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Tiêu đề Naturalism
Tác giả Charles Taylor, Richard Taylor
Người hướng dẫn P. van Inwagen, Ed., I. A. Snook, Ed.
Trường học Cambridge University
Chuyên ngành Philosophy
Thể loại Essay
Năm xuất bản 1989
Thành phố Cambridge
Định dạng
Số trang 10
Dung lượng 702,58 KB

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A system-atic philosophy that fails to give any thought to the ques-tion of *God’s existence could be judged seriously incomplete: likewise a theology that fails to enter into dis-cussio

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*‘naturalism’ His active as well as scholarly engagement

with politics is evident in his life and writings Most

recently, he has produced a major volume on modernity

(Sources of the Self), in which the self is conceived as

consti-tuted by a relation to the good; an essay on

‘multicultural-ism’; and The Ethics of Authenticity, readily accessible but

Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self (Cambridge, Mass., 1989).

——The Ethics of Authenticity (Cambridge, Mass., 1992).

Taylor, Richard (1919–2003) Taylor, an American

philosopher who held professorships at Brown and

Columbia, was among those who saw common sense as

the basis for reasoning He was particularly known for his

well-written prose, shrewd dialectics, iconoclasm and,

especially in his later writings, advocacy of *wisdom over

mere learnedness Among his main works are Action and

Purpose (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1966), Metaphysics (4th

edn., Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1992), Good and Evil (Buffalo,

NY, 1970), and With Heart and Mind (New York, 1973).

To illustrate Taylor’s approach, common-sense yields

that it is up to us what we do and that every event is

caused These apparently conflicting claims are reconciled

by saying that a person is an agent, a substantial self, and

not a bundle of events (as Hume thought); and agency is

outside the scope of the claim that all events are caused

This approach to the conundrum of *free will, however,

faces serious challenges in specifying the nature of an

agent and in explaining how an agent can be influenced by

external events without being caused to act m.b

P van Inwagen (ed.), Time and Cause: Essays Presented to Richard

Taylor (Dordrecht, 1980).

te :see Confucianism.

teaching and indoctrinating Indoctrination is the

teach-ing of what is known to be false as true, or more widely the

teaching of what is believed true in such a way as to

pre-clude critical inquiry on the part of learners

Teachers are thus in a strong position to indoctrinate, as

their pupils are usually in no position to judge the truth or

reasonableness of what they are being taught While in

the Republic Plato advised the guardians to teach the

people a *‘noble lie’ to get them to accept their station in

life, few teachers actually teach things they believe untrue

or unfounded Although non-believers often accuse

Catholic teachers of indoctrinating because they teach

Catholic dogma as true, they are not guilty of Platonic

insincerity They might, though, be teaching in such a way

as to preclude inquiry on the part of pupils To avoid

indoctrinating, teachers must ensure that at some stage in

a course of study pupils will hear competing points of view

on disputed questions Judgement, though, will still be

required as to just which questions are really disputed,

which points of view are worth considering, and when

young pupils are ready to consider alternatives without

I A Snook (ed.), Concepts of Indoctrination (London, 1972).

teaching philosophy Teachers teach two things: what the results of inquiry are, and how to get more of them Teachers of *philosophy want to find and pass on philo-sophical truths and, more importantly, the knack of both getting them and distinguishing them from competitors such as nonsense and falsehood Two near-paradoxes result

Philosophical results are important, and philosophers typically have firm and, they hope, well-thought-out views on philosophical issues But they want students to acquire the ability to form justified beliefs for themselves, even if the cost is occasionally going astray So good philosophers typically do not mind students rejecting their beliefs; indeed they positively welcome it, as long as the disagreement is well supported As all good teachers know, this feature of the pedagogical process makes cer-tain students very nervous Actually, as all good students know, it also makes certain teachers very nervous The second semi-paradox concerns the tension between what is taught and the way it is taught

Philoso-phers emphasize *rational persuasion, rational discourse, and rational examination As Robert Boyle said,

‘Philoso-phy, when it deserves that name, is but Reason, improv’d

by Study, Learning, and the use of things.’ However, the

way in which the importance of rational persuasion is

instilled may have very little to do with rational persua-sion Humour, irony, analogy, intonation, sentence

struc-ture, allusion, arguments ad hominem and from authority,

the perceived enthusiasm and confidence of the speaker, the amount of self-motivation required of the student, and

a host of other factors, including even the very order in which opposing views are presented, all affect the likeli-hood of students’ accepting or even comprehending the points presented Even intellectually extraneous factors such as the room’s light or the presence of moving air affect uptake and acceptance Preaching the primacy of reason involves a host of non-rational methods

Plato believed that philosophy could only be taught soul to soul, and encounters in small groups provide the best way to convey both the excitement involved in, and the abilities required for, the practice of philosophy In

such settings, the student can try out ideas en route to truth

which will then be subjected to detailed constructive scrutiny by herself, her teachers, and her peers

However, the realities of teaching often make this wildly utopian It is difficult for soul to speak to soul when the souls are clustered in groups of up to 300 What one politician has called ‘negative increases’ in educational funding, and the consequent deterioration in the educa-tional process, ensure that the Platonic ideal is seldom realized before the graduate stage (Detailed discussions concerning real-world teaching are offered quarterly in

Teaching Philosophy Also of interest is Thinking, a journal

concerned with philosophy for children.) Plato also believed that students need a rigorous educa-tional background for philosophy: something contempor-ary educational systems find difficulty in providing Many first-year university students do not know so much

910 Taylor, Charles

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as the names of Archimedes or Newton However, such

gaps can be filled, and many universities offer general

introductory courses to attempt just that More

perni-cious is the deliberate inculcation of irrationality Unsure

of how to cope with multiculturalism, many teachers and

too many academics retreat into the relativism they

fuse with tolerance Schools now turn out a host of

con-temporary Averroists, prepared to say straightfacedly,

‘Well, it’s true for you, but not for me.’ Thus, in addition

to the more or less standard familially inspired religious,

political, and moral prejudices, contemporary education

adds another, moral and epistemological relativism,

impressed in the schools, and reinforced by a number of

non-philosophical disciplines, which the working

philoso-pher is called upon to remove before the real business of

*teaching and indoctrinating; American philosophy

H P Grice, ‘Reply to Richards’, in Richard E Grandy and

Richard Warner (eds.), Philosophical Grounds of Rationality

(Oxford, 1986)

David Stove, The Plato Cult and Other Philosophical Follies (Oxford,

1991)

technology:see Frankfurt School.

teleological argument for the existence of God A

world-based line of argument appealing to special

fea-tures, those aspects of the world which appear to be

designed and purposive, analogous to cases of human

design It is usually put probabilistically, arguing that the

most plausible explanation is that of a world designer and

creator, with intelligence, purposes, etc

The theory of *evolution, suggesting an alternative

explanation for some kinds of order, has sapped some of

the persuasiveness of older versions, and has incited the

formulation of more broadly based versions of this

argument, such as those of F R Tennant and Richard

David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (1777).

Richard Swinburne, The Existence of God (Oxford, 1979).

F R Tennant, Philosophical Theology (Cambridge, 1968).

teleological explanation From the Greek word for goal,

task, completion, or perfection Teleological explanations

attempt to account for things and features by appeal to

their contribution to optimal states, or the normal

func-tioning, or the attainment of goals, of wholes or systems

they belong to Socrates’ story (in Plato’s Phaedo) of how

he wanted to understand things in terms of what is best is

an early discussion of teleology Another is Aristotle’s

dis-cussion of ‘final cause’ explanations in terms of that for the

sake of which something is, acts, or is acted upon Such

explanations are parodied in Voltaire’s Candide.

There are many cases in which an item’s contribution

to a desirable result does not explain its occurrence For

example, what spring rain does for crops does not explain

why it rains in the spring But suppose we discovered that

some object’s features were designed and maintained by

an intelligent creator to enable it to accomplish some pur-pose Then an understanding of a feature’s contribution to that purpose could help us explain its presence without mistakenly assuming that everything is as it is because of the effects it causes There are many things (e.g well-designed clocks in good working order) known to have been produced by intelligent manufacturers for well-understood purposes, whose features can, therefore, be explained in this way But if all teleological explanation presupposes intelligent design, only creationists could accept teleological explanations of natural things, and only conspiracy theorists could accept teleological explan-ations of economic and social phenomena

Teleological explanations which do not presuppose that what is to be explained is the work of an intelligent agent are to be found in biology, economics, and else-where Their justification typically involves two compon-ents: an analysis of the function of the item to be explained and an aetiological account

Functional analysis seeks to determine what contribu-tion the item to be explained makes to some main activity,

to the proper functioning, or to the well-being or preser-vation, of the organism, object, or system it belongs to For example, given what is known about the contribution

of normal blood circulation to the main activities and the well-being of animals with hearts, the structure and behaviour of the heart lead physiologists to identify its function with its contribution to circulation Given the function of part of an organism, the function of a subpart (e.g some nerve-ending in the heart) can be identified with its contribution—if any—to the function of the part (e.g stimulating heart contractions) Important empirical problems in biology and the *social sciences and equally important conceptual problems in the philosophy of sci-ence arise from questions about the evaluation of ascrip-tions of purposes and funcascrip-tions

Functional analysis cannot explain a feature’s presence without an aetiological account which explains how the feature came to be where we find it In natural-selection

explanations, aetiological accounts typically appeal to (a)

genetic transmission mechanisms by which features are

passed from one generation to the next and (b) selection

mechanisms (e.g environmental pressures) because of which organisms with the feature to be explained have a better chance to reproduce than organisms which lack it The justification of teleological explanations in socio-biology, anthropology, economics, and elsewhere typi-cally assumes the possibility of finding accounts of trans-mission and selection mechanisms roughly analogous to

*causality; biology, philosophical problems of; Nagel, Ernest

A Ariew, R Cummins, and M Perlman (eds.), Functions (Oxford,

2002)

Morton O Beckner, Biological Ways of Thought (Berkeley, Calif.,

1968), chs 6–8

Larry Wright, ‘Functions’, Christopher Bourse, ‘Wright on Func-tions’, Robert Cummins, ‘Functional Analysis’ (along with

teleological explanation 911

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further references to standard literature), in Elliott Sober (ed.),

Conceptual Issues in Evolutionary Biology (Cambridge, Mass.,

1984)

teleology:see teleological explanation; Aristotle;

causal-ity; biology, philosophical problems of; Nagel, Ernest

temperance:see self-control.

temporal properties and relations: see A-series and

B-series

tender- and tough-minded ‘The history of philosophy is

to a great extent that of a certain clash of human

tempera-ments’, said William James in Pragmatism (1907), listing

typifying characteristics of each as below An almost

per-fect example of the second is A J Ayer; pure forms of the

first are scarcer

The tender-minded The tough-minded

Rationalistic Empiricist

(going by ‘principles’) (going by ‘facts’)

Intellectualistic Sensationalistic

Idealistic Materialistic

Free-willist Fatalistic

t.l.s.s

T L S Sprigge, ‘A J Ayer: An Appreciation of his Philosophy’,

Utilitas (1990).

tense.Grammatically, tense is a feature of verbs,

exempli-fied by the past, present, and future forms ‘he went’, ‘he is

going’, and ‘he will go’ Philosophers think of tense in

broader terms, to include any kind of temporal expression

whose reference is dependent on its time of utterance,

such as ‘yesterday’, ‘now’, or ‘next week’ Thus,

‘yester-day’ refers to the day before the one on which it is uttered

The truth-values of tensed sentences can change over

time: on one day it may be true to say ‘Yesterday it rained’,

while on the next day it may be false to say this Adherents

of tensed theories of *time hold that tensed sentences are

made true by tensed *facts, and that facts change as time

passes, whereas adherents of tenseless theories of time

hold that tensed sentences are made true by unchanging,

tenseless facts For the tenseless theorist, tense is merely a

feature of our language or thought about the world, not a

feature of temporal reality itself e.j.l

D H Mellor, Real Time, 2nd edn (London, 1998).

term.A word or phrase denoting an individual or class, or

the propositional component it expresses Thus ‘John is a

man’ contains two terms, ‘John’ and ‘man’ (or ‘is a man’),

denoting John and the set of men respectively More

gen-erally, any word or phrase that determines the proposition

expressed In this sense, the above sentence contains the

*syncategorematic term ‘is’, which does not denote an

H W B Joseph, An Introduction to Logic (Oxford, 1916), ch 2.

terrorism. ‘Terrorism’ is a highly emotive, pejorative label, originally applied to the Reign of Terror following the French Revolution, but now most commonly used of

*political violence as employed by insurgents against a

*state, unless specifically qualified as ‘state terrorism’ Its definition has proved philosophically elusive, depending,

as it does, on whether, and, if so, how, the pejorative force

is to be captured definitionally; or, in other words, on

whether terrorism is to be viewed as ipso facto

unjustifi-able, and, if so, why, which evidently raises substantive philosophical issues

Broadly speaking, there are two approaches to

charac-terizing terrorism in a way that views it as, ceteris paribus,

morally wrong One regards it as not just any tactic which induces terror by the use of violence, for such terror is rou-tinely employed in wartime by the use of military force, which is not thereby terroristic Rather, it is the use of force of a military character in contravention of the rules

of war as adumbrated in the theory of the just *war Thus,

on the one hand, terrorism may be seen as the use of such

force without a *jus ad bellum because its perpetrators—as

non-state actors—lack proper authority To this criticism those dubbed terrorists typically reply that the states they oppose have forfeited authority over them by their unjust behaviour, which furnishes them with a just cause (an argument advanced by John Locke) It is this line of thought that commonly leads so-called terrorists to view themselves as ‘freedom fighters’

On the other hand, however, what may be attributed to

terrorists is a failure of *jus in bello, resulting from breaches

of the principle of non-combatant immunity by the target-ing of civilians One response to this charge (adopted by Sartre in his defence of FLN violence in Algeria) is that the civilians targeted are not innocent of the injustices combated Another is that the exposure of civilians to injury through terrorism is no greater, and perhaps less, than that routinely accepted in conventional wars The major drawback of this unjust war model of terror-ism is that, in regarding terrorterror-ism as prima facie wrong because contrary to the rules of war, it concedes that ter-rorism is indeed a form of war; albeit often one in which terrorist tactics are employed precisely because the resources for a conventional war are lacking, and there-fore, since military victory is impossible, success can be achieved only by terrorizing a people and its government into submitting to demands Yet, though terrorists usually claim to be fighting a war, this is exactly what govern-ments are loath to allow, since this would give terrorists the same protections as soldiers against the operation of the ordinary criminal law

A second approach to terrorism is, therefore, to view it as wrong for the same sort of reason as any violent crime is wrong, and distinguished from other such crimes only by having a political motive The usual anti-terrorist strategy is thus to employ a criminal justice rather than a military approach, though this can prove problematic in the case of international terrorists operating from beyond the attacked state’s jurisdiction So-called terrorists will deny that their

912 teleological explanation

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violence is morally wrong just because contrary to the laws

of a possibly unjust government, however, and will go on

to repudiate the pejorative label It may still be applied to

them, Michael Walzer argues, if they contravene a

‘polit-ical code’ of anti-state violence by targeting civilians rather

than, on this account, only politicians and the like

These definitional problems may, perhaps, be

over-come by using the word ‘terrorism’ without pejorative

force and viewing it as a species of political violence not

accorded the legitimacy of war Then the substantive

question comes to the fore of when such violence

(includ-ing the violence of the state) is justified p.g

*political violence; war, just

P Gilbert, New Terror, New Wars (Edinburgh, 2003).

—— Terrorism, Security and Nationality (London, 1994).

T Honderich, After the Terror (Edinburgh, 2003).

M Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars (New York, 1992).

M Warner and R Crisp (eds.), Terrorism, Protest and Power

(Alder-shot, 1990)

B T Wilkins, Terrorism and Collective Responsibility (London,

1992)

tertium non datur :see excluded middle, law of.

testimony.The role of testimony in getting and spreading

reliable belief or *knowledge has been a relatively

neglected epistemological issue Traditional

epistemol-ogy has had a marked individualist flavour in its stress

upon the status and vindication of information gleaned

from individual perception, memory, or inference But it

is clear that most of what any given individual knows

comes from others: palpably with knowledge of history,

geography, or science, more subtly with knowledge about

everyday facts such as when one was born Recently,

more attention has been paid to this topic, and amongst

the problems discussed are the scope of the dependency

each of us has on the word of others, the difficulty of

valid-ating the dependency via inferences from an individual’s

experience of witness reliability, and the problems of

C A J Coady, Testimony: A Philosophical Study (Oxford, 1992).

test of time For a work or idea of any sort to evoke

admir-ation or agreement over many generadmir-ations implies that it

transcends fashion and can be appreciated from different

standpoints In the aesthetic realm, where what is at issue

is particular objects for which there can be no universally

applicable standard of taste, the test of time may be the

best, if not the only, determinant of ultimate quality In

politics, too, where knowledge of the effects of

institu-tions and policies may be hard to gauge directly, the test of

time becomes a strong criterion of value, particularly for

*tradition

A Savile, The Test of Time (Oxford, 1982).

Thales of Miletus (6th century bc) By tradition he was the

first philosopher and the founder of the Ionian School

According to Herodotus, Thales predicted (within a year) the solar eclipse of 585 bc Aristotle attributes to him the conjecture that (1) water is the material principle of all things and that (2) a soul (*psyche) is a sort of ‘motor’

(kine¯tikon), for he said that a magnet has a soul because it

G S Kirk, J E Raven, and M Schofield, The Presocratic Philoso-phers, 2nd edn (Cambridge, 1990).

theism:see God.

theodicy.A justifying explanation of why God permits

*evil, responding to the problem of evil The theodicist

puts forward what he or she takes to be the actual

pur-poses, rationales, etc that explain and justify the divine actions, and inactions, with respect to evil It contrasts with a defence, which has a more modest project, that of refuting atheistic arguments from evil without commit-ting to a positive claim about the divine reasons John Hick, for example, proposes a theodicy, while Alvin Plantinga formulates a defence The idea of human *free will often appears in a both of these strategies, but in dif-ferent ways

John Hick, Evil and the God of Love (London, 1968).

Alvin Plantinga, God and Other Minds (Ithaca, NY, 1967).

theology and philosophy That the two have important overlapping concerns seems beyond question A system-atic philosophy that fails to give any thought to the ques-tion of *God’s existence could be judged seriously incomplete: likewise a theology that fails to enter into dis-cussion with opposed views of the world, or to explore whatever philosophical support is available for its princi-pal claims

Other and related topics that have clearly both philo-sophical and theological relevance include questions, for example, of personal identity—in relation to life beyond the death of the body, metaphysical questions about time and eternity (God’s relation to time), and moral questions about the Christian doctrine of *Atonement

Theologians sometimes claim that philosophical appraisal has no legitimacy in relation to what they see as

a ‘revealed’ system of belief But surely this cannot be right First: to preface a statement of doctrine with such words as ‘It is divinely revealed that ’cannot confer coherence on what is logically incoherent or make a con-tradiction come out as true There is therefore legitimate work for logic and philosophy of language in the analysis

of such doctrinal claims Second: however much of his religious beliefs a theologian regards as revealed, that can-not constitute a complete theistic system The revealed totality has to be intelligibly related to the deity who allegedly revealed it, imparted it to mankind; and its authority needs to be more convincingly established than that of rival claimants What is taken to be the essential

nature of that deity, qua revealer, cannot itself be derived

from revelation It is a proper topic for philosophical (metaphysical) inquiry A philosophical component—an

theology and philosophy 913

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epistemology of belief—is thus vitally necessary to a

revealed theology

There is, of course, one route of escape from that model

of ‘revealed package plus metaphysical account of its

divine origin’: namely, to see the ‘revealed’ package as a

set of ‘pictures’, stories, parables, by which to regulate

human life, and for which no further grounding is possible

or appropriate The religious authority and the efficacy of

these pictures, however, when taken in that way, become

*God and the philosophers; religion, history of the

phil-osophy of; Bonhoeffer

C F Delaney, Rationality and Religious Belief (Notre Dame, Ind.,

1979)

J C A Gaskin, The Quest for Eternity (1984), esp ch 1.

R W Hepburn, ‘The Philosophy of Religion’, in G H R

Parkin-son (ed.), An Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (London, 1988).

John Hick, An Interpretation of Religion (New Haven, Conn., 1989).

Richard Swinburne, Faith and Reason (Oxford, 1981).

Theophrastus (c.371–c.287 bc) Younger colleague of

Aristotle, his partner in his researches and his successor as

head of the Lyceum, the school Aristotle founded

Theophrastus wrote on everything from *modal logic

(where he introduced the rule that the conclusion cannot

be stronger than the weakest premiss) to penalties for

gazumping His surviving writings include sketches of

(faulty) human character-types, fundamental works on

botany, and shorter pieces, including a Metaphysics which

contains more questions than solutions He has been seen

as rejecting Aristotelian positions for increased

*mech-anism and *materialism; but the differences can be

exag-gerated, and he is best regarded not as deliberately

rejecting Aristotelian positions but as continuing

Aris-totle’s own procedure of questioning and criticism,

influ-enced by his own preferences and inclinations r.w.s

W W Fortenbaugh et al (eds.), Rutgers University Studies in

Clas-sical Humanities, ii, iii, v, vii (New Brunswick, NJ, 1985, 1988,

1992, 1995)

theorem.In an *axiomatic system a theorem is the last of

a sequence of formulae or propositions each of which is an

axiom or follows from preceding steps in accordance with

specified rules Such a sequence is a proof or a derivation

A proof is clearly formal where the entire process is

syn-tactical and can be employed without further attention to

meanings, as in a computer computation

In some formal systems of logic using *natural

deduc-tion, theorems of logic can be generated without recourse

to axioms In such cases a theorem of logic is one which is

derivable from the empty set of premisses r.b.m

B Mates, Elementary Logic (Oxford, 1972).

theory.A scientific theory is an attempt to bind together

in a systematic fashion the knowledge that one has of

some particular aspect of the world of experience The

aim is to achieve some form of understanding, where this

is usually cashed out as explanatory power and predictive

fertility The traditional analysis, going back to the Greeks and most recently championed by such logical empiricists

as Carl Hempel and Ernest Nagel, sees theories as ‘hypo-thetico-deductive systems’, meaning that one has sets of laws bound together through the fact that, from a few high-powered axioms or hypotheses, everything else can

be shown to follow as a deductive consequence Explan-ation therefore is a matter of showing how things hap-pened because of the laws of the theory Prediction is a matter of showing how things will happen in accordance with the laws of the theory Most significant is the fact that really successful theories bind together information from many hitherto disparate areas of experience, thus exhibit-ing what the philosopher William Whewell characterized

as a *‘consilience of inductions’

In recent years, this picture of theories has come under some considerable attack Although it may apply fairly well to such a theory as Newton’s theory of gravitational attraction, something like Darwin’s theory of *evolution through natural selection seems not to be as tightly inte-grated (deductively) as is supposed Moreover, while such

a theory as Darwin’s certainly has some predictive power,

it can hardly be said that this is a compelling attraction Hence, rather than relying on the traditional excuses (‘biology is immature’ and so forth), an increasing number

of thinkers have started to promote a view of theories which (they claim) pays far greater attention to the actual practice of science Supporters of this ‘semantic view’ of theories argue that theories should not be seen as overall systems trying to cover, at one move, major areas of experience Rather, more informally, they should be con-sidered as sets of theoretical *models which are given empirical meaning only inasmuch as they can be applied directly (semantically) to certain limited areas of empirical reality The virtues of the theory (like explanation and pre-diction) are not prescribed beforehand, but are very much

a function of the particular model in use at the time Debate continues, but undoubtedly at least part of the divide is between an older philosophy of science which

sees the task to be that of prescription of the ideal form of

science, and a newer philosophy of science which rests

content with a description of the way in which science is

*observation and theory

R B Braithwaite, Scientific Explanation (Cambridge, 1953).

R Giere, Explaining Science (Chicago, 1988).

theory-ladenness. The idea that all observations are interpreted through the medium of theories The position has three versions The first insists that when observations are described, the description inescapably involves some theoretical perspective Thus, observations will report the

ant species Solenopsis invicta engaged in foraging rather

than as red objects moving along linear paths More dra-matic is the claim that what is sensed is affected by one’s theory—that our conceptual frameworks affect the sen-sory inputs With the appropriate knowledge base, we see

914 theology and philosophy

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the Old Bailey as a criminal court rather than as a building

inhabited by oddly garbed humans engaged in hectoring

and wheedling A contemporary version of

theory-ladenness asserts that ‘observations’ are constructed—

one counts certain observations as being of psi particles

rather than as blips on a cathode-ray tube because there is

general agreement in the relevant social community on

the former interpretation Theory-ladenness has been

widely used as a reason to question the objectivity of

Ian Hacking, Representing and Intervening (Cambridge, 1983),

ch 10

theory theory of mind.Humans have a natural ability to

attribute mental states to one another in order to explain

and predict behaviour This common-sense psychological

reasoning enables us to make sense of what others do and

say To the extent that this reasoning consists in a body of

knowledge about the workings of people’s minds and

their connection with their acts and utterances, we can

call such reasoning a theory; although the term ‘theory of

mind’ is often used just to refer to the ability to attribute

mental states to others To explain this ability, many

philosophers and psychologists have supposed that

humans are equipped, perhaps innately, with a theory of

mind which they deploy to makes sense of others as

rational agents Such a theory is not consciously or explicitly

known, but it is said to be tacitly known This is the theory

theory of mind The rival view of how we attribute mental

states to others is *simulation theory According to this

view, we work out what others think and feel, or might do

and say, by using ourselves to simulate their predicament

and discovering what we would think or feel, do or say,

were we in their predicament, subject to the same factors

Simulation theory privileges the first-person point of view

in our understanding of others, whereas ‘theory’ theory

privileges the third-personal observation of others b.c.s

M Davies and T Stone, Folk Psychology: The Theory of Mind Debate

(Oxford, 1995)

theosophy.In a broad sense, theosophy is the mystical

doctrine of various German thinkers of the later

*Renais-sance period, most notably Jakob Boehme It holds that

man can have knowledge of God only by some kind of

mystical acquaintance More narrowly, and comically, it is

the name of a movement led by Madame Blavatsky and

Mrs Annie Besant in the late nineteenth century which

sought to bring enlightenment to the Western world from

Eastern religion and metaphysics a.q

thing-in-itself.This is Kant’s expression for the object

con-sidered as it is independently of its cognitive relation to the

human mind It is contrasted with the object as it appears,

or phenomenon, which is the object qua given to the mind

in accordance with its sensible forms Although Kant denies

that we can know the thing-in-itself, he maintains that we

must think of it as the ground of appearance h.e.a

*phenomena and noumena

H E Allison, Kant’s Transcendental Idealism (New Haven, Conn.,

1983)

things.‘Thing’, in its most general sense, is interchange-able with ‘entity’ or *‘being’ and is applicinterchange-able to any item whose *existence is acknowledged by a system of ontol-ogy, whether that item be particular, universal, abstract, or concrete In this sense, not only material bodies but also properties, relations, events, numbers, sets, and propos-itions are—if they are acknowledged as existing—to be accounted ‘things’ In this sense, then, the statement

‘Everything is a thing’ amounts to an analytic triviality However, it is more common for philosophers to use

‘thing’ in a more restricted sense, in which it is interchange-able with ‘object’ and stands in opposition to such terms as

*‘property’, *‘relation’, and *‘event’ In the restricted sense, things are items which possess properties, stand in relations

to one another, and undergo the changes which constitute events Thus understood, the notion of a thing is closely linked to the traditional notion of a *‘substance’ As such, it

is a notion also linked to the grammatical and logical notion

of a *subject (as opposed to a predicate) Indeed, Frege’s well-known distinction between ‘objects’ and ‘concepts’ precisely mirrors the subject–predicate distinction (at least

as it is employed in logic)

What, then, is the hallmark of thinghood in this restricted sense? Two competing answers to this question dominate current debate One, the linguistic answer, espoused by Frege but also by more recent philosophers such as Quine, holds that an object is whatever may be referred to by a proper *name or can be made the value of

a variable of quantification But a problem with this answer is to specify without circularity what constitutes a genuine proper name (or, more generally, a genuine sin-gular term) or variable of quantification For instance, when a soldier is described as having died for the sake of his country, should the noun phrase ‘the sake of his coun-try’ be regarded as genuine singular term naming some object or thing? Surely not: but it is arguably only because

we already believe, on independent grounds, that there are no such things as ‘sakes’ that we refuse to regard this noun phrase as a genuine singular term Here an adherent

of the linguistic answer may follow the lead of Frege and Quine by insisting that the application of genuine names

or variables of quantification demands the provision of cri-teria of identity for the things named or quantified over: in Quine’s words, ‘No entity without identity’ But this sug-gests that in fact metaphysical rather than linguistic con-siderations lie at the root of our concept of thinghood, and more particularly that the hallmark of thinghood consists

in the possession of determinate and objective identity conditions This is the contention of the alternative, meta-physical answer to the question ‘What is a thing?’ By this account, a thing is any item falling under a sortal concept supplying a criterion of identity for its instances Thus shoes and ships and sealing-wax are things, but certainly not sakes and probably not propositions

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There is a special sense of the term ‘thing’ or ‘object’ in

which it is used to draw a contrast with the term ‘subject’,

in the sense of the latter in which it is used to denote a

sub-ject of consciousness or experience, that is, a person or

*self Of course, in a broader sense subjects or persons are

themselves ‘things’, and indeed apparently things with

determinate identity conditions, however difficult it may

be to specify those conditions satisfactorily What chiefly

motivates the subject–object or person–thing distinction

is the fact that objects or things in this sense are thought

about rather than thinking, that is, are passive rather than

active relata of consciousness This fact is mirrored in the

grammatical structure of statements of cognition, which

typically feature transitive verbs taking a grammatical

object—statements like ‘I see a tree’ or ‘You are reading

this book’ Indeed, the terminology of ‘subject’ and

‘object’ clearly draws on these grammatical categories

e.j.l

*vague objects; real

M Dummett, Frege: Philosophy of Language, 2nd edn (London,

1981)

E J Lowe, Kinds of Being (Oxford, 1989).

A Quinton, The Nature of Things (London, 1973).

thinking.In its diverse forms—as *reasoning, believing,

reflecting, calculating, deliberating—thinking appears to

enjoy an intimate connection with speech, but just what

that connection might be is difficult to establish It is

sel-dom, as Plato would have it, a matter of an inward

dia-logue carried on by the mind with itself Not only is

wordless thought possible, as when we think how a room

would look with the furniture rearranged; it does not even

require attention to the matter in question for us to have

thought that something was so, as when, tripping on a

stair, we say we thought there was one fewer stair than

there in fact was

Is thinking that p a matter of being disposed to say that

p? This is tempting through making reliance on the spoken

word basic, but it does not get us far as it stands First,

while thinking that p we need have no inclination

whatso-ever to say that p; at best, the disposition must be

restricted by an appropriate condition, as ‘if asked to give

our opinion’ Even then there is a supposition that we are

speaking truthfully, and this would seem to be a matter of

saying what we really think A more satisfactory

charac-terization might run: to think that p is to be in a state of

mind expressible by saying that p with an intention to

speak the truth The latter condition is not ‘intending to

speak truthfully’, which would again reintroduce

think-ing, but ‘intending to say something that is in fact true’

This characterization allows for a suitably loose

con-nection between thought and speech in several respects:

those who cannot in fact speak are not being denied the

capacity to think, and indeed it is possible that someone

should suggest a form of words which better expresses

another’s thought than the words originally used It is also

allowed that there should be a range of quite different

propositions to which one might assent as expressing

one’s thought You ask whether I thought the window was dirty Yes indeed, I reply, but I could also have agreed

if you had asked whether I thought there was a smudge on the window-pane, this being equally adequate to convey-ing how thconvey-ings struck me at the time It is not as if the for-mulation ventured has to match unspoken words I did not think in words On the other hand, the characteriza-tion is also congenial to the idea that there are limits to the range of thoughts possible without language Lacking the relevant vocabulary, a person could hardly be in a state of mind expressible by saying, with the relevant intention, that Sofia is the capital of Bulgaria

Can animals think? We might say of a monkey which takes refuge from a snake by going up a tree that it knows that it is safe there We might say this, because the mon-key no longer behaves as if in imminent danger, but observes the snake in a detached fashion However, while

we may be prepared to say that it knows, we may be less

happy to say that the monkey thinks that it is safe That

threatens to demand more of the monkey’s mental capaci-ties than we are willing to concede On the other hand, we need a description for the case where there would be

knowledge that p but for the fact that p is false, and while

‘thinks that p’ has the disadvantage of suggesting a

mas-tery of concepts, an inner mental response, which it would

be fanciful to attribute to the animal, so long as ‘knows

that p’ can be affirmed solely on the strength of observed

behaviour, the same status can be extended to the

*belief; cognition; deliberation; understanding; lan-guage of thought

P M S Hacker, Wittgenstein: Meaning and Mind (Oxford, 1990).

H H Price, Thinking and Experience (London, 1953).

G Ryle, On Thinking (Oxford, 1979).

thinking, critical: see critical thinking.

thinking causes are causally efficacious *propositional attitudes Conflict arises over what is required for thinking causes to be causally efficacious For instance, Donald Davidson only requires that the event be causally related

to another event, and that the correct application of men-tal predicates ascribing propositional attitudes supervenes

on the correct application of physical predicates Others argue that something can only be a thinking cause if the event in question is causally efficacious in virtue of its

*intentional properties and believe that Davidson’s approach does not capture this requirement p.j.p.n

*mental causation

D Davidson, ‘Thinking Causes’, in J Heil and A Mele (eds.),

Mental Causation (Oxford, 1993).

third man argument Aristotle coined the expression

‘third man’ (which refers to an extra entity beyond the individual man, such as Socrates or Plato, and the general kind man) to designate a notorious ontological-regress

argument which first appears in Plato’s Parmenides and has

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impressed philosophers ever since Apparently directed

against Plato’s own earlier theory of *Forms, the

argu-ment shows that the premisses which are needed to entail

the existence of a Form can then be reapplied to entail the

existence of further Forms in infinite regress The nerve of

the argument is whether a Platonic Form (or other similar

entity) is or is not to be counted in with the other objects

which are related to it There has been vigorous debate

about the effectiveness of the argument; a majority

main-tain that it exploits genuine deficiencies in Plato’s earlier

thought, while a minority argue that he would reject its

A judicious article from the heyday of modern interest in this

argument is Colin Strang, ‘Plato and the Third Man’, Proceedings

of the Aristotelian Society, supp vol (1963).

Thomism.A philosophical–theological movement based

upon leading ideas of St Thomas Aquinas Successive

gen-erations have taken his philosophy as a starting-point for

their own speculations and have developed his ideas in

many directions Thomism, an ongoing enterprise with

its own schools and disputes, is particularly associated

with the Catholic Church, although much of his theology

has proved acceptable to Christians of a wide variety of

denominations and his theological teachings are by no

means peculiar to the Catholic Church Indeed

philosoph-ical parts of Thomism, for example on predication, on

being, on the nature of mind, and on the relations

between law and human nature, do not depend logically

upon Christian *dogma and can appeal to people of any

religion or none It should be added that Aquinas’s

philoso-phy was never universally accepted by his own Church,

and a number of his propositions were denounced in Paris

and Oxford in 1277 shortly after his death

In due course while Thomism was establishing itself its

proponents, such as John Capreolus, whose title was

Prin-ceps Thomistarum (chief of Thomists), had to defend

them-selves against other movements, especially those based on

the ideas of Duns Scotus and of Ockham In the sixteenth

century, in the face of the Protestant Reformation,

Thomism, represented by men such as Domingo de Soto,

held a prominent place in the armoury of the

Counter-Reformation, and in the nineteenth century, after a period

of decline, it gained renewed vigour as a result of a papal

bull commending the study of Aquinas *Neo-Thomism,

which was in part a result of that bull, is still with us

Among its exponents are Jacques Maritain and Étienne

Gilson We shall consider here three topics which at

dif-ferent times have been high on the agenda of Thomists,

namely, the doctrine of analogy, the relation between free

will and grace, and probabilism

Thomas de Vio (1468–1534), Cardinal Cajetan, was

per-haps the greatest of the Thomists during the earlier stages

of the Reformation His finest work was his commentary

on the Summa Theologiae of Aquinas, but in many other

books also, such as his De nominum analogia (The Analogy

of Names) he attended directly to Aquinas’s doctrines In

that latter work he developed Aquinas’s doctrine of

anal-ogy far beyond anything to be found in Aquinas’s writings The question at issue was the meaning of terms predicated affirmatively of *God, terms such as ‘good’, ‘wise’, and

‘powerful’ Aquinas had said that they should be under-stood neither literally nor negatively but analogically, and though deploying widely the concept of analogy he did not expound it systematically or in detail Cajetan filled that gap

The crucial move in his systematization was to identify

a jointly exhaustive set of three heads of division for ana-logy Any instance of analogy was an analogy either of inequality, or of attribution, or of proportionality The first two, however, turn out to be analogies by an improper use of the term ‘analogy’ Only analogy of pro-portionality is analogy properly speaking Two things are analogous by proportionality if they have a common name and the notion expressed by this name is propor-tionally the same For example, to see by corporeal vision and to see by intellectual vision are instances of seeing, for just as corporeal seeing presents something to the living body so also the faculty of intellect presents something to the mind Thus there is a kind of act which is related to the intellect as seeing is related to the living body, and that kind of act is therefore a seeing, analogically speaking, where the analogy is that of proportionality This kind of analogy is commonly deployed in metaphor, as when we speak of a smiling meadow, on the analogy of a smiling face, for in general people look most attractive when smil-ing, and a meadow, when looking its best, can therefore be described, by analogy of proportionality, as smiling But it was upon the non-metaphorical uses of analogical terms that Cajetan concentrated, and in so doing he shed a good deal of light on Aquinas’s problem of how we are to make sense of affirmative terms predicated of God in the Bible God’s goodness, wisdom, and so on are to be understood

on an analogy of creaturely goodness and wisdom: as our goodness and wisdom are proportional to us so are God’s proportional to him There is considerable dispute among Thomists over whether Cajetan’s teaching on analogy faithfully reflects, as he intended, the mind of Aquinas, but

there is no doubt that his De nominum analogia is a major

Thomist document

A second major area of Thomist thought concerns the relation between human *free will, divine foreknowledge

of human acts, and God’s grace Aquinas had seen the need to refute the argument that God’s foreknowledge of human acts implies that we humans cannot do otherwise than we do He had no doubt that God knows human acts that lie in the future in relation to us now This doctrine does not, however, imply that God determines those human acts He knows them not because he has deter-mined them but because he sees them happening as pre-sent to him, though future in relation to us Aquinas had also seen the need to deal with the closely related question

of whether God’s grace by which a person is saved is something that the recipient freely accepts, or whether his acceptance is determined by God If his grace is not freely accepted, then a question arises of the contribution if any

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that a person can make towards his own salvation or

damnation In the latter part of the sixteenth century a

major dispute arose in this area, particularly between

Dominican thinkers, whose chief spokesman in this

mat-ter was Domingo Bánez, and Jesuits, whose chief

spokesman was Luis de Molina As part of his rejection of

Aquinas’s teaching Molina developed the doctrine of

scientia media (middle knowledge) and the associated

con-cept of a ‘free futurable’, which is an act with a conditional

existence, not an act that will be performed or one that

might be but in fact will not be, but instead one that would

be freely chosen if certain conditions were satisfied God,

as omniscient, must know eternally not only all events

(including all free human acts) past, present, or future in

relation to us, but also all events which would happen

given the satisfaction of certain conditions God’s middle

knowledge of human acts is his knowledge of acts which

have this metaphysical status of a ‘would-be’ These acts

are the ‘free futurables’ Amongst them are the acceptance

by human beings of God’s saving grace According to

Molina God, in an absolutely free act, gives grace in the

light of his middle knowledge that the recipient would

accept it, and the recipient accepts that grace with an

entirely free consent Thus the doctrine of ‘determinism

by grace’ is totally rejected by Molina Against this

teach-ing Domteach-ingo Bánez and his fellow Dominicans deployed

the concept of praemotio physica (physical pre-motion) and

argued, in the spirit of Aquinas, that a person cannot freely

accept the grace that God offers unless moved by God to

do so This is a difficult doctrine to maintain, in its own

way as difficult as the doctrine of middle knowledge, and

the consequent dispute between Dominican Thomists

and Jesuit anti-Thomists rumbled on for decades There is

some point to the claim that the Jesuits were standing

dan-gerously close to the Pelagian heresy, and that the

Dominicans were standing dangerously close to Calvinist

teaching on predestination

In the course of his commentary (1577) on a part of the

Summa Theologiae of Aquinas, Bartholomew Medina

pre-sents a doctrine which he thought of as according to the

mind of Aquinas and which has been disputed by

Thomists ever since The doctrine is probabilism If a

per-son wishes to perform a given act and is in doubt over

whether the moral law forbids that act, then he is morally

at liberty to perform it on condition that the opinion that

he is at liberty to perform it is supported by a probable

argument, that is, by an argument whose conclusion has

some degree of probability, and even if the argument

sup-porting the claim that the moral law forbids the act is more

probable There is an evident danger of probabilism

lead-ing the unwary into the vice of laxity, when a barely

prob-able opinion on the side of liberty will be followed in

preference to a highly probable opinion on the side of the

moral law It was because of this danger that some insisted

that the opinion on the side of liberty had first to be shown

to be soundly based; shaky grounds for acting on the side

of liberty are never sufficient At the other extreme is the

vice of rigorism, associated especially with the Jansenists,

who argued that in the face of a probable argument on the side of the moral law and another probable argument on the side of liberty, there was always a presumption on the side of the law Given that probabilism occupies an inter-mediate position between the two extremes of laxity and rigour, there was room for dispute, which duly took place, over how nearly a probabilist may approach one extreme

or the other without straying into moral error There is no doubt that probabilism has its roots in Aquinas’s writings, and the fact that the doctrine is still a matter for dispute is due in part to the very fact that the protagonists in the dis-pute see themselves as enjoying the support of Aquinas It

is precisely this that makes them Thomists a.bro

*Thomism, analytical

Good accessible material is hard to come by The following are relevant:

É Gilson, The Spirit of Thomism (New York, 1964).

B Hamilton, Political Thought in Sixteenth Century Spain (Oxford,

1963)

Thomas de Vio (Cardinal Cajetan), The Analogy of Names

(Louvain, 1959)

Thomism, analytical A broad philosophical approach that brings into mutual relationship the styles and pre-occupations of recent English-speaking philosophy and the concepts and concerns shared by Aquinas and his fol-lowers This approach bears some relation to that of those post-war Oxford philosophers, e.g Austin and Ryle, who sought to reintroduce certain concepts into the analysis of thought and action, such as those of capacities and dispos-itions, which are prominent within Aristotelian philoso-phy In the case of analytical Thomists the primary areas

of interest have been intentionality, action, virtue theory, philosophical anthropology, causation, and essentialism The expression ‘analytical *Thomism’ is rarely employed, but it usefully identifies aspects of the writings of philoso-phers such as Anscombe, Donagan, Geach, Grisez,

P T Geach, ‘Form and Existence’, in God and the Soul (London,

1969)

A MacIntyre, First Principles, Final Ends and Contemporary Philo-sophical Issues (Milwaukee, 1990).

Thomism, neo-: see neo-Thomism.

Thomson, Judith Jarvis (1929– ) American philosopher best known for her use of hypothetical examples to elicit intuitions that help to reveal the structure of common-sense morality The most influential of her arguments of this sort grants the assumption that the foetus is a person but defends the permissibility of *abortion by appealing to

an analogous case in which a person can stop providing life support for another innocent person, to whom she has been involuntarily connected, only by killing that person Thomson believes that rights, which she analyses as non-absolute constraints on the behaviour of those against whom they hold, are the central components of morality

So, for example, she argues that self-defence is permissible

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if and only if the person one defends oneself against would

otherwise violate one’s rights; for such a person cannot

have a right not to be prevented from violating one’s

J J Thomson, Rights, Restitution, and Risk, ed William Parent

(Cambridge, Mass., 1986)

Thoreau, Henry David (1817–62) *New England

Tran-scendentalist, natural historian, and social critic, Thoreau

proclaimed, in Walden, that most people spend their lives

superficially, by pursuing wealth and following custom

Genuinely encountering reality is to be found only by

sep-arating oneself from the artificialities of city, economic,

and family life and communing directly with nature,

where one could ‘front only the essential facts of life’

Nature preserves a spontaneity and wildness that

civiliza-tion suppresses; the civil liberties democracy provides are

far less important than the spiritual freedom nature

embodies and inspires: ‘all good things are wild and free’

*‘Civil disobedience’ is the classic defence of conscience

above unjust law One must not support an immoral law

and can protest by, for example, not paying taxes that

implement it, or refusing to obey it and accepting a jail

term This appeals to the conscience of others and so

Leo Stoller, After Walden: Thoreau’s Changing Views on Economic

Man (Stanford, Calif., 1957).

thought:see thinking; cognition; language of thought.

thought, language of: see language of thought.

thought, laws of: see laws of thought.

thought experiments are employed both by

philoso-phers and by theoretical scientists to examine the

implica-tions of theories and to explore the boundaries of

concepts They are controlled exercises of the imagination

in which test cases are envisaged with a view to

establish-ing their conceptual coherence or their compatibility with

some proposed theory For example, in assessing the

mer-its of rival theories of *personal identity, philosophers

commonly propose thought experiments envisaging the

consequences of procedures which would apparently

result in the fission or fusion of persons—for instance,

brain bisection followed by transplantation of the two

cerebral hemispheres into separate bodies

Some philosophers object vehemently to the

philo-sophical use of thought experiments as substituting

fan-tasy for reality, but since philosophical argument is often

concerned to establish precisely what is possible, it is hard

to see how philosophy could do without them altogether

e.j.l

R A Sorensen, Thought Experiments (New York, 1992).

Thrasymachus.Notable figure in Plato’s Republic Having

had enough of the preceding high-minded, convivial but

thin discussion of justice, Thrasymachus falls on Socrates

and his interlocutors like a beast, arguing that justice is nothing else than the advantage of the stronger Some interpret Thrasymachus as claiming that justice is nothing deeper than the bare fact that those in power enact laws which protect their interests—justice is nothing more than the weak obeying the will of the strong Some see Thrasymachus as arguing for more: it is just that the strong ought to rule the weak, and justice consists in the strong holding sway Might makes right Thrasymachus is claimed as spokesman by nihilists, ethical egoists,

Plato, Republic 336b–354c.

threats and offers.Threats express intentions to inflict injury or damage They are menacing proposals, paradig-matically expressed in ‘Your money or your life’ Offers,

by contrast, are proposals that expand opportunities: ‘I’ll pay you $10 to weed the garden.’ Threats can masquerade

as offers Since they present pairs of options, their surface grammar can suggest expansion of opportunity Such pro-posals none the less are threats just in case either option would leave one worse off than one would otherwise have been In standard cases, such a set-back is measured relative to the welfare one would have enjoyed had one not encountered the robber in the first place In other cases, the set-back is measured against a morally defined baseline, which includes the welfare one should enjoy as one’s due: a proposal to stop beating you if you weed the garden constitutes a threat Thus threats, in contrast to offers, are coercive, which is not to say that all offers are morally innocent—they may be disrespectful, exploita-tive, or exert undue influence a.car

m.l

*coercion

A Wertheimer, Coercion (Princeton, NJ, 1987).

time. The dimension of *change, a fact which distin-guishes it from the three dimensions of *space But how does genuine temporal change differ from mere variation

as exhibited in space? When a road is said to change in breadth along its length, ‘change’ is being used only metaphorically, in contrast to its literal use when a child is said to change in height as it becomes older Some theories

of time and change do not really accommodate this dis-tinction, and as such are sometimes accused of ‘spatializ-ing’ time or denying the reality of temporal ‘becom‘spatializ-ing’ Some philosophers believe, indeed, that developments in physics connected with the theory of *relativity necessi-tate this denial, because they seem to demonstrate that the notion of an absolute ‘now’ must be abandoned along with the Newtonian notion of the absoluteness of simul-taneity Events deemed ‘past’ in one frame of reference must be deemed ‘future’ in other frames, apparently indi-cating that the distinction between past and future is only

a subjective, experientially based one rather than reflect-ing a genuine ontological divide Philosophers of this per-suasion adopt what is commonly called a ‘static’ view of

time 919

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