Entries tagged with “Scientia”.


Traditionalists frequently criticize the current state of Western intellectual life and culture, arguing that our civilization lacks a genuine spiritual dimension. This fact is painfully obvious to many, including more moderate conservatives. But we can occasionally run into some difficulty when explaining that we believe this decline to have begun during the Renaissance. For many conservatives eras such as the Renaissance and the Enlightenment are the high points of Western civilization when great scientific discoveries and artistic achievements were made. In order to explain our position it is important to emphasize that for us the main goal of intellectual activity (reason) is closeness with the divine, or transcendence. We value many intellectual pursuits, but for us a modern mathematician is not as important as an ancient Pythagorean mathematician. They might both be equally capable of solving a particular mathematical problem, but the modern sees nothing beyond the numbers and the their relations with each other, while the Pythagorean sees the numbers and their relations as a symbolic language for theology.

A good analogy for this idea can be found in the realm of morality and personal behavior. A religious man and an atheist can share a moral belief, for example, that adultery is wrong, and they can both succeed in avoiding adultery because of this belief. But the moral belief and the associated behavior has an extra dimension for the man who acts in this way because God commands it, a dimension medieval_writingthat is absent from the man who acts in this way merely because he does not wish to cause any distress to his fellow human beings, or whatever his mundane reason might be.

For the religious man, avoiding adultery is a spiritual exercise, a manifestation of God’s will in his own psyche and activity. Something on a higher metaphysical plain is gaining mastery over something on a lower plain (the human individual). In the case of the moral atheist there is no interaction between metaphysical levels, no transcendence. Rather there are two things on the same level interacting with each other, the desire for adultery and the desire for not causing distress. Both desires are concerned solely with mundane actions. The actions of the atheist are purely horizontal, while the actions of the religious man have a vertical dimension. The latter’s action exist on several different levels, and that which is viewed on this physical level is but a small part of the entire action. They are unified across the different vertically ordered hierarchical levels, and the part of the action on the lower level serves as a symbol for the corresponding parts on higher levels. Thus it turns out that the two actions, that of the religious man and that of the atheist, share a goal, avoiding adultery, but that the action of the religious man has the added goal of following God’s will. In the same way intellectual activity can have two goals, effecting a mundane change and making a connection with a higher level of reality.

It was during the Renaissance and especially the Enlightenment that Western intellectual life began focusing too much on the former goal and neglecting the latter, and in more recent times the latter has been vigorously attacked and deliberately removed. For this reason many see the decline of the West beginning at a much later period, when vociferous and explicit deniers or God became popular, but it is important to keep in mind the true root of the problem, for that is the only way to find an effective remedy.

Knowledge does not come to us in details,

but in flashes of light from heaven.

-Henry David Thoreau.*

Knowledge is generally defined, at last nowadays, as facts integrated by the mental faculty. True knowledge is in fact a total integration of Truth into the whole being, so it is not only the mental faculty but every other human faculty that must participate in the act of knowing. It is for this reason that we say ‘to know is to be’, for in the final analysis what we know is what we are.

knowledge

Now most men would claim that they do not in fact know all that they are, for example that they do not have perfect knowledge of the physical body. What they mean by this is actually that this knowledge is not grasped by the mental faculty, precisely because it exists on a more contingent plane than reason. If then, extent of the mental faculty is what most men call knowledge, how much greater must be the Knowledge of the Absolute Reality, given that it is all encompassing. This is why we say that God alone possesses pure Knowledge. The knowledge of man is limited and fragile, but the Knowledge of God is unlimited precisely because He is unlimited.

The knowledge of man, insofar as he is limited to reason, is a distant reflection of divine Knowledge. Reason is capable of grasping facts only because it is illuminated by pure Intelligence. Reason is like the moon, the intellect like the sun. Now when a man has harmony within himself, reason is like a pure mirror, light can illuminate and cause it to reflect. On the other hand, when a man is wisespiritually unstable, the rational faculty is like a crude mirror which distorts those things which it reflects. In this case the rational faculty may still be able to grasp facts, but it will distort them and twist them towards false ends. This is the case with the rationalists of our day. Both of the previous scenarios assume that man does not have direct access to the divine Intellect itself, which is not necessarily the case. When it occurs that a man actively realizes his non-separation from God, his knowledge is no longer his own, but that of God. In this case rational intelligence can contribute nothing to what that man knows, but then serves the function of formulating that knowledge to display it to the world. For man, the realization that he is not other than God shatters the illusion of the ego, which at this point is seen never to have existed, this is why it is said that “an undelivered man is actually a delivered man who does not know it”.

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*The Thoreau Reader. Annotated works of Henry David Thoreau. Life Without Principle: http://thoreau.eserver.org/life2.html