Thursday, July 21, 2011

Knowability and Incomprehensibility of God - A Missed Opportunity




1. Michael Horton's The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way is a joy to read.

But a major weakness of Horton's is that he subscribes to Cornelius Van Til's theory of knowledge.

In following Van Til's theory of knowledge, Michael Horton has let pass an opportunity to clear-up some of the confusions in the doctrines of God, the Knowability of God and the Incomprehensibility of God.

The purpose of this post is to state and explain the confusions.

I will give examples in later posts.


2. There are two mutually exclusive views about the object of knowledge:

(a) The empirical intuition claims that all objects of knowledge are objects of perception.

(b) The propositional view claims that all objects of knowledge are truths or propositions, which are objects of conception.

These two views were part and parcel of the conflicts between Cornelius Van Til and Gordon H. Clark in the 1940s.

The conflict has become known as The Clark-Van Til Controversy.

Cornelius Van Til is ambiguous between these two views.

Following Van Til, Michael Horton is also ambiguous between these two views.

Gordon H. Clark believes in the propositional view of knowledge.

Following Clark, I also believe in the propositional view of knowledge.

In following Van Til, Michael Horton has let pass an opportunity to clear-up some confusions.


3. Following Gordon H. Clark, I believe:

(a) The object of knowledge is truth.

(b) All truths are propositional.

(c) Therefore, the object of knowledge is a proposition.

I believe we have perceptions.

I also believe perceptions are *sources* of knowledge.

But I do not believe perceptions are not the only sources of knowledge.

And I do not believe objects of perception are *objects* of knowledge.

All truths are propositional.

Some of our propositions might refer to or is about objects of perception, but the perception itself is not an object of knowledge.

We know truths and a perception in itself is neither true nor false, therefore an object of perception is not an object of knowledge.

But our interpretation of perceptions can be an object of knowledge.

We interpret a perception by making truth-claims about the perception.

A truth-claim is a proposition.

We have interpreted the perceptions truly or correctly if the truth-claims about the perceptions are true.

We have interpreted the perceptions falsely or incorrectly if the truth-claims about the perceptions are false.


4. Some confusions in the doctrines of God, the Knowability of God and the Incomprehensibility of God can be explained if it is assumed the confused take objects of perception as objects of knowledge.

If one takes objects of perception as objects of knowledge, then:

(a) God cannot be known directly through our perceptions of God because we cannot perceive God;

(b) The nature of God cannot be known through our perceptions of his nature because we cannot perceive the nature of God;

(c) The essence of God cannot be known through our perceptions of his essence because we cannot perceive the essence of God;

(d) God can only be known indirectly through his effects such as the effects of his actions; and

(e) God is knowable but incomprehensible becomes God is not understandable.


5. Visual perceptions are considered one of the most important modes of human perception.

The following Bible passage is paradigmatic in substantiating the claim that human beings cannot see God:

And the LORD said to Moses, "This very thing that you have spoken I will do, for you have found favor in my sight, and I know you by name." Moses said, "Please show me your glory." And he said, "I will make all my goodness pass before you and will proclaim before you my name 'The LORD.' And I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy on whom I will show mercy. But," he said, "you cannot see my face, for man shall not see me and live." (Exodus 33:17-20 ESV)


6. Charles Hodge in his Systematic Theology gives a more philosophical explanation of why human beings cannot form a mental image of God:

It is not hold that God, properly speaking, can be conceived of; that is, we cannot form a mental image of God. "All conception," says Mr. Mansel, "implies imagination." To have a valid conception of a horse, he adds, we must be able "to combine" the attributes which form "the definition of the animal" into "a representative image." Conception is defined by Taylor in the same manner, as "the forming or bringing an image or idea into the mind by an effort of the will." In this sense of the word it must be admitted that the Infinite is not an object of knowledge. We cannot form an image of infinite space, or of infinite duration, or of an infinite whole. To form an image is to limit, to circumscribe. But the infinite is that which is incapable of limitation. It is admitted, therefore, that the infinite God is inconceivable. We can form no representative image of Him in our minds. ([1871-1873] 1981, 1:336)


7. Since human beings cannot form an image of God in our minds, we cannot have visual perceptions of God.

If we take objects of perception as objects of knowledge, then this implies that we cannot know God directly.

This is because we cannot form visual perceptions of God.

Although visual perception is only one mode of human perception, the conclusion is generalized to all modes of human perception: human beings cannot have any perceptions of God whatsoever.


8. Let's explain the terms "nature" and "essence".

The usual way to talk about the possession relation between an object and its properties is:

(a) An object exemplifies a property; or

(b) A property is exemplified in (or by) an object.

Other terms for "exemplify" are "instantiate" and "exhibit".

The nature of an essentialist claim is that an object necessarily or essentially possesses a property.

An object essentially possesses a property if:

(a) The object could not be the self-same object and could have lacked the property; or

(b) Under no possible circumstances could the object failed to possess the property.


9. Following Alvin Plantinga, I define the terms "nature" and "essence" thus:

(a) "The nature of an object can be thought of as a conjunctive property, including as conjuncts just those properties essential to that object." (1980, 7n1)

(a) An essence of an object is a property (or group of properties) that is essential and essentially unique to that object. (1974, 70)


10. Both nature and essence are properties.

A property is an abstract object that has neither spatial nor temporal location.

Abstract objects are objects of God's conceptual thoughts.

Since space-time comes into existence at the moment of God's creation and since God thinks before creating his creation, therefore God's thoughts have neither spatial nor temporal locations.

Therefore, as objects of God's conceptual thoughts, abstract objects too have neither spatial nor temporal locations.

Since abstract objects have neither spatial nor temporal locations, we cannot form perceptions of them through our perceptual faculty.

If all objects of knowledge are objects of perception and if we cannot perceive an abstract object, then we cannot know an abstract object.

Since a property is an abstract object, therefore we cannot know a property.

Since nature and essence are properties, therefore we cannot know nature and essence.

In particular, we cannot know either the nature of God or the essence of God.

The conclusion that we cannot know either the nature of God or the essence of God is based on the empirical intuition: the claim that all objects of knowledge are objects of perception.


11. The doctrine of the Knowability of God is the claim that it is possible to know God.

The doctrine of the Incomprehensibility of God is the claim that it is not possible to completely or exhaustively know God.

If we take objects of perception as objects of knowledge, then God cannot be comprehend in the sense that we cannot understand God.

If we cannot see God and form an image of God in our minds and if all objects of knowledge are objects of perception, then our minds is a blank with regards to God.

How can we understand what we cannot see and perceive and is a blank in our mind?

If one takes objects of perception as objects of knowledge and we cannot form an image of God in our minds, then:

(a) in the nature of the case, God is not understandable;

(b) in the nature of the case, God is incomprehensible; and

(c) in the nature of the case, God is not knowable.

Is it any wonder that those who accept the empirical intuition and reject the propositional view of knowledge have proclivities for mysticism and intuitive knowledge of God?


12. Charles Hodge is surely right when he writes in Systematic Theology:

The word, however, is often, and perhaps commonly, used in a less restricted sense. To conceive is to think. A conception is therefore a thought, and not necessarily an image. To say, therefore, that God is conceivable, in common language, is merely to say that He is thinkable. That is, that the thought (or idea) of God involves no contradiction or impossibility. We cannot think of a round squares, or that a part is equal to the whole. But we can think that God is infinite and eternal. ([1871-1873] 1981, 1:336-37)


13. The propositional view of knowledge interprets the doctrines of the Knowability and Incomprehensibility of God very differently from the empirical intuition.

If one takes truths or propositions, which are objects of conception, as objects of knowledge, then:

(a) God can be known directly through truth-claims about God;

(b) The nature of God can be (partially) known through truth-claims about his nature;

(c) The essence of God can be (partially) known through truth-claims about his essence;

(d) God can be known indirectly through truth-claims about his effects such as his actions; and

(e) God is knowable but incomprehensible means we can know some, but not all, truths about God.


References: 

Hodge, Charles. [1871-1873] 1981. Systematic Theology. Vol. 1. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.

Horton, Michael. 2011. The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan.

Plantinga, Alvin. 1974. The Nature of Necessity. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.

Plantinga, Alvin. 1980. Does God have a Nature? Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Marquette University Press.

End.
 

Monday, July 18, 2011

A Rational Reconstruction of Analogical Knowledge




1. Michael Horton, following Cornelius Van Til, believes in the theory of analogical knowledge.

I, on the other hand, following Gordon H. Clark, believe the theory of analogical knowledge to be false.

But I am puzzled.

Why do Van Til, Horton and many other intelligent people believe that the theory of analogical knowledge is true?

The purpose of this blog post is to give an account of a possible reason why these intelligent people believe in a false theory.

The account is a rational reconstruction.

The claim is not that someone actually believes in analogical knowledge based on the rational reconstruction.

The claim is that the rational reconstruction gives a possible and plausible reason why someone would believe in analogical knowledge.


2. The general idea is that the Creator-creation Distinction implies analogical knowledge.

The Creator-creation Distinction is the ontological claim that everything there is can be divide into two mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive class: the uncreated and the created.

There is only one member in the uncreated class: God in Trinity.

Everything else belongs to the created class.

The Creator-creation Distinction implies that the existence of God is qualitatively different from the existence of his creation.

God the Creator is uncreated and exists eternally and necessarily.

The creation of God is created and exists temporally and contingently.

Analogical knowledge is knowledge of a proposition expresses by a sentence which contains at least one analogical predicate.

A predicate is an analogical predicate if it means something similar, but not the same, to man as it does to God.

Cornelius Van Til in The Text of a Complaint: "Man may possess true knowledge as he thinks God's thoughts after him. But because God is God, the creator, and man is man, the creature, the difference between the divine knowledge and the knowledge possible to man may never be conceived of merely in quantitative terms, as a difference in degree rather than a difference in kind. Otherwise the Creator-creature relationship is broken down at a most crucial point, and there is an assault upon the majesty of God." (1944, 3 column 1)


3. The term "knowledge" can refers to either what one knows or how one knows, or both together.

Thus, "knowledge" can refers to the object of knowledge or the act, process, mode or manner of knowing, or both together.

The Van Tillian theory of analogical knowledge is *not* a claim about how man knows.

The Van Tillian theory of analogical knowledge is not a claim about the act, process, mode or manner of man knowing.

Both Gordon H. Clark and Cornelius Van Til agree that how God knows and how man knows is qualitatively different.

They agree that the act, process, mode or manner of knowing is qualitatively different between God and man.

Gordon H. Clark: "The manner of God's knowing, an eternal intuition, is impossible for man." (1944, 9)

Cornelius Van Til: "Another possible objection to the foregoing exposition of Dr. Clark's views might take the form that he does draw a qualitative distinction between the knowledge of God and the knowledge possible for men since he freely recognizes a fundamental difference between the mode of God's knowledge and that of man's knowledge. God's knowledge is intuitive while man's is discursive (Cf. 18:5f., 18ff.). Man is dependent upon God for his knowledge. We gladly concede this point, and have reckoned with it in what has been said above." (1944, 6 column 2)


4. The Van Tillian theory of analogical knowledge is a claim about what one knows.

The Van Tillian theory of analogical knowledge is a claim about the object of knowledge:

(a) It claims that the object of human knowledge is qualitatively different from the object of God's knowledge.

(b) It denies that the object of human knowledge is a proper subset of the object of God's knowledge.

Cornelius Van Til in The Text of a Complaint: "If we are not to bring the divine knowledge of his thoughts and ways down to human knowledge, or our human knowledge up to his divine knowledge, we dare not maintain that his knowledge and our knowledge coincide at any single point. Our knowledge of any single proposition must always remain the knowledge of the creature. As true knowledge, that knowledge must be analogical to the knowledge which God possesses, but it can never be identified with the knowledge which the infinite and absolute Creator possesses of the same proposition." (1944, 5 column 3)

According to Van Til, "we dare not maintain that his knowledge and our knowledge coincide at any single point" (emphasis in original).


5. If Van Til's theory of analogical knowledge is a claim about what one knows, then what does one knows?

What is the object of knowledge?

Let's consider the candidates for object of knowledge.

There are two constraints that must be met by any candidate for object of knowledge:

(a) A person knows with his mind, so an object of knowledge must be mental.

(b) A person knows truth to be true and knows falsehood to be false, so an object of knowledge must be a bearer of truth and falsity.

Let's consider the first constraint:

Firstly, since things in the world (external to oneself) are not mental, if an object of knowledge must be mental, then things in the world cannot be an object of knowledge.

Secondly, if an object of knowledge must be mental, then there are three kinds of mental object that are possible candidates for being object of knowledge: objects of sensation, perception or conception.

Let's consider the second constraint:

Since a sensation in itself is neither true nor false, if an object of knowledge must be a bearer of truth and falsity, then a sensation cannot be an object of knowledge.

Since a perception in itself is also neither true nor false, if an object of knowledge must be a bearer of truth and falsity, then a perception also cannot be an object of knowledge.

The only known bearer of truth or falsity is a proposition and it is an object of conception.

Conclusion: The object of knowledge is truth; all truths are propositional; therefore the object of knowledge is a proposition.


6. If the proper object of knowledge is a proposition, then Van Til's theory of analogical knowledge is not proper.

In criticizing Gordon H. Clark in The Text of a Complaint, Van Til displays considerable skepticism towards proposition as the object of knowledge (1944, 5 column 2):

The fundamental assumption made by Dr. Clark is that truth, whether in the divine mind or in the human mind, is always propositional. Truth, it is said, cannot be conceived of except in terms of propositions (Cf. 2:9ff; 11:2, 14f.; and especially 22:19ff.). It will be observed that Dr. Clark does not claim to derive this judgment from Scripture; it is rather regarded as an axiom of reason (Cf. 36:13-17; 19:19ff.).

It is not necessary or appropriate to consider here all of the implications of this fundamental assumptions. A few observations are however, of immediate importance. This view of truth, it will be noted, conceives of truth as fundamentally quantitative, as consisting of a series of distinct items. Now even if it could be assumed that human knowledge has this propositional character, it would still involve a tremendous assumption to conclude that the divine knowledge must possess the same character. Since our thinking is pervasively conditioned by our creaturehood, we may not safely infer from the character of our knowledge what must be true of the knowledge of the Creator. Even if we could be sure that human knowledge might be resolved into distinct propositions, it would not necessarily follow that the knowledge of God, who penetrates into the depths of his own mind and of all things at a glance, would be subject to the same qualifications. And it may not be overlooked in this connection that Dr. Clark does not claim Scriptural proof for his fundamental assumption as to the character of knowledge.


7. What then does Cornelius Van Til regards as the object of knowledge?

I propose the following theses regarding the object of knowledge in a Van Tillian theory of analogical knowledge:

(a) Propositions are objects of human knowledge.

(b) Propositions are *not* the only objects of human knowledge.

(c) Objects of perceptions are also objects of human knowledge.

(d) Because of the Creator-creation Distinction, human is agnostic of the objects of God's knowledge.

(e) Because of the Creator-creation Distinction, human can infer that the object of human knowledge is analogical to the object of God's knowledge.

There is much to criticize in regarding these theses.

But I will refrain from criticisms for now.


8. Cornelius Van Til is a fertile thinker.

But Cornelius Van Til is an inconsistent thinker.

I will now briefly quote John Frame and Greg Bahnsen to show that they too have difficulty interpreting Van Til's theory of analogical knowledge.


9. John Frame gives contradictory explanations of Van Til's analogical knowledge.
Frame wrote in Van Til: The Theologian ([1976] n.d., 22): “‘Content’ is an exceedingly ambiguous term when applied to thought. The 'content' of my thought may mean (1) my mental images, (2) my beliefs, (3) the things I am thinking of, (4) the epistemological processes by which knowledge is acquired (including the role of sense-experience, intuition, reason, etc.), (5) the meaning of my language, conceived in abstraction from the linguistic forms used to state that meaning, (6) anything at all to which the physical metaphor 'contained in the mind' may conceivably apply. In senses (2) and (3), there seems to be no reason to assert any necessary 'difference in content' between divine and human thought. Surely God and man may have the same beliefs and may think about the same things (emphasis added)."

Whatever knowledge is, it is at least a true belief.

Also, the only bearer of truth or falsity is a proposition.

Since a belief may be true or false and since the only bearer of truth or falsity is a proposition, the object of belief is a proposition.

Since the object of belief is a proposition, if God and man may have the same beliefs, then God and man must be able to think the same propositions.

God is omniscient, which means God knows all truths.

God is essentially omniscient, which means God could not have been God and lack omniscient.

Since God exists eternally and essentially knows all truths, truths or propositions exist eternally and necessarily as the objects of God's knowledge.

As such, propositions are not created.

In having the same beliefs as God, human thinks propositions that are eternal and uncreated.

In Cornelius Van Til: An Analysis of His Thought, Frame gave a contradictory explanation: "Van Til sums up these emphases in the term analogy. Human knowledge is 'analogous' to God's, which means that it is (1) created and therefore different from God's own knowledge, and (2) subject to God's control and authority". (1995, 89)

Since knowledge is at least true belief, if human knowledge is different from God's own knowledge, then human belief must be different from God's belief.

This contradicts Frame's earlier claim that "God and man may have the same beliefs".

Human belief is either the same as God's belief or different from God's belief, but cannot be both.

Human knowledge is either the same as God’s own knowledge or different from God’s own knowledge, but cannot be both.

Human knowledge is either created or uncreated, but cannot be both.


10. Greg Bahnsen in Van Til's Apologetic: Reading and Analysis claims that a human can think the same things as God thinks: "In knowing anything, according to Van Til, man thinks what God Himself thinks: there is continuity between God's knowledge and man's knowledge, and thus a theoretical basis for the certainty of human knowledge. At the same time, of course, when man knows something, it is man doing the thinking and not God - which introduces a discontinuity between the two acts of knowing, a discontinuity that is greater and more profound than the discontinuity between one person's act of knowing something and another person's act of knowing it." (1998, 226)

Bahnsen does a bit of creative re-interpretation and shift the meaning of Van Til's analogical knowledge from the object of knowledge to the acts of knowing.

I heartily agree with Bahnsen that in knowing anything, man thinks what God himself thinks.

But Bahnsen must be confused.

For this is Gordon H. Clark's position, not Cornelius Van Til's!

For Van Til, human knowledge and divine knowledge do not "coincide at any single point".

For Van Til, human knowledge "can never be identified with the knowledge which the infinite and absolute Creator possesses of the same proposition".

I do not believe Bahnsen's interpretation is faithful to Van Til's writings.


11. Cornelius Van Til has never properly explained how the Creator-creation Distinction implies analogical knowledge.

Since I do not belief the Creation-creation Distinction implies analogical knowledge, I do not belief there can be any such explanation.

Knowledge is knowledge of truth.

Since God knows all truths, if we do not know some of the truths God knows, then we do not know any truths.

Although there cannot be a proper explanation of how the Creator-creation Distinction implies analogical knowledge, there nevertheless are two fallacious attempts at doing so:

(a) The conceptual approach at explanation is based on the idea that our propositions are finite replicas or copies of God's propositions.

(b) The perceptual approach at explanation is based on the idea that all objects of knowledge are objects of perceptions.

John Frame has attempted to flesh out the conceptual approach at explanation in (1995, 89-95).

Since this blog post is too long already, I will criticize Frame's attempted explanation of how the Creator-creation implies analogical knowledge in a future post.

I will now sketch the perceptual approach at explaining analogical knowledge.


12. The starting point for any rational reconstruction of Van Til’s theory of analogical knowledge is the Creator-creation Distinction.

The Creator-creation Distinction is the ontological claim that everything there is can be divide into two mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive class: the uncreated and the created.

The Creator-creation Distinction is based on the doctrines of God and creation.

Within Reformed theology, the Creator-creation Distinction is not problematic.


13. Cornelius Van Til then extends the Creator-creation Distinction from ontology to epistemology.

The question is why extend the Creator-creation Distinction from ontology to epistemology?

In itself, the Creator-creation Distinction is an ontological claim.

In itself, the Creator-creation Distinction does not imply analogical knowledge.

What additional considerations motivate Van Til to extend the Creator-creation Distinction from ontology to epistemology?


14. A plausible explanation is that Van Til believes in the empirical intuition and takes objects of perception as objects of knowledge.

The empirical intuition claims that all objects of knowledge are objects of perception.

As Michael Horton has written: "Epistemology follows ontology. In other words, our theory of how we know anything depends on what we think there is to be known." (2011, 47)

The Creator-creation Distinction divides everything ontologically into two classes: uncreated and created.

There is only one object belonging to the uncreated class of being: God in Trinity.

Everything else belongs to the class of created creation.

However, human beings cannot have perceptions of God.

But human beings can have perceptions of some created things.

Thus:

(a) All objects of human knowledge are objects of perception.

(b) Human beings cannot perceive God but can perceive some created things.

(c) Therefore, all objects of human knowledge are perceptions of created things.

Since our perceptions come into existence in the act or process of perceiving, our perceptions are also created.

In short, all human knowledge is created.

Furthermore, human knowledge is doubly created in that:

(a) The perceptions are created.

(b) What can be perceived are created things.

The Creation-creation Distinction extends to the object of knowledge.


15. The following Bible passage is paradigmatic in substantiating the claim that human beings cannot see God:

And the LORD said to Moses, "This very thing that you have spoken I will do, for you have found favor in my sight, and I know you by name." Moses said, "Please show me your glory." And he said, "I will make all my goodness pass before you and will proclaim before you my name 'The LORD.' And I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy on whom I will show mercy. But," he said, "you cannot see my face, for man shall not see me and live." (Exodus 33:17-20 ESV)


16. Charles Hodge in his Systematic Theology gives a more philosophical explanation of why human beings cannot form a mental image of God:

It is not hold that God, properly speaking, can be conceived of; that is, we cannot form a mental image of God. "All conception," says Mr. Mansel, "implies imagination." To have a valid conception of a horse, he adds, we must be able "to combine" the attributes which form "the definition of the animal" into "a representative image." Conception is defined by Taylor in the same manner, as "the forming or bringing an image or idea into the mind by an effort of the will." In this sense of the word it must be admitted that the Infinite is not an object of knowledge. We cannot form an image of infinite space, or of infinite duration, or of an infinite whole. To form an image is to limit, to circumscribe. But the infinite is that which is incapable of limitation. It is admitted, therefore, that the infinite God is inconceivable. We can form no representative image of Him in our minds. ([1871-1873] 1981, 1:336)


17. Thus, since human beings cannot form an image of God in our minds, we cannot have visual perceptions of God.

Although visual perception is only one mode of human perception, the conclusion is generalized to all modes of human perception: human beings cannot have any perceptions of God whatsoever.

Hearing is also a mode of human perception.

What of all those records in the Bible about God speaking to man and man hearing God speaks to him?

To accommodate the thesis that human beings cannot have any perceptions of God, what human actually hears cannot be what God actually says.

Just as we cannot actually see God, so we cannot actually hear God.

When God speaks to man, some of which are verbal sentences which expresses propositions, what we actually hear cannot be what God actually said.

Thus, a proposition cannot mean the same thing to man as it does to God.

Assume a simple sentence with a subject and a predicate.

A sentence may express a proposition.

There are three ways the proposition expresses by the sentence does not mean the same thing to man as it does to God:

(a) The subject does not mean the same thing to man as it does to God.

(b) The predicate does not mean the same thing to man as it does to God.

(c) Both the subject and predicate do not mean the same thing to man as they do to God.

All three leads to skepticism, but the least damaging is option (b).

Hence analogical predication which in turn implies analogical knowledge.


18. According to this rational reconstruction:

(a) The culprit for analogical knowledge is the empirical intuition - the belief that all objects of knowledge are objects of perception.

(b) The empirical intuition implies all knowledge is created - perceptions come into existence in the act or process of perceiving.

(c) Since God's knowledge is not created and our knowledge is created, therefore, to be true knowledge, our knowledge must be analogical to God's knowledge.


19. I appraise the content of this rational reconstruction as fallacious.

We know truth and all truths are propositional.

Perceptions in itself are neither true nor false.

Therefore, perceptions cannot be objects of knowledge.

It is our interpretations of perceptions that are either true or false.

We interpret perceptions by making truth-claims about the perceptions.

The truth-claims are propositional.

And we can know true interpretations of perceptions.

Knowledge is knowledge of truth.

Since God knows all truths, if we do not know some of the truths God knows, then we do not know any truths.


References:

Bahnsen, Greg L. 1998. Van Til's Apologetics: Readings and Analysis. Phillipsburg, New Jersey: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company.

Clark, Gordon H. et el. 1944. The Answer to a Complaint Against Several Actions and Decisions of the Presbytery of Philadelphia Taken in a Special Meeting Held on July 7, 1944.

Frame, John M. [1976] n.d. Van Til: The Theologian. Chattanooga, Tennessee: Pilgrim Publishing Company. (Originally published as The Problem of Theological Paradox. In Foundations of Christian Scholarship: Essays in the Van Til Perspective, ed. Gary North, 295-330. Vallecito, California: Ross House Books.)

Frame, John M. 1995. Cornelius Van Til: An Analysis of His Thought. Phillipsburg, New Jersey: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company.

Hodge, Charles. [1871-1873] 1981. Systematic Theology. Vol. 1. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.

Horton, Michael. 2011. The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan.

Van Til, Cornelius et el. 1944. The Text of a Complaint Against Actions of the Presbytery of Philadelphia In the Matter of the Licensure and Ordination of Dr. Gordon H. Clark.

End.

Friday, July 15, 2011

God and the Object of Knowledge




1. Three theses about the object of knowledge:

(a) The object of knowledge is truth.

(b) All truths are propositional.

(c) Therefore, the object of knowledge is a proposition.


2. Thus:

(a) We can know a truth to be true.

(b) We can know a falsehood to be false.

(c) We cannot know a truth to be false.

(d) We cannot know a falsehood to be true.


3. These three theses are part of the dispute between Gordon H. Clark and Cornelius Van Til in the 1940s.

That dispute has come to be known as the Clark-Van Til Controversy.

Clark affirms all three theses.

Van Til in one way or another denies them.


4. I will call Gordon H. Clark's position the propositional view of knowledge.

I follow Clark in affirming all three theses.

Although Michael Horton did not acknowledge it explicitly, his epistemology as expressed in The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way is heavily dependent on Cornelius Van Til's position.

In following Van Til, I think Horton has missed an opportunity to clean up some confusion in the doctrine of God, the doctrine of the Knowability of God, and the doctrine of the Incomprehensibility of God.

As a preliminary, I will explain what the theses mean and distinguish them from something in the neighborhood.


5. There is a very powerful intuition, call it the empirical intuition, that says that we know things in the world through experiencing them through our senses:

We know God by experiencing him, we know there is a car across the street by seeing it, and we know the music of Ludwig van Beethoven by hearing it.

According to the empirical intuition, we know things or objects in the world by experiencing them through our senses.

In all these cases, the object of knowledge is an object of perception.

So, according to the empirical intuition, all objects of knowledge are objects of perception.


6. In contrast, the propositional view of knowledge claims that the objects of knowledge are truths.

Since all truths are propositional, the objects of knowledge are propositions.

Now, propositions are abstract objects that do not have spatial or temporal locations.

We can think or conceive propositions, but we cannot perceive propositions by seeing, hearing or touching them.

According to the propositional view, all objects of knowledge are truths or propositions which are objects of conception.


7. So, we have two mutually exclusive views about the objects of knowledge:

(a) The empirical intuition claims that all objects of knowledge are objects of perception.

(b) The propositional view claims that all objects of knowledge are truths which are objects of conception.


8. According to the empirical intuition, we know God by perceiving God.

We perceive God by sensing or experiencing him.

The powerful empirical intuition places a premium on knowing God by sensing or experiencing him.


9. In contrast, according to the propositional view of knowledge, all objects of knowledge are truths or propositions which are objects of conception.

We do not know the things in the world but we know truths about the things in the world.

We know God by knowing truths about God.

We know God by thinking and conceiving truths about God.

The propositional view places a premium on knowing God by believing truths about God.

(To believe is to think as true.)

For example, we know the proposition that God exists.

We know the proposition that the Second Person of the Trinity has incarnated as the person Jesus Christ.


10. The propositional view of truth does not deny that a person has experiences of God.

The propositional view of truth need not deny the importance of experiencing God.

But the propositional view denies the experiences of God are themselves objects of knowledge.

The objects of knowledge are truths and all truths are propositional.

We know truths or propositions about God.

We know truths or propositions about our experiences of God.

Perceptions in themselves are neither true nor false.

Perceptions need to be interpreted.

Perceptions are interpreted by truth-claims about the perceptions.

In knowing truths about our experiences of God, we interpreted our experiences of God.


11. We must distinguish the above from something in the neighborhood: the dispute between empiricism and rationalism.

According to D.W. Hamlyn (Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2nd ed., s.v. "Empiricism"): "Empiricism is the theory that experience rather than reason is the source of knowledge, and in this sense it is opposed to rationalism."

The dispute between empiricism and rationalism is a dispute about the *source* of knowledge.

The dispute between the empirical intuition and the propositional view of knowledge is a dispute about the *object* of knowledge.

A person who subscribes to the propositional view of knowledge can consistently subscribe to the view that perception may be a source of knowledge.

The two disputes are related but distinct.

Take, for example, the truth-claim that we can know God by experiencing God.

Taken as a claim about the *source* of our knowledge of God, it is true.

Our experiences can be a possible source of knowledge of God.

But taken as a claim about the *object* of our knowledge of God, it is false.

The objects of knowledge are truths or propositions and we can only know truths about God.


12. I have seen some people label Gordon H. Clark as a rationalist.

Gordon H. Clark is an important critic of empiricism but I do not believe Clark is a rationalist.

Being an important critic of empiricism does not thereby make one a rationalist.

I think people whom labeled Clark as a rationalist have confused the disputes between:

(a) the source of knowledge; and

(b) the object of knowledge.


References: 

Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2nd Edition. 2006. Farmingtion Hills, Michigan: Thomson Gale.

Horton, Michael. 2011. The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan.

End.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Analogical Predication and Stigmatizing the Morals of One's Opponents




1. Chapter One of Michael Horton's The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way is titled "Dissonant Dramas: Paradigms for Knowing God and the World".

Section III of Chapter One is titled "Epistemology: Knowing God". 

Subsection A of Section III is titled "How Can We Know God? Post-Reformation Interpretation". 

This is a miserable subsection and I will start with the worst of it - the ending paragraph (Horton 2011, 57): 

Although not all representatives (certainly not Carl Henry, for instance) would embrace an "overcoming estrangement" paradigm, univocity has been the characteristic ontological and epistemological presupposition of this scheme, just as equivocity is the ground of "the stranger we never meet." If univocity breeds rationalism, equivocity generates epistemological skepticism. Both positions presuppose human autonomy and are, therefore, unwilling to regard reality and access to that reality as a gift that comes to us from outside of ourselves. It is significant that Paul describes this perverse refusal to accept our role as covenant creatures as ingratitude (Ro 1:20-21). This refusal is not, therefore, simply an intellectual problem, but is rooted in an ethical rebellion that is willfully perpetuated. As Paul goes on to relate in that passage, the biblical term for this pursuit of autonomous metaphysics is idolatry. 


2. This paragraph is miserable.

There are three views of predication: univocal, analogical and equivocal. 

Horton subscribes to the analogical view of predication. 

But Horton is not satisfied with appraising the other two views he disagrees with as wrong, incorrect or false. 

Horton has to judge those who hold to the other two views to be "ingratitude" to God, commit "ethical rebellion that is willfully perpetuated", and practice "idolatry".

And Horton called on the Apostle Paul to help him do this dirty work. 

Miserable. 


3. In regard to the theories of predication, it has to do with how a predicate apply to its subject(s). 

A theory of predication is about the relation between language and reality.

In particular, a theory of predication is part of a theory of reference and is about how a linguistic object (predicate) refers to objects in the world (the subject of the predicate).

Regarding our language about God, there are three theories about how predicates apply to God: univocally, analogically and equivocally.

Following Gordon H. Clark, I hold to univocal predication: “But if a predicate does not mean the same thing to man as it does to God, then, if God’s meaning is the correct one, it follows that man’s meaning is incorrect and he is therefore ignorant of the truth that is in God’s mind.” (Clark [1957] 1982, 32)


4. Horton believes in the Creator-creation Distinction.

And Horton thinks the Creator-creation Distinction implies analogical predication.

I also believe in the Creator-creation Distinction.

But I do not think the Creator-creation Distinction imply analogical predication.

The Creator-creation Distinction is an ontological distinction.

It implies that I, and other things in this world, am created by God.

But the Creator-creation Distinction is not an epistemological distinction.

The Creator-creation Distinction does not apply to the object of knowledge, which is truth or proposition.

The object of knowledge is truth and all truths are propositional, therefore the object of knowledge is a proposition.

God is omniscient, which means God knows all truths.

Furthermore, God is essentially omniscient, which means that God could not be God and lack omniscient.

God knows all truths by determining the truth-value of propositions.

The Westminster Confession of Faith (3.1a):
God, from all eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of his own will, freely, and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass.

How does God ordained whatsoever comes to pass?

God ordained whatsoever comes to pass by determining the truth-values of propositions.

A proposition is true because God from eternity determines that it be true.

A proposition is false because God from eternity determines that it be false.

Therefore, truths or propositions exist eternally and necessarily as the objects of God’s knowledge.

When a person knows any truths at all, he knows the identical propositions that God knows.

Knowing the identical propositions that God knows imply univocal predication.

Since God knows all truths, and if we do not know *some* of the truths God knows, then we do *not* know any truths at all.

Since both analogical and equivocal predication imply that we do not know any of the truths that God knows, both are reduce to skepticism.


References:

Clark, Gordon H. [1957] 1982. The Bible As Truth. Reprinted in God’s Hammer: The Bible and Its Critics, 24-38. Jefferson, Maryland: The Trinity Foundation.

Horton, Michael. 2011. The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan.

End.