished reading a short story by the underappreciated Richard Yates, “Regards at Home,” cleaned up cat vomit, meditated from 1:17 to 2:10, and will now do  some serious writing on my book, if I don’t play a blitz chess game first. And then at 4:00 to the mountain bike! The strenuous life is best by test.

In Defense of the Electoral College

Here.

Is there anything more to Hillary Clinton’s recently reiterated fulminations against the Electoral College apart from the fact that she lost to Trump in 2016?  “It’s an abomination.” “For obvious reasons.”  But I will say something nice about the embittered loser.   If she got her emotions under control she probably could explain the reasons for the EC, something I don’t expect AOC or Kamala Harris could do.

Scott Bessent on Alexander Hamilton on Economic Security

At the WSJ:

Under President Trump’s leadership, the U.S. Treasury is working to restore economic security as the foundation that allows a nation to fulfill its most basic obligations.

Emboldened by our actions, other countries began to exploit our dependence as leverage. Now is the time to correct this. We need to insist on trade that is fair, reciprocal and consistent with our national interest. This is why the U.S. Treasury is organizing its economic statecraft around five core principles.

First, economic security begins with national capacity. We have rediscovered at great cost what Alexander Hamilton taught us: that every nation “ought to endeavor to possess within itself all the essentials of national supply.” Our strength is derived from what we can build, for the nation that can’t produce what it needs isn’t truly secure. The nation that depends on its adversaries for critical inputs isn’t truly sovereign. And the nation that reduces its economics to consumption isn’t truly prosperous.

The Hamiltonian point about security and sovereignty is perfectly obvious. How foolish to be dependent upon a geopolitical adversary such as the Chinese Communists for pharmaceuticals and semiconductors! But that dependence is what the Democrats allowed, whatever their motives.

This is why we are lucky that Donald J. Trump came along. You may find him stylistically off-putting, as I do, but substance trumps style, a fact that escapes the stylish but merely performative Gavin Newsom and Kamala Harris.  If it is style you want, Melania has more than enough for both POTUS and FLOTUS.

For my edgier political observations, take a gander at my Facebook page, where I do not hesitate to impute motives to our political enemies.  And yes, they are enemies, even if you do not want to go all the way with Carl Schmitt.

Two Senses of ‘Transcendental’ Part I: Trans-Generic Determinations

This is for Tom Carroll and anyone else interested in the topic.

At 998b22 of his Metaphysics, Aristotle argues that Being cannot be a highest genus. (If it were a genus, it would have to be the highest genus since Being is maximally inclusive in that absolutely everything is; but Being cannot be the highest or any subordinate genus because it is not a genus at all.)  I will formulate  Aristotle’s thesis in my own way, and then give some reasons for accepting it. I won’t examine his reasoning in this installment.   But first some terminological regimentation.

I will use ‘Being’ and ‘Existence’ interchangeably. To be = to exist.  Being = Existence.  Being/Existence is crucially different from beings/existents.  (The forward slash in my writing indicates inclusive as opposed to exclusive disjunction. This is a Logic 101 distinction that I will happily explain if necessary.)

What is important here is the ontological difference between Being/Existence and beings/existents.  I say that with Heidegger in mind, but without endorsing all or even most of what Heidegger means by the phrase, especially not what he says  in his later phase, post-Kehre (after the famous ‘Turn.’)  As I use ‘ontological difference,’ said difference is already in Aquinas as the distinction between esse and ens, the distinction between the To Be (esse) of beings and the beings (entia) that participate in To Be/Being.  My ontological use of ‘participate,’ despite its Platonic provenance, is eminently apropos inasmuch as ens is the present participle of the infinitive esse. (Exactly how much philosophical juice can be squeezed out of this grammatical fact is a matter of controversy.)

The majuscule-miniscule distinction must be constantly observed. I mean the distinction between big ‘B’ being and little ‘b’ being.   This typographical distinction records the ontological difference of Being and beings;  in Latin that between esse and ens; in German, that between das Sein and das Seiende.  Both of the latter terms are nominalizations or, if you prefer, substantivizations, the first of the infinitive sein, the second of the present participle seiend.  ‘Das Sein’ is a proper noun that refers to Being in its difference from beings, while ‘das Seiende’ is a common noun that refers to beings either collectively or distributively depending on whether it is taken to refer to  beings as a whole or  to  beings taken one-by-one.

So we need to distinguish collective from distributive uses of ‘being.’ And we must never use ‘being’ to refer to  the Being of beings, that in virtue of which beings are.  Some will dismiss ‘in virtue of which’ as a weasel phrase, a phrase with no definite meaning. We can discuss this if Tom wants to, but for now I dismiss the dismissal.  Others will be inclined to say that there is no Being different from beings: there are beings, all right, but no Being.  They might go on to say that talk of Being in its difference from beings involves illicit hypostatization.

This all needs careful discussion, but for now I will simply point out that the many numerically different beings have something in common, namely, that they are, and are not nothing.   Each of the many beings is, and each is not nothing, and so each has in common with every other one the fact of its not being nothing. So the Being of beings is not the same as the beings that are.  Being is one to their many.  Being is what makes them be. The many beings form a totality of some sort since they all have in common that they are.  But we may not assume that totality of beings is a mathematical set, a mereological sum, or any other familiar sort of totality.  I am inclined to say that it is sui generis. It would also be hasty to assume that we know what the commonality of Being amounts to. Is it the commonality of a multiply instantiable concept? The commonality of a common cause? Both suggestions lead to trouble.

Another question concerns the ‘of’ in ‘Being of beings.’ Is this a subjective genitive, an objective genitive, both, or neither? In ‘city of Boston,’ the ‘of’ is neither.  What I call the ‘of’ of apposition is not a genitive. So this is another topic that Tom might want to discuss. Timor domini initium sapientiae.  “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” The fear of the Lord is not the Lord’s fear, but ours. The genitive is objective.  The beginning of wisdom, however, is wisdom’s beginning. Subjective genitive. So both types of genitive are operative in one and the same Latin sentence and its English translation.  The revelation of God, however, is both God’s revelation of himself and a revelation about God to us. So in this example the genitive has both functions.  What about the Being of beings? Is Being merely that which makes possible the manifestation of beings to us, or is it that which makes beings be whether or not they are manifest to us? Or both?

Now what  struck Parmenides at the beginning of our tradition and filled him with wonder was that beings are, that things exist, that they are (non-locatively) there, that they are not nothing.  This was a concrete metaphysical experience he had, an intuition or direct (conceptually unmediated) awareness of the Being  of beings.  The first ‘of’ in the preceding sentence I take to express the objective genitive and the second the subjective genitive.

This leads naturally to the question, What is Being? Aristotle concludes at 998b22 of his Metaphysics that Being cannot be a genus. And he is right if he means that what makes beings be cannot be their falling under a genus.  To put his conclusion in my own way, existing things are not a kind of thing. Particular trees, cats, moons, and so on are instances of natural kinds.  So we can say that feline things are a kind of thing. But no particular feline, Max, for example, can instantiate the kind unless it, Max in this case, exists.  No individual x  can instantiate any kind K unless x exists.  From this I conclude that existing things are not a kind of thing.  Being is not a genus.

From this we can conclude that Being and a being is trans-generic: it transcends and cuts across all the various genera.  A being qua being (ens qua ens) is not confined to any genus, and the Being (esse) of this being (ens) is not the being’s instantiation of any genus.  Accordingly, being (ens) is a trans-generic and thus transcendental determination in the pre-modern sense.

More later. We are just scratching the surface.

Dark Nietzschean Thoughts

Substack latest.

The serious thinker is self-critical: his examination of life, without which his life is not worth living, is a self-examination, even unto a painful thinking against himself. He has the courage to entertain, which is not to say endorse, dark thoughts. He is not an apologist for a ready-made worldview. He toes no party line. His watchword is ‘inquiry,’ not ‘worldview.’ He would have a worldview if he could, but he must inquire to find one.

Here is a dark thought, one I do not endorse, but entertain, though not with much hospitality.

Read the rest.

Reading Now: Stefan Zweig, The World of Yesterday

I first read Stefan Zweig in 1988 when I came upon his The Royal Game  and Other Stories in a Greenwich Village book store.  I purchased a copy from the Village Chess Shop on November 12th of that year.  As  a chess player I had long known about the eponymous story.  It delighted me as much as “Letter from an Unknown Woman,” from the same collection, moved me.

So when our long-time friend Spencer Case mentioned The World of Yesterday on his Facebook page, I knew I had to have it.  It does not disappoint. Here is a taste to whet your appetite:

If today, thinking it over calmly, we wonder why Europe went to war in 1914, there is not one sensible reason to be found, nor even any real occasion for the war. There were no ideas involved, it was not really about drawing minor borderlines; I can explain it only, thinking of that excess of power, by seeing it as a tragic consequence of that internal dynamism that had built up during those forty years of peace, and now demanded release. (220)

To appreciate this passage, it must be savored in the context of the chapter ‘Brightness and Shadows over Europe’ which deals with the run-up to the Great War and the mentality of the individuals and peoples who prepared it and suffered unspeakably in its aftermath.

The sensitive Zweig, born in 1881, couldn’t bear the aftermath, even from afar,  and committed suicide with his wife in Brazil in 1942.

 

John Locke on the Right to Self-Defense

Substack latest.

Calm, clear, rigorous, and free of invective. Which is not to say that invective does not have important uses. Different strokes for different folks. For thugs, slugs. The hard fist of unreason. For the reasonable, the open-handed, loving caress of sweet reason. Civility for the civil. Respect for the respectful.

UFC Fight at the White House?

A senator in cargo pants, and now this? Matthew Schmitz at Compact thinks something revolutionary is going on. His is a provocative article, and not too long.  I support Trump for a number of reasons, one of which is that he is a fighter.  On the other hand, while there is the decadence of suicidal empathy, there is also that of suicidal brutality.

Panem et circenses!

I am no fan of spectator sports.  We have too many sports spectators and too many overpaid* professional louts. I preach the People’s Sports, despite the leftish ring of that.

Remove your sorry tail from the couch of sloth and start a softball league with your friends and neighbors. Play volley ball whether in a pool or on dry land. Engage your fellow paisani in a game of bocce. (But don’t call it bocce ball. Do you call tennis tennis ball?)

Or take the Thoreauvian high road, leave the People behind, and sally forth solo into the wild. As Henry David said, “A man sits as many risks as he runs.” Old Henry puts me in mind of Cactus Ed, the Thoreau of the American Southwest.

In Vox Clamantis in Deserto Edward Abbey opines:

Football is a game for trained apes. That, in fact, is what most of the players are — retarded gorillas wearing helmets and uniforms. The only thing more debased is the surrounding mob of drunken monkeys howling the gorillas on.

Was Abbey a racist? That depends on what a racist is. I’ll leave it for you to decide what a racist is and whether Abbey was one.

_______________

*Can anyone be ‘overpaid’? If enough people like what you sell, and are willing to pay you for it, you may become rich indeed. Think of all the rich schlock novelists. Capitalist acts among consenting adults. That’s the libertarian line.  Or do you prefer more government intervention in people’s lives? For the record, I am not a libertarian. But I’ll take a libertarian over a leftist any day.

Julian Green on Simone Weil

Julian Green, Diary 1928-1957. Entry of 3 December 1950, p.223, emphasis added:

Simeone Weil. I know very little about her works and I am reading them at present with astonishment. She touches on all the subjects that move me most and seeks what is deepest in us. Her passion for the absolute makes her kin to the best, and her contempt for what is relative is, I think, unequaled except by St. John of the Cross and Pascal . . . . How many books that were mere literature does she convict of vanity! How many things does she outmode and reduce their contents to nothing! Robert tells me that her conclusions are nonhuman, and I think so too, but that means that she climbs to heights where we find it hard to breathe. A monster of intelligence. There is something about her that horrifies.

See also: Simone Weil on False Gods
and
Simone Weil in the Light of Plato

For more excerpts from Green’s diary, visit my Green, Julien category.

Weil’s Wager

Karl White tells me he looked for this old essay of mine but couldn’t find it. His interest, for which I am grateful, inspired me to thoroughly re-think and re-work it. It is now tighter, cleaner, and better organized, and to be found at the top of the Stack.

In her New York Notebook from 1942, Simone Weil presents an argument which she claims “…is greatly preferable to Pascal’s wager.”[i] One of her commentators agrees, finding her argument “obviously both morally and intellectually” superior to Pascal’s.[ii] I will call this argument “Weil’s Wager.” As far as I know, it has yet to be subjected to a close examination.

Faith and Prayer: The Case of Ron Franz

Top o’ the Stack.  Explores the difference between puerile and mature faith.  Topics include: idolatry, superstition, grades of prayer, mysticism, Simone Weil.

It starts out:

One of the minor characters of Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild is the old man to whom Krakauer gave the name ‘Ron Franz.’ He was 80 years old when his and Christopher McCandless’s paths crossed. McCandless made indelible impressions on the people he met, but he affected Franz more than anyone else, so much so that the old man with no surviving kin wanted to adopt the 24-year-old as his grandson. The story of their encounter is recounted in the chapter entitled ‘Anza-Borrego’ and is also well told in the movie version of Krakauer’s book. Franz came to pin his hopes on the remarkable young man and longed for his return from Alaska. When he heard from a hitchhiker that McCandless had died, he and his faith were shattered: