G
greylorn
Guest
I think you are wrong, but that does not make it so. I have often thought that I was wrong, but I turned out to be right, and vice versa. Right or wrong, you’ve put some thought into a worthy question. Here are my best answers.I would like to know what the traditional understanding of epistemology within Catholic philosophy. According, to the rationalists, reason is the ultimate source of knowledge. Plato, for example, used to think that, the human being is born with ideas that are innate to him and that - like Socrates - the purpose of education was to bring those ideas out.
For the empiricists, all knowledge comes from experience and it is not possible for reason to be the final authority on reality. Reality, for many empiricists, however, was seen with skepticism and many were those - like David Hume - who doubted that we could apprehend reality in itself.
I, for myself, struggle with the notion of innate ideas. Is this true? Is this part of Catholic philosophy and theology? Also, I tend to think that all knowledge starts with the senses and that even mathematical truths would not exist if we did not have sense experience. Am I wrong?
You’ve put the cart before the horse. Your question is like standing alongside a wheeled buggy and asking how it moves. A better question would be, “what makes it move?” The Harry Potter stories featured this example at two levels, beginning with carriages which moved students from train to school without any form of locomotion— as if by magic.
The understanding of knowledge requires an understanding of mind, because mind may be the creator of knowledge, and is certainly a repository of sorts for it.
There is no agreement about the nature of mind, so we are free to invent one. I propose that humans have two mental mechanisms, brain, and the entity which religions call soul. Mine is a modernized version of classic Cartesian Dualism, with details about the properties of “soul” which are consistent with modern physics, and irrelevant to this discussion. It is enough to say that the brain handles some kinds of knowledge, like how to do arithmetic, drive a car, and pick your nose. The “soul” handles mostly conceptual knowledge, those things which we often understand without words.
The brain contains innate knowledge, sometimes referred to as instincts. Emotions come into this category. These can be modified or entirely recreated by forces outside the brain, including programming, electronics, and chemistry. Brain absorbs knowledge via direct sensory connections.
The “soul” originally appears without pre-programmed knowledge, but most folks with three-digit I.Q.'s have been here before. Yes, I know that reincarnation is not a popular concept among either atheists or Christians, but it is a common belief in much of the world, and there is considerable excellent modern evidence for it.
A reincarnated “soul” comes with two kinds of memory— residual memory from its previous life (short lived, usually manifesting only in young children), emotional memory from critical previous lives, and, most importantly, conceptual memory. The conceptual memory content provides the groundwork for genius and proclivities, among other things.
Mathematics is entirely different from ordinary knowledge. It is the only knowledge which can be obtained without sensory (name removed by moderator)ut.
You will notice that while ordinary knowledge has various degrees of validity and acceptance, mathematics does not. It exists independently of the universe, God, and any other minds capable of discovering it. Math is the one thing upon which all humans must agree. Our enemies may believe in a different God, or no God, but in order to build the bombs and delivery systems they want to use to convert us to their opinions, they use the same math.