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Responsibility to aspire to the greater good? Well, then I'm glad I'm not a commie
naturalist. I am not even implying that Tom Clark is a collectivist in any way,
shape, or form. I don't know the man's politics. But after all, "the greater good"
is Communism, as opposed to "promoting the general Welfare," which is American
Constitutionalism. And that is a not a parsing of the terminology. So why use such
terminology?
While Marx said violence in and of itself is not a good thing, he admitted it may
at times be necessary to achieve a greater good. But the promotion of the general
welfare requires the protection of the individual from violence initiated by
others. The use of State sanctioned violence "when necessary" is the tyranny of
the rulers over the ruled--for the ostensible benefit of those who are ruled.
Why do I take the critical and extreme path of making the Clark look like an anti-
individualist? Because he speaks in the most general of "mushy" soft terminology
so that he can not be pinned down as to just what he means--unless you read
between the lines."[W]e [need to] live in the light of the empirical truth about
ourselves; we don’t need another way of knowing that [which] applies to personal
concerns or ultimate concerns. This simplifies things."
Why should personal concerns not be of importance? Because personal concerns get
in the way of the common good, without which we can have no ethically personal
self-fulfillment!
Clark admits his naturalistic world-view is probably for the 25th Century because
it will take a lot of "education"--or should it be called "re-education"--before
we see the idealism of which he dreams. So it may be assumed he does not advocate
State-promoted violence in order to accomplish any of his goals. But others of his
world-view, those who are also looking at "the common good," do not feel this way.
As I wrote in a column last week, the "WeCanSolveIt" campaign that is all over TV
is a direct offshoot and is supported by Al Gore's environmental campaign. That
can only mean government controls, since he isn't talking the 25th Century; Gore
is talking ten years.
Everything he says is obfuscation. "Fully caused" means that what we "want" and
"who we are" are the result of things not in our control, those pesky memes and
genes and environmental factors that "fully cause" us. "
"If we reproduced the exact circumstances that obtained at a given time and place,
the same behavior would arise: so, in any given situation, we couldn’t have done
otherwise, on this view. This means we can’t take ultimate credit or blame for
what we do."
He means, if you had something to do all over again, went back in time and
encountered the same circumstances, you never would have thought of a different
course of action. This is not because in going back we are repeating history. It
is because "we are not the ultimate originators of our behavior, but simply the
most proximate cause, and other causes surround us in time and space." In time and
space we are fully caused by things not in our control, which affect our choices,
thereby leaving "free will" to be not only "supernatural" (to be explained below,)
but leaving free will to be anything but free.
There again, Clark uses that non-differential phrasing that means nothing. He says
we are "more or less" deterministic. Which is it? And why are we deterministic, if
indeed we are? Because the "other causes that surround us in time and space"
determine who and what we are for us.
He says we are "organic, evolved systems." That is stating the obvious. We are not
rock or gas; we are organic. Does this help his argument? It merely gives it a
weightier preponderance of overspeak.
He says we are "fully embedded within natural causality." I'd venture to say we
could not be half embedded, or one-tenth embedded, or two-hundred percent
embedded. But what does it mean to be embedded "within natural causality?"
Clark uses that phrasing over and over as some sort of mantra, trying to dispell
the soul as something man is predisposed to think of as supernatural. It is his
goal to "embed" us so deeply into the "natural full-causality" of our determined
lives as un-free members of the "common good" that individualism and the knowledge
of what we call soul--no matter what it turns out to be be--is dismissed by us as
the equivalent of mythology.
"Thanks to neuroscience, there are vastly fewer gaps these days in which the soul
can hide." The soul is not an empirical existent, as Clark leads us to infer,
something he says we believe is supernaturally reified and existing as something
separate and apart from the biology of the human body, floating around it, causing
our bodies or our minds to do things while we go on blindly believing that we have
free will in order to fulfull the agency of the soul.
It is true that anyone with a belief in traditional religion believes something
along these lines. Even Deists believe it. But naturalists don't have to give up
defining a "soul" we know exists even by any other name they may choose to give
it. We naturalists don't believe it is supernatural. So we naturalists don't
believe it is "implanted" supernaturally or otherwise. We believe something exists
that has been called soul and is defined as supernatural, but is not supernatural
and is the result of our biology. We don't have to search off the beaten track for
"memes" and "genes" and environmental agents as "causes" of behavior which are
unchangable even if we went back in time to do something all over again.
The soul is precisely that which Clark claims neuroscience dispells: the
neurological mechanics of the human organ in its entirety, the act of
consciousness looking in upon itself and "feeling" its position in the world,
knowing it must decide right from wrong on the basis of extant circumstances.
On that account he is correct; we must make all our decisions based on extant
circumstances, on things that we have no control over, such as the light turning
red when we're in a hurry to get to work but forcing us to stop, for example. We
have no free will to run the light? Why not? We have no free will to calm down by
saying the Serenity Prayer? Why not? We have no free will to explode with road
rage and scream obscenities at the light and the city that put it there, and at
the people going in other directions who didn't have to stop? Why not? Why don't
we have the free will to act otherwise than we would have?
Well, that was not the naturalistic world view of the soul before St. Augustine,
but the pre-Augustinian Naturalists did not believe that the soul was implanted by
the ruler of the universe. They were well aware of what we now call the "tabula
rasa" mind, and that as the mind fills with metaphysical entities, so grows the
soul based upon our evaluation of the specific entities we have come to
comprehend. They did believe the soul was supernatural, and that it was
transcendal of time and space.
They did believe the soul "flew back up to heaven," or some such nonsense as that.
But if neuroscience is proving that there is no "implanted" entity we can wrap our
minds around, it certainly is proving that what we can wrap our minds around is
the idea that emotions are caused by the firing of neurons and the resultant
chemical and electrical reactions in our central nervous system.
I've always said the soul is nothing more than the manifestation of the central
nervous system, a manifestation of which we are aware within our cognitive
capacities. But manifestations can be positively identified, and if the firing of
neurons when we are faced with a decision, and the resultant firing of more
neurons when we make that decision, can be located within our being it does not
have to have the identity of "supernatural" when everything that exists as its
cause is necessarily "natural." It is for the greater good of mankind that we
identify the soul as individualistic, and neither "contra-causal" or
"compatibilist", except that the harder I look the less luck I have finding an
actual denotation of either phrase as it relates to free will. "Contra-causal"
seems to be a floating abstraction not found in dictionaries but imbued with the
anti-virtue of leaving man powerless.
The soul is natural, as natural as the fingernails on your hand, and was no more
put inside you at conception by something that supercedes "natural" than your
fingernails were implanted supernaturally. But they both exist.
I think Clark has things backward, but for the life of me I don't know how he got
it that way. Since our souls are not supernatural, since they are nothing but
neurons firing and the resultant emotional responses, then doesn't that indicate
individualism, rather than "being one" with nature?
Publishing Note:
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