Skip to content

Notices

 

ARTICLE PUBLISHED: January 2021

Origin of things - title pageOn the Ultimate Origination of Things

Philosophers’ Imprint (the publisher’s site)
PDF (read/download the article)

Abstract: Why does the universe exist rather than not exist? And why is it the way that it is and not otherwise? Some philosophers have contended that it is reasonable to ask such questions even if the universe is eternal, or held to be so. And some, Leibniz for instance, have claimed in addition that such questions can never be satisfactorily answered by looking to the universe itself, but only by acknowledging the reality of an extramundane and absolutely necessary being as the ultimate origin of things. To all appearances, these claims remain viable. There seems, at any rate, to be nothing in modern cosmology that rules them out. Even so, it is argued here that certain developments in general dynamical theory preclude an extramundane origin, without, however, impugning the legitimacy of our existential questions or contradicting the idea that there exists an absolutely necessary being.

 

BOOK PUBLISHED: January 2013

Pneumatology of Matter

Amazon US | UK (the book’s page)
Book Depository (the book’s page)
iff Books (the publisher’s site)
Facebook (the author’s page)
NZ Authors (the author’s page)
Tumblr (interview with the author)

Synopsis: Throughout history philosophers have posited souls, vital spirits and other active principles in living beings in order to explain their differences from non-living beings. With the arrival of genetics and evolutionary biology, however, it now seems possible to account for these differences without assuming such principles. Living beings are henceforth to be understood mechanically, as products of self-replicating microscopic objects and selective environmental conditions, rather than pneumatically, in terms of active principles. It is very remarkable, therefore, that physics has since abandoned the mechanical model of explanation, which it gave to biology, and returned to the pneumatical model, applying it not merely to living beings but to matter quite generally. The conceptual origins and philosophical significance of this remarkable development are explored in the present work. Part One examines the crucial role played by field theory in the decline of mechanism in physics and its replacement by pneumatism. Part Two discusses the importance of this development for metaphysics and the theory of human nature.

Review: David Gunn…argues extensively that modern physics has completely abandoned mechanistic explanations and that important philosophical conclusions follow from this, among them: • That a unified account of Man and Nature is possible. • That nothing transcends Nature, but all is immanent. He calls his philosophy “subjective materialism”. • That freedom is nothing more than the power of self-determination and that this power is possessed by every being in Nature. It is not the ability to act otherwise, since only a different self could have acted differently. • That the uniqueness of Man’s freedom is his ability to produce intellectual objects of theoretic, practical, and aesthetic value (the True, the Good, the Beautiful). This is Man’s vocation. (The capitalized abstractions and the unconcern with feminist objections to equating “Man” with “human beings in general” is typical of Gunn’s affinity with the grand system-building rationalists of the 18th and 19th centuries.) • That “good” and “evil” can be defined in terms of what promotes or thwarts intellectual production. • That the soul is mortal and that human mortality and human evil have the same origin, which, if I understand Gunn correctly, is simply that the part falls short of being the whole. Unlike many authors who have attempted to explain the philosophical and religious or spiritual ramifications of modern physics, Gunn does not shy away from using mathematical symbols. Equations abound in the middle part of the book. However, as a relatively ignorant layman in this field, I can attest that it is possible to follow the gist of Gunn’s exposition while sliding over the details of the equations. This is a very ambitious book that deserves to be read and discussed by everyone who is interested in the question of what modern science really has to say about man’s place in the universe. My own evaluation is that Gunn has made an impressive case for the claim that modern physics has abandoned mechanistic explanations and that this has important philosophical implications. I am not convinced, however, by his conclusions about the nature of human freedom, his claim that it is possible to have a priori knowledge of nature, and his reversion to exalting the intellect over emotions. These are no doubt questions the reader will wish to ponder for himself or herself. ~ Jack Call, Ph.D., Philosophy Professor, Citrus College, Author of God is a Symbol of Something True (From an Amazon review.)

— For further details visit the book’s page on this site.

%d bloggers like this: