Footnotes to Plato from the foothills of the Superstition Mountains

Idolatry, Desire, Buddha, Causation, and Malebranche

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Does causation have a moral dimension?

This upload was 'occasioned' (all puns intended) by my meeting with the amazing Steven Nemes yesterday at Joe's Real BBQ in charming old town Gilbert. Among the topics we discussed were idolatry, desire, and Buddhism.

He strode up, gave me a hug, and handed me three books he has recently published. A veritable writing machine, he's out-Fesering the phenomenal Ed Feser. And it's good stuff. I dove into his  Trinity and Incarnation this morning and will be discussing in future posts the shift in his views from orthodox or what he calls catholic (lower-case 'c') Christianity to a position reminiscent of Advaita Vedanta he calls "Qualified Monism."


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2 responses to “Idolatry, Desire, Buddha, Causation, and Malebranche”

  1. Simon Neale Avatar
    Simon Neale

    “Secondary causes are mere occasional causes, occasions of the exercise of the causality of the only true productive cause, God.”
    And call no man your father upon earth, for One is your Father, who is in Heaven. (Matthew, 23:9)

  2. BV Avatar
    BV

    Simon,
    Thanks for that. Whether MT 23:9 is a verse in support of occasionalism is a difficult question. I am going to have to think about it.

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