A quick search yielded the following definition for subjective, “adj. Proceeding from or taking place in a person’s mind rather than the external world.”
Yep. And it’s not lost on me that while God may be a “person” (or three persons!), that “personhood” is of a different quality than a human person. Nevertheless, I think the salient distinction there works, all the same. “Subjective” is an effective term for pointing at this concept of ‘will-driven’, or 'of mind", as a way of being rigorous in locating and classifying the sources of values, aesthetics, and even physical reality itself (i.e. on Catholicism, all of nature proceeds from the will of God).
My objection to calling the mind of God subjective without qualification is described in these two quotes. In the first, it is revealed quite clearly why we do not place a great deal of trust in subjectivity (vested interests, biases, distorted psychologies). A mind with perfect knowledge and will would have none of these.
Agreed, and I haven’t disputed that. Rather, I suggest that “perfect knowledge” doesn’t “objectify” the mind, but rather fully “subjectivizes” it. To the extent Catholic beliefs are correct, and Yahweh exists and is omniscient and omnipotent, this renders him, as someone put it upthread “The Supreme Subject”.
Which is to say that bias, distortion, dishonesty, ignorance and all that are artifacts of human nature and human limitations, but not essential to “subjectivity”. There’s nothing inconsistent about saying “God knows all, perfectly”, and “The pronouncements of God are subjective”. I think this is where a basic difference in our understandings comes up, this idea that subjectivity
entails all these imperfections and limitations. I don’t see those as being entailed or indicated at all; they are coincidental to man’s nature. He is subjective in the sense he is “will-driven” (his “self” is a mind),
and he also happens to be equipped with a mind with all the well-known limitations we struggle with. An alien race that had a mind of far, far greater power, perfection, reason, discipline, etc. would be
exactly as subjective in its pronouncements and choices as you or I. Or God.
The second quote distinguishes mind from the external world, and it is this reference to an external world that is key. In an ontological sense creation and the creator are certainly distinct, but if we are talking about perception, what could possibly be external to the mind of God?
Right, this is very good, making progress in the discussion. That is a statement that fully resonates with me. The very universe – forget values for the moment, just talking atoms and physical matter, here – is “mind-dependent”, on Catholic theism. That isn’t something Catholics shy away from, but proclaim proudly, one of their major contributions to the spectrum of possible beliefs in men. But this interdependency links God and the God-willed universe, necessarily, in a way that is totally incompatible with the idea of “pure objectivity”, if that phrasing works for you – the existence of something (a universe) that is perfectly brute fact, and no more dependent for its existence or structure on God’s will or mind than on
your mind or
mine.
If we accept the pushback from some of the Catholics here, then “objectivity” get nullified in the pure sense. There is now no term to use for an ontology where a universe (or just rock, perhaps) obtains totally independent of mind, any mind, including the mind and will of God. Catholics may not agree with the
actuality that concept describes, but the problem is that Catholics here aren’t arguing against the actuality, but against there
being any such concept at all!
Here’s a simple question that brings this forward. If you are a Catholic and you think Catholic morality is “objective”, then
what would be the adjective you’d apply for the concept where morality obtains completely and utterly independent of any mind or will, including God, Allah, the Great Spirit, you, me, demons, ghosts or
any entity that is possessed of a mind and will? How would you refer to that concept?
My claim is that this is what “objectivity” points to as a principle in practice, right now, and it works, Catholic discomfort with it not withstanding.
There are a few instances in the gospels when Christ knew things that for a normal human conciousness would be impossible (i.e. he “saw” a man sitting under a tree beyond the range of vision, he knew what the Pharisees were thinking, he foretold some events before they happened). At one point an evangelist writes that Christ always knew who a person was and what they were thinking. If by divine subjectivity you mean that our will and God’s will are distinct, I am in whole hearted agreement.
That is my understanding, yes. Our will and God’s will (on Catholicism) are not only distinct, but fundamentally different as “types of will”. Yet, they are both perfectly subjective in being will-based in their choices, actions and degrees of freedom.
On the other hand, we should not assume that our experience of subjectivity, with all of its limitations, can be used to describe God. It is safer to say that we do not understand how the mind of God operates.
I think a key point to consider is the idea I gave above, that “subjectivity” in no wise implies or entails fallibility, bias, distortion, dishonesty or ignorance. We humans are subjects, making subjective choices, but the problems with our epistemic limitations and other problematic motivations and flaws are wholly incidental to this, not predicated on it.
That may be a subtle point, but I think that may unlock whatever stalemate we are dealing with on this.
Good comments, thanks.
-TS