Two Different Christmas Day Meditations on the Incarnation

Last Year's:

"And the Word Was Made Flesh and Dwelt Among Us" (John 1:14)

Let us meditate this Christmas morning on the sheer audacity of the idea that God would not only enter this world of time and misery, but come into it in the most humble manner possible, inter faeces et urinam nascimur, born between feces and urine, entering between the legs of a poor girl in a stable.  Just like one of us, a slob like one of us. The notion is so mind-boggling that one is tempted to credit it for this very reason, for its affront to Reason, and to the natural man, accepting it because it is absurd,  or else dismissing  it as the height of absurdity. A third possibility is to accept it despite its being absurd, and a fourth is to argue that rational sense can be made of it. The conflict of these approaches, and of the positions within each, only serves to underscore the mind-boggling quality of the notion, a notion that to the eye and mind of faith is FACT.

The Most High freely lowers himself, accepting the indigence and misery of material existence, including a short temporal career that ends with the ultimate worldly failure: execution by the political authorities.  And not a civilized Athenian execution by hemlock as was the fate of that other great teacher of humanity, but execution by the worst method the brutal Romans could devise, crucifixion.

Read the rest.

And here is one first posted in 2010 and re-posted on Christmas Day, 2014:

Incarnation Approached Subjectively: The Mystical Birth of God in the Soul

[. . .]

1. The essence of Christianity is contained in the distinct but related doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation. Josef Pieper (Belief and Faith, p. 103) cites the following passages from the doctor angelicus: Duo nobis credenda proponuntur: scil. occultum Divinitatis . . . et mysterium humanitatis Christi. II, II, 1, 8. Fides nostra in duobus principaliter consistit: primo quidem in vera Dei cognitione . . . ; secundo in mysterio incarnationis Christi. II, II, 174, 6.

2. The doctrine of the Trinity spelled out in the Athanasian Creed, is that there is one God in three divine Persons, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. Each person is God, and yet there is exactly one God, despite the fact that the Persons are numerically distinct from one another. According to the doctrine of the Incarnation, the second person of the Trinity, the Son or Logos, became man in Jesus of Nazareth. There is a strong temptation to think of the doctrinal statements as recording (putative) objective facts and then to wonder how they are possible. I have touched upon some of the logical problems the objective approach encounters in previous posts.  The logical problems are thorny indeed and seem to require for their solution questionable logical innovations such as the notion (championed by Peter Geach) that identity is sortal-relative, or an equally dubious mysterianism which leaves us incapable of saying just what we would be accepting were we to accept the theological propositions in question.  The reader should review those problems in order to understand the motivation of what follows.

3. But it may be that the objective approach is radically mistaken. Is it an objective fact that God (or rather the second person of the Trinity) is identical to a particular man in the way it is an objective fact that the morning star is identical to the planet Venus?

Perhaps we need to explore a subjective approach. One such is the mystical approach illustrated in a surprising and presumably 'heretical' passage from St. John of the Cross' The Ascent of Mount Carmel (Collected Works, p. 149, tr. Kavanaugh and Rodriguez, emphasis added):

. . . when a person has finished purifying and voiding himself of all forms and apprehensible images, he will abide in this pure and simple light, and be perfectly transformed into it. This light is never lacking to the soul, but because of creature forms and veils weighing upon and covering it, the light is never infused. If a person will eliminate these impediments and veils, and live in pure nakedness and poverty of spirit . . . his soul in its simplicity and purity will then be immediately transformed into simple and pure Wisdom, the Son of God.

The Son of God, the Logos, the Second Person of the Trinity, is 'born,' 'enters the world,' is 'incarnated,' in the soul of any man who attains the mystic vision of the divine light. This is the plain meaning of the passage. The problem, of course, is to reconcile this mystical subjectivism with the doctrinal objectivism according to which the Logos literally became man, uniquely, in Jesus of Nazareth when a certain baby was born in a manger in Bethlehem some 2000 years ago.

Read the rest.

Poor Barry Manilow

Here:

In an experiment published in 2000, the psychologist Thomas Gilovich and his colleagues asked undergraduates to wear a piece of clothing that they found embarrassing—a t-shirt with a picture of singer-songwriter Barry Manilow on it. After putting on the shirt, the undergraduates had to spend some time in a room with other students and were later asked to guess how many of the other students noticed what they were wearing. The undergraduates tended to overestimate the proportion by a large margin, and did the same when asked to wear a t-shirt with a positive image on it, like Bob Marley or Martin Luther King Jr. In study after study, experimental subjects thought that other people would notice them much more than they actually did.

Another study that confirms what we already knew.  Were any tax dollars used to fund it?  In a scientistic culture ignorant of its own rich traditions it is thought that only what is 'scientifically' validated can be taken seriously.  I am not denying that a study such as this one might have some slight value.

More interesting, I should think, would be a study of why Marley and King have a positive image and Manilow a negative one, not that I would be caught dead listening to Manilow's schmaltz, except for analytic and culture-critical purposes.  Or a study why there is a preponderance among the young of Che Guevara T-shirts over, say, Maggie Thatcher T-shirts.

Christmas Eve at the Oldies: Tunes of the Season

BoulevardierMerry Christmas everybody.  Pour yourself a drink, and enjoy.  Me, I'm nursing a Boulevardier.  It's a Negroni with cojones: swap out the gin for bourbon.  One ounce bourbon, one ounce sweet vermouth, one ounce Campari, straight up or on the rocks, with a twist of orange.  A serious libation.  It'll melt a snowflake for sure. The vermouth rosso contests the harshness of the bourbon, but then the Campari joins the fight on the side of the bourbon.  Or you  can think of it as a Manhattan wherein the Campari substitutes for the angostura bitters.  That there are people who don't like Campari shows that there is no hope for humanity. An irrational prejudice against artichokes? 

Cheech and Chong, Santa Claus and His Old Lady
Canned Heat, Christmas Boogie

Leon Redbone and Dr. John, Frosty the Snowman
Beach Boys, Little St. Nick.  A rarely heard alternate version.

Ronettes, Sleigh Ride
Elvis Presley, Blue Christmas.  This one goes out to Barack and Michelle.

Jeff Dunham, Jingle Bombs by Achmed the Terrorist.  TRIGGER WARNING! Not for the p.c.-whipped.

Porky Pig, Blue Christmas

Dylan Magon, White Christmas.  Don't know this dude.  Appears to be a black Italian.  Good performance, except that he says'sly bells' instead of 'slay bells.'  

Charles Brown, Please Come Home for Christmas

Wanda Jackson and the Continentals, Merry Christmas Baby
Chuck Berry, Run Rudolph Run

Eric Clapton, Cryin' Christmas Tears
Judy Collins, Silver Bells

Ry Cooder, Christmas in Southgate.  Don't miss this one if you are a Los Angeleno.  
Bob Dylan, Must Be Santa

Is this the same guy who sang Desolation Row back in '65?  This is the 'stoned' version.  It'll grow on you! Give it  chance.

Bob Dylan, Red Cadillac and a Black Moustache. Not Christmasy, but a good tune. 

Who could possibly follow Dylan's growl except

Tom Waits, Silent Night.  Give it a chance. 

A surprising number of Christmas songs were written by Jews.  

Of Birth and Barcan

The Opponent writes,

"Death is not an end to existence, but the process of becoming non-concrete. Birth is the making concrete of something that has existed since the beginning of time and will exist until the end of time." (Reina Hayaki)

This is one way of interpreting the Barcan formula (possibly for some x Fx implies for some x possibly Fx).  If the formula is true, there are no ‘contingent objects’, i.e. no objects that exist in some worlds but not others.

My position is that there are contingent entities (as well as contingent identities). I imagine you will be less sympathetic to this, however. Interested in your thoughts.

The Opponent is misrepresenting Professor Hayaki's view.  On a careful reading of her article, the quotation above is not her view but expresses a temporal analog of the modal view of Linsky and Zalta that she is opposing.

Barcan Contrapositive T-ShirtBe that as it may.  Let's consider the Barcan formula by itself.

The formula is that Possibly, something is F implies Something is possibly F.  The modality in question is 'broadly logical' in Plantinga's sense.  Some call it 'metaphysical.'   

By my modal intuitions, the formula is false.  A trio of  'possible' counterexamples.

A. Sally wants a baby.  But there is no actual baby such that Sally wants it.  Sally wants to have a baby, i.e, give birth to a baby, her own baby, one that does not yet exist.  What Sally wants is possible. So, possibly, some baby is such that Sally wants it.  But it doesn't follow that some actual baby is possibly such that Sally wants it. For every actual baby is such that Sally does not want it.

B. It is possible that there be a sinless man.  But it does not follow that one of the men who exist is possibly sinless.  

 

C. Possibly, some sloop satisfies Ortcutt's exacting specifications.  (It is possible that there be such a sloop.)  But it doesn't follow that some existing sloop (without modifications) is possibly such as to satisfy Ortcutt's exacting specifications.  For it could be that every sloop that exists fails to satisfy our man.

I am assuming actualism: there are no merely possible objects.  The truth of Possibly, something is F does not commit us to the existence of a merely possible individual that is F. 'Possibly, something is a matter transmitter,' for example, does not commit us to the existence of a merely possible matter transmitter.  I should think it commits us only to the existence of a conjunctive property that is possibly instantiated.

The Barcan formula may hold for necessary beings such as the number 7.  But it fails for contingent beings.

Of course I hold that there are contingent beings.  Whether there are contingent identities is another topic entirely.  One topic at a time. 

David French

David French continues to write good columns for NRO. His latest is about one of Hillary's darlings, Black Lives Matter. But when it came time to act and actually do something in opposition to this movement he calls "poisonous," he refused to support Trump, thereby aiding and abetting Hillary and her destructive leftist race-baiting agenda.

Edith Stein on Cognitio Fidei: Is Faith a Kind of Knowledge?

Edith-stein-copiaOne finds the phrase cognitio fidei in Thomas Aquinas and in such Thomist writers as Josef Pieper. It translates as 'knowledge of faith.' The genitive is to be interpreted subjectively, not objectively: faith is not the object of knowledge; faith is a form or type of knowledge. But how can faith be a type of knowledge? One ought to find this puzzling.

On a standard analysis of 'knows,' where propositional knowledge is at issue, subject S knows that p just in case (i) S believes that p; (ii) S is justified in believing that p; and (iii) p is true. This piece of epistemological boilerplate is the starting point for much of the arcana (Gettier counterexamples, etc.) of contemporary epistemology. But its pedigree is ancient, to be found in Plato's Theaetetus.

Malcolm Pollack’s Kulturpessimismus

I hope he is wrong, but I fear he is right:

Europe is very, very, ill, a victim of a weak but highly opportunistic pathogen, and if it cannot soon mount a robust immune response it will die. Even if it can manage such a response, at this late hour it will be a close-run thing — and we have already passed the point, I think, where it can recover without some very serious “unpleasantness”. But the choice is now very plain: awaken or die.

Most likely it will die, I think. (Already there are calls to close down the traditional Christmas-markets for the sake of security. This is what late-stage cultural immunodeficiency looks like.)

When a nation forgets her skill in war, when her religion becomes a mockery, when the whole nation becomes a nation of money-grabbers, then the wild tribes, the barbarians drive in.

John Howard

I wonder: when the last native Europeans have dwindled to a final few, and they are forced to watch one another put to the sword, will they worry, most of all, about an anti-Muslim “backlash”? Will they wonder, in that moment, how things might have been if they had stood for themselves — and then say, just as they are annihilated, “But that’s not who we are”?

“Not ‘who you are’?” says Gnon, with majestic indifference. “Right, perhaps not. Very well, then. Goodbye.”

It may be too late for decadent Europe, but we still have time, and with Trump in the saddle, a fighting chance.  The defeat of Hillary the hopeless is a change that brings hope.  

UPDATE

The ever-helpful Dave Lull points us to the hopeful 2016: A Tuning Point for Europe? Merry Christmas, Dave!

Socializing as Self-Denial

You don't really want to go to that Christmas party where you will eat what you don't need to eat, drink what you don't need to drink, and dissipate your inwardness in pointless chit-chat.  But you were invited and your non-attendance may be taken amiss.  So you remind yourself that self-denial is good and that it is useful from time to time to practice the art of donning and wearing the mask of a 'regular guy.'

For the step into the social is by dissimulation. Necessary to the art of life is knowing how to negotiate the social world and pass yourself off under various guises and disguises.

War, Torture, and the Aporetics of Moral Rigorism

That the deliberate targeting of noncombatants is intrinsically evil and cannot be justified under any circumstances is one of the entailments of Catholic just war doctrine.  I am sensitive to its moral force. I am strongly inclined to say that certain actions are intrinsically wrong, wrong by their very nature as the types of actions they are, wrong regardless of consequences and circumstances.    But what would have been the likely upshot had  the Allies not used unspeakably brutal methods against the Germans and the Japanese in World War II?  Leery as one ought to be of counterfactual history, I think the Axis Powers would have acquired nukes first and used them against us.  But we don't have to speculate about might-have-beens. 

If I understand the Catholic doctrine, it implies that if Harry Truman had a crystal ball and knew the future with certainty and saw that the Allies would have lost had they not used the methods they used, and that the whole world would have been been plunged into a Dark Age  for two centuries — he still would not have been justified in ordering the annihilation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Indeed, if the deliberate targeting  of noncombatants is intrinsically evil and unjustifiable under any circumstances and regardless of any consequences, then it is better that the earth be blown to pieces than that evil be done.  This, I suppose, is one reading of fiat iustitia pereat mundus, "Let justice be done though the world perish."  Although I invoked an historical example, nothing hinges on it since a matter of principle is at stake.  

This extreme anti-consequentialism troubles me if it is thought to be relevant to how states ought to conduct themselves.  Suppose that there is no God and no soul and no post-mortem existence, and thus that this life is all there is.  Suppose the political authorities let the entire world be destroyed out of a refusal to target and kill innocent civilians of a rogue state.  This would amount to the sacrificing of humanity to an abstract absolutist moral principle.  This would be moral insanity.

On the other hand, extreme anti-consequentialism would make sense if the metaphysics of the Catholic Church or even the metaphysics of Kant were true.    If God is real then this world is relatively unreal and relatively unimportant.  If the soul is real, then its salvation is our paramount concern, and every worldly concern is relatively insignificant.   For the soul to be saved, it must be kept free from, or absolved of, every moral stain in which case it can never be right to do evil in pursuit of good.  Now the deliberate killing of innocent human beings is evil and so must never be done — regardless of consequences.  On a Christian moral scheme, morality is not in the service of our animal life here below; we stand under an absolute moral demand that calls us from beyond this earthly life and speaks to our immortal souls, not to our mortal bodies.  Christianity is here consonant with the great Socratic thought that it is better to suffer evil, wrong, injustice than to to do them. (Plato, Gorgias, 469a)   

But then a moral doctrine that is supposed to govern our behavior in this world rests on an other-worldly metaphysics.  No problem with that — if the metaphysics is true.  For then one's flourishing in this world cannot amount to much as compared to one's flourishing in the next. But how do we know that the metaphysics is true?  Classical theistic metaphysics is reasonably believed, but then so are certain versions of naturalism.  

I am not claiming that classical theism false.  I myself believe it to be true.  My point is that we know that this world is no illusion and is at least relatively real, together with its goods, but we merely believe that God and the soul are real.   

If the buck stops with you and the fate of civilization itself depends on your decision, will you act according to a moral doctrine that rests on a questionable metaphysics or will you act in accordance with worldly wisdom, a wisdom that dictates that in certain circumstances the deliberate targeting of the innocent is justified?

An isolated individual, responsible for no one but himself, is free to allow himself to be slaughtered.  But a leader of a nation  is in a much different position. Even if the leader qua private citizen holds to an absolutist position according to which some actions are intrinsically wrong, wrong regardless of consequences, he would not be justified in acting in his official capacity as head of state from this absolutist position.  The reason is that he cannot reasonably claim that the metaphysics on which his moral absolutism rests is correct.  God may or may not exist — we don't know.  But that this world exists we do know.  And in this world no action is such that consequences are irrelevant to its moral evaluation.  By 'in this world' I mean: according to the prudential  wisdom of this world.  Is adultery, for example, intrinsically wrong such that no conceivable circumstances or consequences could justify it?  A worldly wise person who is in general opposed to adultery will say that there are conceivable situations in which a married woman seduces a man to discover military secrets that could save thousands of lives, and is justified in so doing.

Anscombe's case against Truman does not convince me.  Let the philosophy professor change places with the head of state and then see if her moral rigorism remains tenable.

We confront a moral dilemma.  On the one hand, a head of state may sometimes justifiably act in the interests of the citizens of the state of which he is the head by commanding actions which are intrinsically wrong.  On the other hand, no one may ever justifiably do or command anything that is intrinsically wrong.

Of course the dilemma or aporetic dyad can be 'solved' by denying one of the limbs; but there is no solution which is a good solution. Or so say I.  On my metaphilosophy, the problems of philosophy are almost all of them genuine, some of them humanly important, but none of them soluble.  The above dilemma is an example of a problem that is genuine, important, and insoluble.  

Torture

Patrick Toner holds that waterboarding is torture.  I incline to say that it isn't.  But let's assume I am wrong.  Presumably, most who hold that waterboarding is torture will also hold that torture is intrinsically wrong.  But how could it be wrong for the political authorities to torture a jihadi who knows the locations and detonation times of suitcase nukes planted in Manhattan?  Here again is our moral dilemma.  I suspect Toner would not 'solve' it by adopting consequentialism.  I suspect he holds that torture is wrong always and everywhere and under any conceivable circumstances.  But then he is prepared to sacrifice thousands of human lives to an abstract moral principle, or else is invoking a theological metaphysics that is far less grounded than the prudence of worldly wisdom.  I would like to hear Toner's response to this.

Some have tried to solve the dilemma by invoking the Doctrine of Double Effect.  But I am pretty sure Patrick will not go that route.

Related: The Problem of Dirty Hands 

Is the Pope Catholic?

That depends.

You could be asking whether the man who happens to be the current pope, Francis, is Catholic.  You would then be asking about the occupant of an office at the apex of the Catholic organizational hierarchy.  Or you could be asking about the office itself: Is the office of the papacy occupiable only by a Catholic?  

The answer to the second question is easy: of course.

The answer to the first question is not so easy.  Is Francis a loyal Catholic who upholds authentic Catholic teaching?  Many in the know are skeptical.  See here and here.  I agree with them.  Those links are to First Things articles. The Remnant takes a harsher line.

So there is a clear sense in which the pope is not Catholic.

I suspect that his real 'religion' is leftism.