Jon, perhaps we should celebrate this August 28th as the 116th anniversary of 
the text you have kindly quoted for us several times now. I’d like to celebrate 
by looking closely into the logic of it. 

Peirce says “it must suppose something to be in that antecedent state,” namely 
the state of absolute absence of any phenomena. Peirce then asserts that “this 
must be that which would Really be in any possible state of things whatever, 
that is, an Ens Necessarium.” But this is simply a definition, true only as a 
tautology. If anything follows logically (i.e. by deduction or necessary 
reasoning) from this, it is that Ens Necessarium is not a phenomenon. And 
neither is God, if God is that Ens. 

I don’t see how it follows from this that God is “distinct” in any intelligible 
sense of that word, or that God has any intelligible attributes such as those 
you enumerate in your post, or those anybody else has affirmed — except those 
which people suppose that Ens to have. Which is why its reality can never be 
more than a “hypothesis” — and even calling it that is a stretch for any 
scientific logic, as it is wholly untestable.

Peirce’s affirmations about God are statements of his belief. The Logic 
Notebook of August 28, 1908, shows that they have no basis in logic.

Love, gary

Coming from the ancestral lands of the Anishinaabeg

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Jon Alan Schmidt
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2024 6:19 PM
To: Peirce-L <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] CSP: "A man could not have any idea that was not 
anthropomorphic," was, Ens necessarium

 

List:

 

I agree that Peirce was an unorthodox Christian in his religious beliefs, but 
the abundant quotations that I have provided in other recent threads amply 
demonstrate that his philosophical conception of God was quite compatible with 
classical theism. Again, he explicitly affirmed that God is real, personal, 
omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent, infinite, transcendent (not immanent), 
knowable (not utterly inscrutable), necessary (not contingent), immaterial (not 
embodied), and eternal (outside time).

 

GR: Jon concludes that "It would be disingenuous for any purported Peirce 
scholar to claim otherwise [than that Peirce was a theist and an 
anthropocentrist in his conception of God].

 

For the record, here is what I actually said.

 

JAS: By his own abundant and unambiguous testimony, Peirce believed that God as 
Ens necessarium is "Really creator of all three Universes of Experience" (CP 
6.452, EP 2:434, 1908). It would be disingenuous for any purported Peirce 
scholar to claim otherwise.

 

While I have acknowledged that much can be gleaned from his writings that is 
compatible with pantheism, panentheism, or atheism, my recurring point is that 
no one can accurately ascribe to Peirce himself the view that the three 
universes (and corresponding categories) are identical to God, are contained 
within God, are themselves eternal, or came into being from absolutely nothing. 
Again, he explicitly stated otherwise in his Logic Notebook entry that I will 
quote one more time.

 

CSP: Cosmology or the explanatory science of the Three Universes shows then 
plausibly at least how the Three Universes were produced, from an antecedent 
state. But their Phenomena are all the phenomena there are. The task of 
Cosmology is therefore to show how all phenomena were produced from a state of 
absolute absence of any; and logic requires that this problem [is] to be 
solved. But it must suppose something to be in that antecedent state, and this 
must be that which would Really be in any possible state of things whatever, 
that is, an Ens Necessarium. This Ens necessarium being, then, the Principle of 
all Phenomena, must be the author and creator of all that could ever be 
observed of Ideas [1ns], Occurrences [2ns], or Logoi [3ns]. (R 339:[295r], 1908 
Aug 28)

 

According to Peirce, God as Ens necessarium is distinct from and logically 
antecedent to "all the phenomena there are" (1ns/2ns/3ns) as "the author and 
creator of all" observable phenomena. This is not "my reading of Peirce," it is 
what his own words plainly assert.

 

Regards,

 

Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA

Structural Engineer, Synechist Philosopher, Lutheran Christian

www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt <http://www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt>  
/ twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt <http://twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt> 

 

On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 2:50 PM Edwina Taborsky <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Helmut, List

 

Comments on your questions,,

 

1] Yes, my reading of Peirce is that the term of ‘God’ means Reason, Reasoning, 
Logic, Mind. See 6.218 ’there is no principle of action in the universe but 
reason’….but, this reasoning is not deductive but also  inductive and abdutive, 
ie, open. This is the result of, as you note, that ALL THREE Categories were 
existent from the beginning. 

 

Therefore reasoning or logic is necessary - since it enables continuity and the 
formation of habits of generality..Without habits - what would result? That is 
- a universe operative only in Firstness and/or Secondness - would result in:  
Entropy. 

 

What is meant by the term of ‘god’? In In 8.211-212, he compares it with 
’Nature’ - andNature is an evolving, rational expression of Mind as Matter.The 
concept that ‘Matter is effete Mind’ [6.25] is basic to Peirce’s objective 
idealism [6.24]; Note that 6.268 ‘where all mind partakes of the nature of 
matter’..and so on. See an extensive analysis; 6.277. 

 

 In 6.502, Peirce uses the analogy of “a mind’ for the meaning of ‘god’. I have 
no problem with such an analogy - and reject the anthropomorphic images [again, 
I’m an atheist so….]…and reject the concept of god as causal. Again, I consider 
Peirce’s insistence that all three categories emerged together - to be a key 
infrastructure in his concept of the role of reason in the operation of the 
universe. . 

 

And Peirce’s outline of nothing [see 1.412 and 6.217 is not the ’nothing of 
negation [6.217…”There is no individual thing, no compulsion outward nor 
inward, no law”…andn “nothing necessarily resulted [6.218\. 

 

3. I’m not sure what you mean by ‘capitalism’. My understanding of the term is 
that it means that the actions of the Investment and Production of goods and 
services are in the control of the individual, the private individual. Rather 
than the collective or State. 

 

The benefits of capitalism is that this enables diversity and novelty of 
innovation [ which can only be done by free-thinking, curious individuals]; it 
enables an economy whose goods and services are linked to local realities [ 
local environment of land and plants/animals, local needs, …rather than 
top-down one-style fits all ]. It enables multiple sites of production - and - 
importantly, if one individual’s enterprise fails - only he fails - not the 
whole collective. The emergence of capitalism in the 15th 16th century and the 
concomitant development of the middle class enabled an explosion of population 
growth in Europe  - and a concomitant increase in health and well-being - and - 
eventually, a need to expand to the ’new world’ because of this population 
growth [ see Braudel F, histories].

 

Edwina 

On Aug 27, 2024, at 2:40 PM, Helmut Raulien <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

List,

 

as I said, I find the term "habit" at least as due to investigating its 
anthropomorphicity. The term "nothing" though I don´t see for anthropomorphic 
at all. (Sorry for my bad English, maybe I confuese "to" with "as" and "for"). 
Anyways, when we speak of "nothing" in a theological context, it becomes 
complex, I think:

 

1-- Is God logic/word, like John wrote (Bible) at the beginning of his gospel?

 

2 -- Or does God have to, like all creatures and all inanimate nature, obey to 
logic, because logic is absolutely inevitable, and the one primary ens 
nessecitarium? I think that is e.g. the position of Omri Boehm, in whose view 
ethics too derive from logic, as I think to have understood).

 

I´m am against Hegel, but must admit, that he wrote a fine description, how 
everything evolved from nothing. BUT: I agree with Edwina (if i understood 
right), that this is not an evolution, as all three categories must have been 
there from the start.

 

Well, I am sort of an agnostic, somewhere between panentheism and theism. I 
guess, even between theists, there are different ways to define the concept 
"God". And certainly the concept "nothing": Might well be, that it merely exist 
for concept in capitalism? (Sorry for that, Edwina, but I just felt like this). 
I just wanted to say, that maybe point 2 is true, and in that case, maybe there 
never has been "nothing". I think, the buddhist say so, I am not a buddhist, 
but this their point is worth of taking it into the discourse as possibility 
(type due to not knowing).

 

But with Anselm of Canterbury, we might say, that if we can imagine "nothing", 
there must be, or have been, nothing. But I would doubt that we can imagine 
nothing (besides of being broke). It is a nonsentic term. Maybe.

 

Best regards, Helmut

Gesendet: Dienstag, 27. August 2024 um 03:50 Uhr
Von: "Edwina Taborsky" <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
An: "Gary Richmond" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: "Peirce-L" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >, 
"Edwina Taborsky" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
>
Betreff: Re: [PEIRCE-L] CSP: "A man could not have any idea that was not 
anthropomorphic," was, Ens necessarium

Gary, R, List

I certainly agree that Peirce was not an ‘orthodox Christian’ - and think that 
this term - and the term of ’theism’ needs to be clarified within Peirce’s [not 
someone who is not Peirce] - understanding.

I think Peirce's outline of the categories is a basis for understanding some of 
what these terms means - since the operation of the categories must include 
such concepts as the origin of the universe,  of evolution and adaptation - as 
well as the societal roles that we understand that religion plays.

Therefore I also disagree with JAS’s assertion that ’something cannot come out 
of nothing’ - and thus, his claim that an "there must have been something else 
real that produced all observable phenomena (contingent being)”.Such a comment 
could only be made when one is thinking within and only within the mindset of 
Secondndess - which requires kinetic linear causality. 

But Peirce’s explanation of the universe as it developed from Nothing [1.412] 
isn’t an analysis based within Secondness but explains how ALL’ THREE 
categories emerged within this realm of Nothing.  As such, these three modes 
together produce, within their capacity of self-organization and self-creation 
- our universe. That is how I understand Peirce’s writings - which is  quite a 
different understanding from that of JAS - and , as I’ve noted, there’s no 
point in our discussing these issues - as we are both ’settled’ in our 
interpretations [and thus, alas, both do indeed, can superficially be said to 
block the way of inquiry].

 

As for anthropomorphic images - our species ’thinks’ only in symbols, and so - 
it is an easy analytic mode - but there are other images and symbolic means to 
explain these issues - even including mathematics! - but the anthropomorphic 
ones tend to align our identities with ‘more powerful forces than our 
individual selves - and are helpful to clarify our moral and ethical rules.  
But - I think they can be misleading and dangerous …especially when set up 
within beliefs held by ’tenacity’ and ‘authority’ .

 

Edwina 

On Aug 26, 2024, at 8:14 PM, Gary Richmond <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

List,

 

While Jon has shown that Peirce considered himself to be a theist "[b]y his own 
abundant and unambiguous testimony" in the near exhaustive group of quotations 
which he supplied. I would only add that, in my view, Peirce was a peculiar 
sort of theist, and certainly not an orthodox one. Indeed, as he wrote, he was 
"very far from being an orthodox Christian." 

"I am very far from being an orthodox Christian; but as I see deeper into the 
creeds than the men who merely mouth them, and see them in a different way, I 
see more clearly their preciousness" (In a letter to William James dated 
November 25, 1902)

I would suggest that this passage reflects Peirce's nuanced and personal 
interpretation of the creeds (and not only the creeds), differing from more 
conventional understandings and beliefs held by many -- if not most -- others 
in his congregational circle(s). [I had earlier noted that from my youth I too 
have 'translated' the myths, rituals, and Christian creeds into ideas that were 
also anything but orthodox and conventional, such as my conception of the 
Cosmic Christ. I think it likely that others, perhaps many others, have done 
something like that (or how would one ever arrive at such a concept as the 
Cosmic Christ?)] 

As for Peirce's views, as remarked, Jon has convincingly and, as he sees it, 
decisively argued that Peirce was a theist, although he adds that Peirce 
presents his theistic position as "but a highly plausible hypothesis."

JAS: In the state of things logically antecedent to the three universes (and 
corresponding categories), which was utterly devoid of any phenomena 
whatsoever, there must have been something else real that produced all 
observable phenomena (contingent being), namely, that which is real in every 
possible state of things (necessary being). He presents this as neither a hard 
fact nor a mere opinion, but a highly plausible hypothesis, and elsewhere 
directly addresses the charge of anthropomorphism.

CSP: I have after long years of the severest examination become fully satisfied 
that, other things being equal, an anthropomorphic conception, whether it makes 
the best nucleus for a scientific working hypothesis or not, is far more likely 
to be approximately true than one that is not anthropomorphic. ... [A]s between 
an old-fashioned God and a modern patent Absolute, recommend me to the 
anthropomorphic conception if it is a question of which is the more likely to 
be about the truth. (CP 5.47n, EP 2:152, 1903)

 

Jon is saying that Peirce's views are both theistic and anthropomorphic, and 
these two are conjoined: "[Peirce] even explicitly endorses anthropomorphism in 
conjunction with theism." 


CSP: To Schiller's anthropomorphism I subscribe in the main. And in particular 
if it implies theism, I am an anthropomorphist.  

 

GR: But regarding anthropomorphism, Peirce tellingly writes elsewhere: 

 

If I were to attach a definite meaning to “anthropomorphism,” I should think it 
stood to reason that a man could not have any idea that was not 
anthropomorphic, and that it was simply to repeat the error of Kant to attempt 
to escape anthropomorphism (emphasis added). MS [R] 293:1-2; NEM 4:313  1906-7 

Here Peirce says that he considered it "reasonable" to believe that all our 
ideas are necessarily anthropomorphic. However, as both Peirce and Schiller 
were pragmatists, their anthropomorphism involves -- to some smaller or greater 
extent -- their understanding that we humans naturally understand the world and 
concepts, including God, through our own experiences and characteristics. Thus, 
when thinking about God, people quasi-necessarily ascribe human qualities, 
emotions, and intentions to the divine. Further, Peirce's and Schiller's 
anthropomorphism seems tied to their both being pragmatists in the sense that 
understanding God in human terms makes the concept of God more relatable and 
meaningful than the abstractions of the Enlightenment and, in particular, 
German Idealism. Finally, an anthropomorphic God is one with whom humans can 
seemingly have a personal relationship.

Jon concludes that "It would be disingenuous for any purported Peirce scholar 
to claim otherwise [than that Peirce was a theist and an anthropocentrist in 
his conception of God]. 

That may be so as far as it goes, although stated in a rather hubristic way. 
But as I see it there is much more to be said about  the character of Peirce's 
theism, his un-orthodox Christianity, and his anthropocentrism which holds that 
we can have no ideas which are not anthropomorphic. 

But for me, perhaps an even more important consideration is that there is most 
certainly very much more to inquire into as to how his metaphysics might be 
used -- and, indeed, is being used -- to explore metaphysical and religious 
positions other than theistic and anthropocentric ones. 

As I previously remarked, I do not want to get into religious metaphysical 
discussions with Jon, now for several reasons.  

Best,

 

Gary R

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