Yes, I know. I saw the faith icon. I'm an ex-Catholic, myself.
Just curious, but by "within", do you mean that there are exceptions? IOWs, that identifiably Catholic opinion isn't of one mind on the subject?
Okay.
Fair enough, but that doesn't mean that you don't have the burden of justifying your position. It simply means that you've decided that no such justification is possible because your views are basically arational and mystical. Being unwilling or unable to defend one's views doesn't really fly in philosophical discussion, which is all about presenting justifications.
The problem I have with this statement is that it smuggles this conceptual conclusion into the experience itself, and then conveniently tries to place this knowledge prior to conceptualization!
Even if one does stare out in any direction into some imagined "infinity", and one's mind experiences something that one attributes to "infinity", that doesn't mean that you are staring at God. It is your faith or belief in the existence of God, and your belief that God is "infinite", that causes you to interpret the experience of "infinity" as the experience of God. If you didn't believe in the existence of God, you would only say that you had experienced "infinity", or at least felt like you did.
No need to be so reductionistic. But the point here is that the concept that you are overlaying on the experience is the concept of God. And, until then, there is no reason to see the experience as one of God.
In my view, when we stare out in any direction, we aren't staring at any actual "infinity". But I do grant that people may feel as if they are, just as people have difficulty relating to Einstein's views on the curvature of spacetime, and believe that the universe must therefore have some kind of edge or boundary surrounding it, with something (or nothingness) outside of that.
I have no doubt of that, but I'm not certain what you think that shows.
eudaimonia,
Mark
Well, Mark, your post is extremely thought-provoking, to be sure.
I think that every discipline begins with a perception and certain assumptions. For science it is existence, that it is capable of being understood through observation and study.
For philosophy, I think it begins with Being. For some philosophers, Being is the Ground of Existence, and for theologians, Being is God, and all of this relates back to existence.
So, all of these disciplines can be said to overlap in some sense. For the theologian, existence itself is related to Being, and evidence for God.
Hans Urs von Balthasar's theology begins in God and descends to the person. Karl Rahner's theology starts in the person and ascends to God. He does so through both theology and philosophy. Philosophy and theology are related and interactive discplines.
There is an argument about that, of course. Tertullian thought that theology ought to have nothing to do with philosophy, but he might not be a theologian in the strictest sense of the word.
The relationship between philosophy and theology began early on, and perhaps reached a peak in the work of St. Thomas Aquinas.
Karl Rahner began his career with two works of philosophy--Spirit in the World and Hearers of the Word--which formed the philosophical basis for his theology, which culminates in Foundations of Christian Faith.
Karl Rahner posits what is found in a simpler form in St. Ignatias of Loyola--that God is found in the humdrum of our daily existence. Rahner goes on to say that the key is found in the conscious awareness of our everyday finite experience. Lo and behold, this describes my experience!
But it is more than that, Rahner says, it is a transcendental experience. So, part of Rahner's theology is that man is a transcental being, which, IIR, is what you pointed out to me that natural emergence posits about man.
I imagine that you are very interested in consciousness as well, which Tielhard de Chardin posited is the peak of man's evolution to date, and Wayne Teasedale said is the heart of the spiritual experience.