S
Socrates4Jesus
Guest
Is the metaphysical, physical?I understand where you’re coming from Soc. I really do. I was born and raised a scientist. I love science and the explanations that it gives. I love the problems that it can solve. I love that on many levels “biology is just chemistry”, something I discovered and told my mom in High School. I received a bachelors degree in biochemistry and now I’m in medical school, learning how to take care of people. I love science.
But one thing I’ve learned over the past few years is that science isn’t everything. There is far more to this world than what we can see or feel or study. There is the physical world made up of atoms. There is also a metaphysical world that underlies it. The beauty of God’s creation is that 99.999% of the time, he makes it so the two match up. Because he commands that the natural world follow these laws he has established for the vast majority of the time, we can study it and make predictions about it.
Studying the natural world is wonderful. Its a good job and a good calling. BUT sometimes, when we think we have God’s creation all figured out, we become tempted to be intellectually prideful. We start saying that what we’ve discovered or learned is all there is. We ignore other truths, other realities.
Philosophy isn’t wrong simply because it looks at the world through different eyes than Biology or Chemistry. Philosophy doesn’t negate the “truths” of Biology and Chemistry. Philosophy studies that which is deeper. It studies the metaphysical realm.
With your questions, you are making the mistake of thinking that “if I just get to the smallest part then I will have found the substance in the material world.” I showed you the error in your thinking about the snowball and so you turned to water. But you’re ignoring things on a macro-level.
Soc, what makes a chair a chair? It isn’t its atoms or molecules: I can make a chair out of almost any substance and then turn around and use those same atoms to create something entirely different. It isn’t how it looks: chairs come in all sorts of shapes and sizes and colors. They can have 2 legs or 4 legs or no legs at all. They can have a short back or a tall back or no back at all. They can have arms or no arms. I can take each of the above parts of a chair (legs, back, arms, and a seat) and make a couch or a love seat or a stool or a foot rest. A chair is a chair because it has the metaphysical substance of a chair. This substance, its “chair-ness” is what makes it a chair. And on some level we recognize that in things. We can walk into a room and see a chair we’ve never seen - perhaps one that even looks VERY different from anything we’ve ever seen - and know that it is probably a chair.
What makes a snowball a snowball? As I demonstrated before, it isn’t its atoms. So, Soc, what makes a snowball a snowball? And what makes a pen a pen? And what makes bread bread? And what makes an atom an atom?