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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger William Wildblood said...

And the more you rant the better. We need ranting because we are so stuck in our ways and our unthought through assumptions about life. We need something to wake us up. I don't know why modern people don't believe in hell. What do they think they are living in now? What have they created with their self-centred, lazy cowardice if not a hell on earth?

Now that's a rant!

21 January 2020 at 15:21

Blogger Matias F. said...

I'd say that the idea that metaphysics can be ignored has a long tradition in Western philosophy. Some of the biggest names (Aquinas, Descartes and Hegel), have set out an explicit goal of bridging in their systematic thought the gap between two extremes, monist idealism (= everything dependent on God's will) on the one hand, radical materialism on the other hand, neither of which would leave a role to free will. The result has, in general, been some kind of dualism, which leaves free will to the individual but argues that the universe and societies function in some systematic way that obligates the individual to conform to the rules of society. The metaphysics behind the various philosophic systems leave a degree of variation between the two extremes.

In 18th and 19th century liberalism, this tendency was very explicit, but to my understanding of the history of Western thought, it was there at the very beginning. In 20th century nationalism, even radical materialist positions were made compatible with traditionalist ideas.

Of course, the implicit background to this kind of philosophical compromises (system-building) was the grounding of society in throne and altar: in a military hierarchy and the control of legitimate opinion, which had authority by tradition. When this 'irrational' element of authority was lost, metaphysics could no longer be ignored as societal order (if any) would have to be constructed on a new basis.

Now we are living on borrowed time as disorder advances.

23 January 2020 at 11:53