27. Becoming Strong in Common Ground: Agreement Among Philosophers
Summary
Listen to Lecture
Subscribe in Podcast App | Download Transcript
Lecture Notes
Main Topics #
The Problem of Disagreement #
- Pre-Socratic philosophers disagree on nearly every fundamental point
- This widespread disagreement can lead either to despair about human knowledge or to reckless presumption
- Aristotle’s solution: find what is common to all positions rather than focusing on disagreements
The Universal Principle: Change Through Contraries #
- All Greek natural philosophers explain change through opposites or contraries
- Examples cited: dense/rare, hot/cold, wet/dry, mixed/segregated, love/hate, even/odd
- This principle appears universally—ancient Greece, ancient China (I Ching with yin/yang), and modern physics
- Crucially, this principle is forced on the mind by truth itself, not freely imagined as a hypothesis
Custom and Habituation vs. Reason #
- Human beings easily become accustomed to seeing things as normal, even when they represent a decline (illustration: the movie scene and Rosa’s reaction)
- Einstein’s example: despite revolutionary thinking, Einstein resisted the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory because determinism was so deeply ingrained from his upbringing
- Heisenberg’s observation: even brilliant scientists cannot easily abandon fundamental assumptions they were raised with
- The solution requires help from a master or teacher to encourage proper thinking
Aristotle’s Method of ‘Becoming Strong’ #
Berquist identifies several key steps Aristotle takes:
Step One: Give Reason for What All Say Without Reason
- Aristotle provides justification (a syllogistic argument) for why everyone posits contraries as first principles
- This validates universal agreement by showing it follows necessarily from the nature of change
Step Two: The Nature of This Common Thought
- This thought is forced by truth itself, not a freely imagined hypothesis
- Contrast: Einstein’s phrase “creation of scientific hypothesis is like writing a novel” suggests hypotheses are freely created
- A truth forced by mind cannot be otherwise; a hypothesis can be tested and rejected
- Universal recognition across cultures and ages points to truth
Step Three: Distinguish How Contraries Are Judged
- Some philosophers judge the fundamental contraries by the senses (hot/cold, wet/dry)
- Others judge by reason (odd/even, love/hate)
- All seek the first pair of contraries, not just any pair
Step Four: Agreement in General and Proportionally
- In general: all agree that change involves contraries
- Proportionally: different pairs maintain the same structural relationship
- Example from mathematics: 2:3 as 4:6 as 8:12—different numbers, same proportional relationship
- Philosophical example: dense is to rare as full is to empty as love is to hate
Step Five: Recognize Lack or Privation in Each Pair
- One member of each contrary pair is superior or more positive
- The other is inferior or involves a lack (λείψις/privatio)
- Dense has something that rare lacks; full has something that empty lacks; love has something that hate lacks
- Thomas Aquinas is notable for recognizing this principle, which will become even more important in Reading 11
Key Arguments #
The Principle of Fewness (Simplicity) #
- Fewer principles are better if they are sufficient
- Not that fewer is always better, but fewer is better when adequate
- Fundamental principle in natural science from the Greeks through Einstein
- Shakespeare’s phrase: “Fewness in truth”
- Illustration: Newton, Galileo, and Einstein all operate on this principle
The Role of Imagination in Scientific Discovery #
- Einstein observed that creation of scientific hypothesis is like writing a novel
- Scientific theories are usually invented by young men (typically in their 20s and 30s)
- The imagination is most perfect at a young age
- Reason, however, is better at later ages (50+)
- Example: Heisenberg’s original ideas came in his 20s, but his understanding of what he invented became clearer and more crystallized as he aged
- This suggests scientific progress requires both imagination and mature understanding
Proportion in Understanding Agreement #
- Despite surface disagreement, proportional thinking reveals hidden unity
- Example: different pairs of contraries maintain proportional relationships
- Illustration from marriage: wife A is to husband A as wife B is to husband B—different people, proportional relationship
- Wine pairing example: Chardonnay is to chicken as Chianti is to spaghetti
- Understanding proportion shows that all philosophers are saying the same thing in structure while differing in particulars
Important Definitions #
Contraries (ἐναντία/contraria) #
Opposites that cannot coexist in the same subject at the same time. All natural change involves transition from one contrary to another.
First Principles/Beginnings (ἀρχαί/principia) #
The fundamental causes from which all other things derive.
Proportion (ἀναλογία/proportio) #
In the Greek sense: a likeness of ratios, not merely a mathematical ratio. Structural similarity across different particulars. Example: 2:3 as 4:6 as 8:12—each pair maintains the same proportional relationship despite different numbers.
Privation or Lack (λείψις/privatio) #
The absence of a quality or perfection that something is capable of having. One member of a contrary pair represents presence; the other represents absence or privation.
Forced by Truth (anankasthenai ypotei tei aletheiai) #
A principle or thought that cannot be otherwise because truth itself compels it. Contrasted with a freely imagined hypothesis.
Examples & Illustrations #
Movie Theater and Custom #
- A young unmarried woman becomes accustomed to indecent movie scenes
- What was shocking becomes accepted as normal through habituation
- Illustrates how custom blinds us to moral decline
The Doctor and the Patient #
- A patient describes his daily routine: “I get up, shave, vomit, and brush my teeth”
- When the doctor expresses shock, the patient responds: “Doesn’t everybody?”
- Shows how deeply ingrained customs make people view abnormalities as normal
Einstein and Quantum Theory #
- Despite being revolutionary, Einstein resisted the Copenhagen interpretation
- Reason: he was too accustomed to determinism from his upbringing
- Illustrates that even brilliant minds resist contradicting fundamental assumptions
Marriage Proportionality #
- Two couples may be well-matched: husband A with wife A, husband B with wife B
- If spouses were swapped, both marriages would fail
- Illustrates that agreement can be proportional rather than particular
- Wife A is to husband A as wife B is to husband B
Hair Length (Proportion in Nature) #
- Modern people say there’s nothing wrong with men having long hair
- Appeal to Christ wearing long hair
- But in the age when Christ lived, women wore hair to their ankles and men wore it shorter
- The natural proportion remains: women’s hair should be longer than men’s
- Bible says “a woman’s glory is her hair,” but hair is not a compliment to a man
- Illustrates that what is natural may be proportional rather than absolute
Wine and Food Pairing #
- Chardonnay pairs with chicken; Chianti pairs with spaghetti
- Different wines for different foods
- Proportionally: Chardonnay is to chicken as Chianti is to spaghetti
- Illustrates proportional agreement despite particular differences
Pythagoras Table of Contraries #
- Pythagoras listed ten pairs of contraries, one column labeled “good,” the other “bad”
- Right is good, left is bad; male is good, female is bad
- Anticipates Aristotle’s observation that one contrary is superior and the other inferior
- Shows ancient recognition of privation principle
Questions Addressed #
How can we proceed when philosophers disagree? #
- Not by despairing or by presumptuous individual genius
- By finding what is common to all positions
- By becoming strong in that common basis before resolving particular disagreements
What is the common basis among all natural philosophers? #
- All explain change through contraries or opposites
- This is not a hypothesis but something forced on the mind by truth itself
- This principle appears universally across cultures and times
Why do some philosophers judge contraries by senses and others by reason? #
- Different access points to the same fundamental truth
- Sensible contraries (hot/cold, wet/dry) are immediately known through sensation
- Rational contraries (odd/even, love/hate) require abstraction and reasoning
- Both point to the same underlying principle
Why are proportional agreements important? #
- They reveal hidden unity beneath apparent disagreement
- Understanding proportion shows that different thinkers are saying the same thing structurally
- Proportional thinking bridges particular disagreements and general agreement
Methodological Insights #
The Importance of Common Ground #
- Men tend to agree more about the general than the specific
- Starting with the common provides a stable foundation for resolving disagreements
- The common is more known to us than the particular
Imagination vs. Reason in Science #
- Imagination is necessary for formulating novel scientific hypotheses
- Imagination is most powerful in youth (20s-30s)
- Reason develops more fully later (by age 50+)
- Greatest scientific discoveries come when imagination is strongest, but understanding deepens when reason matures
The Role of Teacher and Student #
- A good teacher knows when to encourage and when to restrain
- Students need both hope (that truth is knowable) and fear (of error)
- Custom and habituation are powerful forces that resist change
- External aids (authority, credibility, grace) help move the will toward assent