PhilPro 2
Where to Begin
In a sense we have
begun the philosophical project, and that is with the idea of Tradition or
Tradere. Now, perhaps it would be wise to begin with the concept of how the
ideas enter the human being and come back out in an altered form.
Mechanism of Tradition
It is debated whether
the human soul enters the world with some preequipped knowledge or as a blank
slate in terms of knowledge. In terms of intellect we know that the human soul
is indeed fundamentally intellect and will and that it is enjoined to the human
body to form the complete human. For the purposes of this work temporarily, I
shall assume the truth of the blank slate. The blank slate is convenient as it
posits universal uniformity of the soul. While an innate knowledge will have to
answer the following of question of whether all souls are uniform in knowledge
or that there is in an inequality of knowledge in the souls at their creation.
Assuming blank slate
theory, that means all knowledge of the soul comes from outside. Now since all
knowledge comes from outside and ultimately it comes from God, then each soul
has no personal material to create knowledge. Instead, the soul receives that
knowledge from God indirectly through predecessors, and the soul will transmit
that knowledge to their successors and the Tradition is sustained. Yet the
Tradition evolves, because each soul with their intellect will process that
knowledge with their intellect and then they will transmit the processed or
altered knowledge to the next generation. This process of knowledge
modification is automatic.
For now, this is all
we need to know about the precise mechanism of Tradition, now we can move on to
the content of the Tradition, that is the knowledge of Being or Existence.
The Mechanism of this Project
This project is not
done in a highly structured or systematic manner. Rather it is done more
spontaneously, whatever idea was granted by God in any given point of time is
what is written immediately. As such, the writings are divided into these notes
in the Philosophy Project folder. When we get stuck, we may read over prior
writings and perhaps we may derive new ideas from there. As such, the project can
keep moving as there is always a new writing. Eventually I hope for structure
and system to emerge by itself from these spontaneous acts of writing while
being guided by the Holy Spirit.
The Thing and the Existence
For I have heard of St
Thomas Aquinas somewhere saying that being is “that which is”. Therefore, Being
is precisely a “thing” which “exists”. Now this leads to the precise question
of what is the distinction between thing and existence. Of course, we’re starting
off fresh from the abyssal void of unknowing, so the Thomistic distinction is
simply a stepping stone to move forward towards deeper understanding. It is to
be understood that there will be great trouble over the language and the
semantics. So if this system is to be brought outside, there will be great work
in finding the parallels of language. Now we must treat of the thing and the
existence separately.
The Thing or the Object
When we conceive of
the thing or the object, what is it? In past writings I so easily write off the
thing as being a “unit of existence” yet this assumes that all things exist and
that all things are part of existence. We know by the concept of “non-existent
things” that there are things which indeed do not exist and so they are outside
of existence. This is a severe problem when considering that the thing which is
totally outside of existence cannot even be placed in the mind. So we consider
that there might be something like possible existence. Everything has possible
existence, but not everything has actual existence.
The Thing or the Object Part 2
The concept of the
thing or the object is difficult to define for it is one of the most
fundamental concepts in all of philosophy, and this system recognizes that. The
object is also the most transcendent concept, as it is possible to speak of an
object which defies all created concepts, an object which is so isolated and
unknown that the only feature of the object that we can speak of is that it is
isolated and unknown. As the category of object is all-encompassing, then there
is no object which does not fall into the category of object. For anything
which can be spoken of, and even those which cannot be spoken of due to the
limitations of our language, is an object.
The definition of an
object goes beyond even that of existence. For while existence still has
potential of non-existence, that is some sort of duality, the object is beyond
all duality, it is wholly One and United. The reality of object is that which
is totally unattainable because it even goes beyond existence and as such it
goes beyond God, for God is Existence. Yet would it not be heretical to say
that there is something more fundamental, something more foundational, than God
Himself? We do not know, yet in this system there is no heresy, only truths and
falsehood.
It may very well be
that God is simply that object of high that He is so unimaginable that there
are levels of His Being which we perceive. There is this level of Being of God,
which we can speak of with definite language, and there is that level of Being
which goes beyond all language other than the language of negation. I digress,
we shall return to the concept of object at once. The object in itself cannot
be defined in itself, but it must be defined in relationship to all other
objects which we perceive.
Yet this is true of
all other objects other than that One Object, let us say a dog. Do we ever
comprehend what a dog is? No we do not, we instead comprehend a dog by that
which composes it. We define a dog as things which composes and constitutes a
dog. It has 4 legs, it is an animal, it is a mammal, it has fur, it is the
species of Canis lupus familiaris, and so on. So in general, an object is
comprehended by relationships of properties. These properties are further
comprehended by their relationships until one reaches the fundamental property,
the simple property, and so on.
Let us take the
mathematical concept of 4. What is 4? What does 4 mean? 4 is an object which
reflects the cardinality or the amount or the measure of distinction of all
groups of objects which do possess the number of 4. Yet then again, even the
simple object of 4 is defined and understood by the examples of 4. As such, no
object is understood by itself, but it is understood by other objects and
relationships with those other objects. This means that the object which is
isolated cannot be comprehended.
Yet to say something
hints at a possible level of comprehension. So even the isolated object can be
known by the lack of relations it has with our world and the rest of reality. The
problem is, the isolated object is a truly impossible object for it negates
sound reason about the world. For all objects are bound under the single
comprehensible category of reality, and so anything within reality do possess
relations to each other by virtue of their relationship to the Category of
Reality, which we also know as the Category of Object.
To say that there is
an isolated object is to say that there is a whole other Reality or Category,
which cannot be united at all with our Category. Yet as long as we define the
Category of Object as that Category which includes all other categories, then we
have to say that all objects are related to each other by the virtue of the
Categorical Union. The problem with the Category of Object is that because it
is the Union of all dualities and opposites and contraries, then you can
encounter 2 objects radically different but they are united by the concept of Object,
that is the Category of All.
It is possible to
accept that it is impossible to define the Category of Object, such that the
Object is in itself undefined. It is important to distinguish between the
Object being defined but that definition is unattainable and that there is
absolutely no definition at all to the Object. Now this is problematic as that
which exists must have an identity and therefore a definition. And we cannot
say that the Object is that which exists as we have defined that existence is
distinct from the object itself.
Even that which has no
identity is indeed identified as the lack of an identity. So that which has no
identity actually has an identity, it is simply that the identity is empty.
The Object Part 3
Let us attempt to make
this a bit more organized and structured. St Thomas Aquinas defined being as
“That which is” aka an Object in Existence. Yet what is the Object and what is
Existence? In the previous section we have defined the following, that the
Object is beyond existence, that the object’s identity is empty, and the object
is not anything in particular. As opposed to existence, the object is without
negation as the object is the category of all.
The Other Approach
For there is no real
other approach in philosophy. What God meant by the other approach is the
evidential approach. That we observe from the particular realities and ascend
to the abstract and general realities instead of attacking the general reality
immediately.
Pluralism or Monism
Is the world composed
of a single substance which replicates itself over and over again, or is it
composed of truly distinct substances? Yet if the world is composed truly
distinct substances or truly distinct principles, then we cannot possibly
relate with those distinct substances or principles. As such we obtain a clear
principle:
Completely distinct
principles and substances cannot interact and relate with each other.
The principles and
substances which can relate with each other must be united by a unifying
principle or substance.
Therefore, even if
pluralism is true, we can never know about it. Pluralism is impossible to
prove. However, even if we define that pluralism is true monism or at least
categorical monism will always be true. How is this so? It is because even if 2
realities which cannot interact at all exist, then there is always a possible
statement which includes the 2 realities. The statement that “There are 2
realities.” Is true and possibly made. As such, there is always a category
which includes all other categories of realities. This Supreme Category proves
that monism is undeniably true even if only at a categorical level.
Substantial Monism or Substantial
Pluralism
So we have proven that
monism is true categorically. Now we must discern whether in terms of
substance, that is to say the object which makes up everything at a fundamental
level, is one or is many.
Principles
1. The Category of Object is all-encompassing
2. There is no object which lies outside of the
Category of Object
3. Any member of the category of object is
understood by relationships of other objects or with other objects.
4. A category is founded on a common substance
Questions
1. Are all substances derived from one single
substance?
Monosubstance
If there are many
substances, then it cannot be denied that there is one supreme substance which we
all call God. However, we cannot say that every substance is derived from the
substance of God as it would imply that every substance is substantially just
God. This is pantheism and thus is heretical. So it seems perfect monosubstance
cannot be correct. For if there is only one substance, then the result is the
Trinity and only the Trinity. So there must be more than one substance which
composes reality.
Polysubstance
For one substance
cannot turn into many substances. As such, singularity cannot give birth to
multiplicity and only multiplicity can give birth to multiplicity. That is why
the Most Holy Trinity exists, it is the only possible relationship which the
Single Substance can have. However, that which is multiple is inferior to the
Singular. Yet there is a way to convert the Single Substance into multiple
beings. That is by division.
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