Showing posts with label patience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patience. Show all posts

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Find

11.24.19


Mariel Hemingway
Idaho Valley


Find
Refuge 
寻找避难所
Xúnzhǎo bìnàn suo
避難所を探す
Hinansho o sagasu
ps46
Find confugerunt

My house is my home. 
Respect protects me when i roam.

Security is dependent upon defense.
The space between things is something sensed.

A thrust can be blocked, dodged or countered.
Standing your ground isn't locked, lodged or outwardly powered.

Light is my refuge when darkness is unsafe.
Darkness is better when being seen is a mistake.

Though the earth be moved to shake the tree,
we will hold faith in divine existence as our reason to be.

Though the mountains lose rocks that roll to the depths of the sea,
we will believe that God has a plan to work with that which can be seen.



Though the water rages while the land trembles with tumult,
we will rejoice in the One who helps us rebuild as a result. 

The unity for existence holds diversity in unitary forms
Affordable production with quality as the norm
builds the economy to reconstruct that which was damaged by the storm.  

There is an elevation whose streams make the river glad.
The flow of water is a reminder of the experience humanity had.

The water flows downward by the pull of gravity.
The city was built for the security of shelter's sanity.

The habitation of the Most High lies in the heart.
Adoration is the ardor that harbors the craft in any art.

God is in the midst of her.
The lonely heart hears the stir.

She will not be overthrown.
The break of day will renew the light as known.

We are not alone
though each is allowed his own.

Nations have made much ado
but they have been happy too.

Kingdoms have been shaken to the core.
Republic has to mind conservative reform.

When God had spoken, the earth seemed to melt away
to leave faith as the power to rebuild that which fell to the fray.

The fire of divine desire is with us.
Redemption with truth trusts in what's just.

Free will is the greatest gift
but it has to be managed with thrift.

Those who took payment for a service, but didn't provide one in return
are liable for the broken contract as the cause of the dispersion that burned. 

The liberal claim to power over executive authority
has been used as a support for prejudice against the majority.

The accusation of corruption invoked the charge of tyranny
to punish the larger body as the cause of criminal conspiracy.

Look upon the works that are best
to see the awesome things that passed the test.

The divinity of deity has made war to cease.
It was this that let the falsely convicted captives free. 

One criminal on the cross asked 'Are you not the Messiah?
Why do you hang there like a pariah?

'Save yourself and us!
Is this something we need to discuss?'

The other rebuked him and said,
'Do you not fear judgment from the living and dead?

'You are under the same sentence of condemnation
but you will be seen as guilty for generations.'

The thief who defended Jesus as Christ
was told that he would reside in paradise.

That the Son would hang on the cross is theology
that has been known to invoke controversial apology.

That One with the divine nature would die for our sins
was viewed as absurd monotheistic din.

The self sacrifice of the body of the divine person
was offered once for the cleansing from human incursion.

It was an expression of love for our conversion
that offered the promise of salvation with baptismal immersion.  

May you be made strong with the glorious power
that prepares you to endue anything with patience beyond the trifling hours.

Give thanks to the Father who enabled you to share in the inheritance of the light.
He rescued us for redemption by faith from the darkness of power for sight.

His Son is the firstborn of all creation for our faith.
The Christ of Jesus is the image of the invisible God portrayed.

We have been advised to view Christ as the center of reality
to invest in a faith that promotes freedom in tactically factual actuality.

Religion was not meant to impose ascetic law on all people.
Devotion is an emotion to cultivate goodness for redemption from error or evil.

Be free and know the stillness of divinity.
The spirit of love will exalt the peace of infinity.

The fire of divine desire is with us.
Redemption in truth trusts in what's just.

---------------------

46 Deus noster refugium
Light is our refuge

1 God is our refuge and strength,
a very present help in trouble.
2 Therefore we will not fear, though the earth be moved,
and though the mountains be toppled into the depths of the sea;
3 Though its waters rage and foam,
and though the mountains tremble at its tumult.
4 The Lord of hosts is with us;
the God of Jacob is our stronghold.
5 There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God,
the holy habitation of the Most High.
6 God is in the midst of her;
she shall not be overthrown;
God shall help her at the break of day.
7 The nations make much ado, and the kingdoms are shaken;
God has spoken, and the earth shall melt away.
8 The Lord of hosts is with us;
the God of Jacob is our stronghold.
9 Come now and look upon the works of the Lord,
what awesome things he has done on earth.
10 It is he who makes war to cease in all the world;
he breaks the bow, and shatters the spear,
and burns the shields with fire.
11 "Be still, then, and know that I am God;
I will be exalted among the nations;
I will be exalted in the earth."
12 The Lord of hosts is with us;
the God of Jacob is our stronghold.


Psalm 46

The 46th psalm is addressed to the chief Musician for the Sons of Korah according to alamoth.

The note for alamoth is unique to this psalm. It may refer to a high pitched instrument. It could be a reference to the soprano voices of young girls who went out to dance in celebration of David's victory over the Philistines.

The Midrash Tehillim comments on the psalms. It parses the word alamot (Hebrew: עלמות‎) as referring to the "hidden things" that God does for his people.

The office for the chief Musician was established by David. He appointed a man named Heman as the main musician or singer.

Asaph was made Heman’s right hand assistant and the Merarites were at his left hand (1 Chron.6:39). The Asaphites were one of the guilds of musicians in the First Temple.

The Korahites were the sons of Moses' cousin. Korah had led a revolt against Moses. He died after a fire was sent from heaven to consume the entire force. It was reported that the children of Korah did not die. (Num. 26:11)

The Korahites were counted with the Kohathites among the Levites. Both groups are documented as having offered praise with volume. (2 Chron. 20:19)

The Kohathites cared for the vessels and objects within the sanctuary - the Ark of the Covenant, Menorah, Table of Showbread, etc.

Several psalms are described in their opening verses as being by the Sons of Korah. The numbers for these psalms are 42, 44–49, 84, 85, 87 and 88.

Some of the Korahites were also "porters" of the temple (1 Chron. 9:17–19). One of them was over "things that were made in the pans" (v31), i.e. the baking in pans for the meat-offering (Lev. 2:5).

There is a tradition that the prophet Samuel was descended from Korah.

Martin Luther wrote and composed a hymn which paraphrases Psalm 46. "Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott" translates as "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God." Johann Sebastian Bach based his chorale cantata Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott, BWV 80, on Luther's hymn.

=================

Eng.  My house is my home.
Ch.    我的房子是我的家。
           Wǒ de fángzi shì wǒ de jiā.
Jpn.   私の家は私の家です。
            Watashinoie wa watashinoiedesu.
Krn.    내 집은 내 집이야
             nae jib-eun nae jib-iya
Ltn.     Mea domus mea est in domum suam.
Itln.    La mia casa è la mia casa.
Spn.    Mi casa es mi hoga
Frn.     Ma maison est ma maison.
Grk.     Το σπίτι μου είναι το σπίτι μου.
              To spíti mou eínai to spíti mou.
Rsn.      Мой дом мой дом.
              Moy dom moy dom.
Gmn.   Mein Haus ist mein Zuhause.
Trk.      Benim evim benim evim.

------------------------

Pastors

Jeremiah (650-570 BCE)


Jeremiah was the son of Hilkiah, a kohen from the Benjamite village of Anathoth.

Kohen is the Hebrew word for "priest". It is used in reference to the Aaronic priesthood. Levitical priests or kohanim were in direct patrilineal descent from the biblical Aaron, brother of Moses.

Kohanim performed the daily and holiday (Yom Tov) duties of sacrificial offerings during the existence of the Temple in Jerusalem.

The sacrifices were not limited to the offering of animals.

Hygenic kosher practice in the preparation of food products for market still fall under the province of kohanim.

Anathoth  is the name of one of the Levitical cities given to "the children of Aaron" in the tribe of Benjamin (Josh. 21:13–18; 1 Chron. 6:54–60).

The Israelites often did not change the names of the towns they found in Canaan, the name of this town may be derived from a Canaanite goddess, `Anat.

Anathoth seems to be a plural form of the name. It could be the shortened form for bêt ‘anātôt 'House of the ‘Anats'. This was either a reference to many shrines of the goddess or a plural of intensification.

‘Anat is a war-goddess in the Ugaritic Baal cycle. She is the maiden sister to Ba'al Hadad, the maker of storms. Ba‘al is usually called the son of Dagan, the father of fertility. Ba'al is also named as the son of El at times.

The name El is a general form that indicated the highest rank. It is a Northwest Semitic word meaning "god". It was attached to a proper name as a title that indicated the supreme status for a deity.

Ugarit map


Ugarit is a city of ruins located near Ras Shamra, Syria. Ugaritic is the western form for the extinct Amorite language. It is the only Amorite dialect known to be preserved as written. The Ugaritic texts discovered by French archaeologists in 1929.

The Book of Jeremiah is the second of the Latter Prophets in the Hebrew Bible and the second of the Prophets in the Christian Old Testament. His book is intended as a message to the Jews in exile in Babylon. It explains the disaster of exile as God's response to Israel's pagan worship.

The people are described as an unfaithful wife and rebellious children. Their infidelity and rebelliousness made judgement inevitable. Restoration and a new covenant are foreshadowed to perpetuate the promise of reward for fidelity. 

Judgment had been pronounced against a number of the kings of Judah in the previous chapter. Other leaders were included in the judgment with the use of the term 'shepherds.'

There was the distinct implication of argument against what had been done to Israel and what was threatened against Judah. Priests were implicated in the perpetuation of harmful primitive practice as associated with polytheism.

Jeremiah 23:1

Woe to the shepherds who destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture! says the LORD.

-------------------------

Those who take payment for a service, but don't provide one
are liable for the broken contract as the cause of dispersion.

The liberal claim to power over executive authority
has been used as a support for prejudice against the majority.

==================

Colossians 1:15


The epistle to the Colossians was addressed to the Christians in Colossae.

Colossae map

Colossae was one of the most celebrated cities of southern Anatolia (modern Turkey). It was located in Phyrgia in Asia Minor.

It was an ancient city about 161 km (100 mi.) east of the cosmopolitan capital city of Ephesus, located in the Roman province of Asia.

It was 15 km (9.3 mi.) southeast of Laodicea on the road through the valley near the Lycus River at the foot of Mt. Cadmus, the highest mountain in Turkey's western Aegean Region.

It was between the cities Sardeis and Celaenae southeast of the ancient city of Hierapolis.

The 5th Century geographer Herodotus first mentioned Colossae by name and as a "great city in Phrygia" which accommodated the Persian King Xerxes I en route to wage war against the Greeks.

The city had already reached a certain level of wealth and size by this time. Xenophon refered to Colossae as a populous and wealthy city of considerable magnitude in the 5th century (Anabasis).

Strabo (63 BCE-24 CE) was a historian who lived in Asia Minor during the period of transition from the Roman republic to the empire. He noted that the city drew revenue from the flocks in the wool trade. The wool of Colossae gave its name to the color colossinus.

The location had importance as a mercantile center in the Hellenistic period, but it had diminished in size by the 1st century CE. It was known for its fusion of religious influences (syncretism). It included Jewish and Gnostic groups.

There was also an angel-cult in the pagan tradition. The unorthodox cult venerated the archangel Michael who is said to have caused a curative spring to gush from a fissure in the Earth.

Epaphras seems to have been a person of some importance in the Christian community in Colossae (Col. 1:7; 4:12). Tradition presents him as its first bishop.

The epistle speaks of Paul as having "heard" of the Colossians' faith (Col. 1:4). The letter to Philemon speaks of Paul's hope to visit Colossae upon being freed from prison (Philemon 1:22). Philemon was the second bishop of the see according to tradition.

The Colossians were encouraged to see Jesus as the center of reality in order to avoid the pressures from other religions. The problems of the Church were described. Believers were encouraged to remain devoted to Jesus as Christ.

Colossians 1:11-15

May you be made strong with all the strength that comes from his glorious power and may you be prepared to endure everything with patience while joyfully giving thanks to the Father who has enabled you to share in the inheritance of the saints in the light. He has rescued us from the power of darkness and transferred us into the kingdom of his beloved Son in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.

He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation.

-------------------------

May you be made strong with the glorious power
that prepares you to endue anything with patience beyond the trifling hours.

Give thanks to the Father who enabled you to share in the inheritance of the light.
He rescued us for redemption by faith from the darkness of power for sight.

His Son is the firstborn of all creation for our faith.
The Christ of Jesus is the image of the invisible God portrayed.

==================

The Criminal on the Cross


The priests and teachers of the law had been made the council of the elders for the people of Judah with the approval of the Roman government.

Jesus was questioned by this body about his instruction about the Messiah. His testimony was used to send him to Pontius Pilate.

He was questioned by Pilate as the Roman governor. When the governor found that he was a Galilean, he was sent to Herod as the tetrarch of Galilee. The tetrarch returned Jesus to the governor.

Pilate convened an assembly of the chief priests, the rulers and people to release Jesus from conviction for the death penalty. He said that he would chastise and release him as the prisoner to satisfy the offering at the time of the feast for the Passover.

The governor was confronted with angry cries when the outspoken yelled for crucifixion. They insisted that Barabbas be released instead. Pilate said that he would chastise Jesus two more times. The angry voices that threatened riot would not relent.

He released Barabbas who had been imprisoned for sedition and murder, but delivered Jesus to their will. He was nailed to the cross with two others who had been convicted of crime.

Luke 23:35

One of the criminals who were hanged there kept deriding him and saying, 'Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself and us! The other rebuked him, saying, 'Do you not fear God since you are under the same sentence of condemnation?'

-------------------------

The criminal asked 'Are you not the Messiah?
Why do you hang there like a pariah?

'Save yourself and us!
Is this something we need to discuss?'

The other rebuked him and said,
'Do you not fear judgment from the living and dead?

'You are under the same sentence of condemnation
but you will be seen as guilty by following generations.'

The thief who defended Jesus as Christ
was told that he would reside in paradise.

That the Son would hang on the cross is theology
that has been known to invoke great controversy.

That One with the divine nature would die for our sins
was viewed as absurd monotheistic din.

The self sacrifice of the body of the divine person
was offered once for the cleansing from human incursion.

It was an expression of love for our conversion
that offered the promise of salvation with baptismal immersion.

==================

Cicero (106-43 BCE)


Rebellion

Legend has it that in the city-state's earliest days, Romulus, the founder and first king of Rome, picked the 100 best men, or patricians, in the city to be members of his Senate for as long as they lived.

While the seven kings of the monarchy ruled, the Roman Senate made the laws and elected the kings. The last king was an Etruscan who had a reputation for severity.

His son, Sextus Tarquinius, reportedly raped the wives and daughters of powerful Roman nobles. A group of nobles led by Lucius Junius Brutus, with the support of the Roman Army, expelled Tarquinius and his family from Rome in 509 BCE.

When the Roman Kingdom, which lasted from 759-509 BC, came to an end, Rome transitioned into a republic with executive offices who served as generals and judges and built public works.

The Roman constitution was not a single written document. It was the system of government that had evolved from the kingdom and a senate of patricians without term limits into a republic.

The Romans referred to Greek culture with respect for written expression on matters of importance.

Constitutional Traditions in the Republic

Two consuls always served together at any one time after Rome became a republic. They were the chairmen of the Senate.

Both had to agree to enact a proposed action. Each was able to overrule the other. They had to request any money from the Senate for their office.

They commanded the Roman army. Both had two legions. They came to exercise the highest juridical power. The two consuls had to belong to the Patriciate, the Roman aristocracy. The office was opened for plebeians in the 360's.

The Lex Licinia Sextia provided that at least one consul each year should be plebeian in 367 BCE. Lucius Sextius was elected as the first plebian consul the following year.

Only fifteen novi homines, "new men" with no consular background, were elected to the consulship until the election of Cicero in 63 BCE.

The Comitia centuriata was an assembly of the richest Romans. The comitia elected the consuls. The term was 1 year in length.

Once elected, they took orders from the Roman Senate. When their terms were up, both consuls were given governorships of provinces outside of Italy.

The comitia became more powerful after the Conflict of the Orders. This conflict was a class struggle between the wealthy patricians and the poor plebeians that lasted from 494-287 BCE.

The Plebians forced the patricians to accept a new office that was independent of the consuls and the Senate during the dispute. The office was named the Tribune of the People. The comitia acquired the power to make laws, ratify treaties and declare war as a result of a series of laws.

Cicero argued that the constitution was a law that was written on our hearts. The unwritten law alluded to the state of the social contract as a development beyond tribal organization with respect for primitive concepts of freedom in nature. There was a question regarding the benefit of the state of society as preferable to local council alone.

Cicero's contribution to Rome as a consul was to override due process of law in order to put down a 'rebellion.' It was reported to the public that the rebels who threatened the peace of Rome were executed without a trial.

The idea that the majority should not rule has been used to undermine the legal authority of the social contract. Consider the 'protection' proposed for undocumented immigrants by liberals.

Liberals want to subsidize living expense for the undocumented. They want to give them the right to vote. These two proposals give those who refuse to register favor over citizens and documented immigrants.

J.S. Mill also expressed a warning about the tyranny of the majority. Too much of this type of concern promotes the tyranny of the undocumented.

Not Majority Rule


I have investigated the civil rights movement with particular interest for the claim of majority prejudice in the south.

I found that Rawls' argument against the Utilitarian principle of the greatest happiness for the greatest number was an endorsement for partial judgment as the veil of ignorance.

He had argued that limited participation in organized politics would induce objectivity as the necessary standard for judgement regarding observable events.

The Clintons have used ignorance to promote decisions against the majority interest with the endorsement of socialism and radical feminism.

If you didn't directly perceive a case of sexual assault, how are you to form a judgment on a claim to the same that was reported to have happened over a decade ago? Do you rely on the testimony of the accuser or the accused?

Their media reports supported the testimony of the accuser with the defamation of character against the accused. LBJ did a similar sort of thing with Dr. King.

Mohammad Ali was loud in his endless self-promotion. He explicitly complained about the racism of white people. He stated that he would not fight in a war against people who had not done anything to him. He had the right to refuse the draft, but it was reported that he served time for it.

Dr. King was more aggressive in the promotion that white people were prejudiced against the employment of black people in industry. Civil rights were reduced to the state of affairs for black people in his negotiation with the US government.

Ali used religion for his success in sport. King used socialism for his success in political intervention. King's argument was dependent upon the reports of prejudice against blacks in the South.

Rawls wasn't the only Harvard professor who helped to promote the belief that majority prejudice was the only real social problem in institutional form. Cavell was a participant as well.

Roman Constitution

Freedom

Baruch Spinoza
b. 11.24.1632 Amsterdam, Netherlands
d. 2.21.1677  The Hague, Netherlands

Independence has to be guided by responsibility or it is not being led to productive value.

Nature is the expression of the universe. The universe is the product of the Creator.

Causality regulates change. Chance is irregularity in causality.

Spinoza

Philosophy
Ethics
wiki Baruch Spinoza philosophy

Spinoza's philosophy held an attraction for late 18th-century Europeans. It provided an alternative to materialism, atheism and deism.  He provided a conceptual frame for the Enlightenment philosophy as it related to the government of law.

Three of Spinoza's ideas held a strong appeal.

The unity of all exists.

Regularity is a function of the unity.

The energy of nature expresses the spirit for the identity of the unity.

Both Descartes and Spinoza lived in the Dutch Republic (1581-1795). Descartes (31 March 1596 – 11 February 1650) preceded Spinoza (24 November 1632 – 21 February 1677).

Kingdom of the Netherlands
wiki

The current Kingdom of the Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy. Spinoza had proposed this form of government as best with his Tractatus Theologico-Politicus.

Constitutional monarchy has the potential to exceed a constitutional republic in democracy by virtue of the conservatism in the dynastic succession.

The resurrection of republic as a form of government required the application of reason to define the purpose of government, commerce and society.

Rosseau's ideas of education are limited according to contemporary standards, but his social contract provided the essential factor for the determination of law. The government is obliged to serve the people who pay for functional operations.

If the US does not limit commerce to a legal free market, it has lost ground in terms of using reason to reflect on the history of the republic.

The people have risen up repeatedly to define republic as a democratic institution, but socialists have used their advantage in influencing government with knowledge about campaign finance, lobbying and media expression to institute policy that claimed to be for the people, but was for liberal officials in fact.

Law is being defined as an exercise in using the state to act as a criminal force that regulates the existence of threat from outside the sphere of influence for the accumulation of wealth by state officials.

This doesn't mean that law has to be rejected as though that leaves only grace. It means that grace provides sanction for amending the law.

Dutch Republic
17th Century

The Dutch rebelled against Philip II of Spain and his successors in the 16th century. The main reasons for the uprising were the imposition of new taxes, the tenth penny and the religious persecution of Protestants by the newly introduced Inquisition.

The revolt escalated into the Eighty Years' War. The protracted conflict ultimately led to Dutch independence.

The Dutch Republic was officially known as the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands. It was a a confederal republic formally established by the formal creation of a confederacy in 1581 by several Dutch provinces that seceded from Spanish rule. The republic lasted until the Batavian Revolution of 1795.

The small republic of around 1.5 million inhabitants distinguished itself by world trade through the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the Dutch West India Company (WIC). The state sustained military success against larger and presumably stronger nations such as Spain and England.

The naval fleet of 2,000 ships was larger than that of England and France combined. The fleet was assembled with the shipping industry with respect for the knowledge of the size of the competitive nations.

The organization of production for the culture was managed in the arts and sciences. Painters such as Rembrandt (1606-1669), Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675) and others achieved widespread recognition.

Hugo Grotius (1583-1645) built the conceptual frame for political science with the foundations for international relations based on natural law.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723) used the relatively new development of the microscope to study biological microbes. This made him the first recognized micro-biologist.

Jan Swammerdam (1637-1680) used the microscope to study insects. He made important discoveries regarding the life of bees.

He demonstrated that there are various phases in the life of an insect. The egg, larva, pupa and adult stages are different forms of the same animal.

He also carried out experiments on muscle contraction as part of his anatomical research.  He used dissections for examination. He observed and described red blood cells.

The relatively tolerant atmosphere towards different religions and ideas contributed to the success of free thought in establishing republic as a competitive form to monarchy in Europe.

The Union of Utrecht in 1579 is regarded as the foundation of the Republic of the Seven United Provinces, which was not recognized by the Spanish Empire until the Peace of Westphalia in 1648.

Holland and Zeeland were granted the right to accept Calvinism as the one religion in practice. Every other province had the freedom to regulate the religious question as it wished.

The Republic dominated world trade, conquered a vast colonial empire and operated the largest fleet of merchantmen of any nation during the late 16th and 17th centuries.

Slavery was included in the competition for global expansion, but Spinoza would question whether a state that allowed slavery could be regarded as free.

Amsterdam

Amsterdam flourished, largely from trade with the Hanseatic League from the 14th century.
The 17th century is considered Amsterdam's Golden Age.

It became the wealthiest city in the western world. Ships sailed from the port to the Baltic Sea, North America, Africa, present-day Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka and Brazil.

It was the central hub for a worldwide trading network. Amsterdam's merchants had the largest share in both the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch West India Company. These companies acquired overseas possessions that later became Dutch colonies.

Amsterdam was Europe's most important point for the shipment of goods. It was the leading Financial center of the western world.

The Amsterdam office of the international trading Dutch East India Company became the world's first stock exchange by trading in its own shares in 1602.

The Bank of Amsterdam started operations in 1609. It acted as a full service bank for Dutch merchant bankers and as a reserve bank.

Peace is a virtue

Jewish Philosophy

When the Romans conquered the Jewish nation in 70 CE, much of the Jewish population was sent into exile throughout the Roman Empire. Many were sent to the Iberian Peninsula.

The approximately 750,000 Jews living in Spain in the year 1492 were banished from the country by royal decree of Ferdinand and Isabella. The Jews of Portugal, were banished several years later.

Spinoza's ancestors were of Sephardic Jewish descent. They were a part of the community of Portuguese Jews that had settled in the city of Amsterdam in the wake of the Portuguese Inquisition (1536). The Inquisition had resulted in forced conversions and expulsions from the Iberian Peninsula

Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677) argued that people would not be superstitious if they could govern their circumstances with set rules or if they were always favored by fortune.

Humans are driven into circumstances where rules are useless. The fluctuation between hope and fear is driven by the uncertainty of fortune. The variability of chance leaves them with the consideration of credulity.

He wrote, "The human mind is readily swayed this way or that in times of doubt, especially when hope and fear are struggling for the mastery, though usually it is boastful, over-confident, and vain." (Tractatus Theologico-Politicus)

The chief victims of superstition are those who covet temporal advantage too aggressively. Superstition is engendered, preserved and fostered by fear. 

The essential mystery of despotic statecraft is to hoodwink the citizens into subservience to the credulity of cause that men may fight as bravely for slavery as for safety and count it not as shame but the highest honor to risk their blood and their lives for the vainglory of tyranny.

No such expedient could be planned or attempted in a free state.

The habits of mind differ. Some more readily embrace one form of faith, some another. What moves one to pray may move another to scoff,

Everyone should be free to choose for himself the foundations of his creed. Faith should be judged only by its fruits. Each would then obey God freely with his whole heart. Nothing would be publicly honored save justice and charity.

The ultimate aim of government is not to rule by fear nor to exact obedience. The purpose is to free each from fear for all possible security. Law is to be legislated to strengthen the natural right to exist and work without injury to self or others.

Tractatus Theologica-Politicus

Spinoza put forth his most systematic critique of religion in the treatise Tractatus Theologica-Politicus. He argued that reason should not be subordinated to scripture. Reason should reflect upon scripture for the consideration of Constitutional law.

When reason has been made subservient to scripture, then, Spinoza argued, "the prejudices of a common people of long ago... will gain a hold on his understanding and darken it."

He reinterpreted the belief that there were occurrences of objective miracles or supernatural events. He argued that God acts solely by the law of "his own nature". He rejected the view that the divine nature has a predetermined course of events.

Spinoza was not only the real father of modern metaphysics and moral philosophy for politics, but also of the higher criticism of the Bible.

His Tractatus Theologico-Politicus undertook to show that Scripture gave no authority for those who sought to impose the rule of law with cruelty in punishment or violent aggression.

Spinoza had to show what was meant by a proper understanding of the Bible to achieve this object. This gave him occasion to apply criticism to interpretation.

There have been cases where the scientific use of DNA evidence has exonerated someone convicted of the charge of murder. It was demonstrated that the rape associated with the murder was not done by the one who had been convicted for the crime.

This type of exoneration justifies the application of a life sentence in cases where the evidence was strong, but not conclusive. The convict could be released from his sentence prior to his death.

It is reasonable to assume that if some were released from the death sentence, there were others who have been wrongly put to death. This is another form of murder.

The state isn't put to death for the error, but it suffers a loss of credibility among the taxpayers who pay for the legal system to form judgments for justice.

When the story of Jesus with the woman accused of adultery is considered, it can be seen that the legal system has been right to shift standards of punishment to decrease the incidence of cruelty due to false conviction. The death penalty used to be applied to those convicted of a number of crimes lesser in severity than murder.

The act of adultery is not in itself life threatening. There have been adulterers who have sought to kill their spouses.

There have also been those who were seeking sexual gratification outside of the marriage without homicidal intent. The punishment for adultery then should not include the death penalty unless the spouse was murdered by the adulterer.

Jesus told those who asked him about what to do with respect for the woman to examine their conscience. He said, "Let him who is without sin cast the first stone."

Justice in the legal system was not regarded as something that was open to debate for those who were not in line to become a magistrate in the kingdom or Roman republic. The Romans didn't have a public system for education.

Spinoza saw the importance of introducing his metaphysics for ethics in order to raise the thought of the common citizen to reasonable application in the new republic. This included the tract on the theology associated with politics.

Tractatus Theologico-Politicus
wiki quotes

Spinoza was a sephardic Jew. His family moved to the Dutch Republic to escape persecution from the Inquisition in Spain. He was a rational philosopher. He was one of the most important and radical thinkers of the early modern period.

His thought combines a commitment to a number of Cartesian metaphysical and epistemological principles with elements from Euclidean geometry, ancient Stoicism, Hobbes and medieval Jewish rationalism. The respective principles are grafted into an original system.

His naturalistic view on God, the world, human being and knowledge served to ground a moral philosophy centered on the control of the passions. Self-control was the leading virtue in the pursuit of happiness.

These principles also lay the foundations for democratic political thought. Pretensions regarding the dogmatic interpretation of Scripture and sectarian religion were criticized.

Spinoza was issued the harshest writ of herem or excommunication ever pronounced by the Sephardic community of Amsterdam on July 27, 1656.

It was never rescinded. We do not know for certain what Spinoza’s “monstrous deeds” and “abominable heresies” were alleged to have been. An educated guess comes quite easily.

He was expressing those ideas that would soon appear in his philosophical treatises. He denies the immortality of the soul; rejects the notion of deity as having an existence completely distinct from creation and claims that the Law was not specifically given to the Jews nor was it binding in every aspect of the ancient expression.

It has since been shown that the Hebrew texts contain elements from the ancient codes of law in the Middle East. The law against murder as expressed in the second commandment was in the code of Ur Nammu.

The law that punished killing with a lesser penalty than death was expressed in the story of Cain and Abel. The code of Hammurabi punished killing with a fine if the killer said that he killed without malice.

Spinoza was banished from his community. He was content to have an excuse to depart. His community and religious commitment were gone by this point.

He was interested in writing something modern. He wanted it to have an impact on the European world. He left Amsterdam altogether within a few years.

He began writing in 1661. He was living in Rijnsburg, not far from Leiden. He worked on the “Treatise on the Emendation of the Intellect,” an essay on philosophical method.

He also wrote the “Short Treatise on God, Man and His Well-Being.” This was an initial but aborted effort to lay out his metaphysical, epistemological and moral views.

His critical exposition of Descartes’s “Principles of Philosophy” was the only work he published under his own name in his lifetime. It was completed in 1663 after he had moved to Voorburg outside the Hague.

He was also working on what would eventually be called “The Ethics” by this time. This was his philosophical masterpiece.

When he saw the principles of toleration in Holland being threatened by reactionary forces however, he put it aside to complete his scandalous “Theological-Political Treatise.”

This was published anonymously and to great alarm in 1670. One overwrought critic called it “a book forged in hell by the devil himself”.

When Spinoza died in 1677, he was still at work on his “Political Treatise’” This was soon published by his friends along with his other unpublished writing which included a “Compendium to Hebrew Grammar.”

“The Ethics” was written in the form of a geometric proof. It was modeled on Euclid’s “Elements.” The basic definition for a point is a location. It has no length or extension.

It is used as a metaphor for the “self” as the “essence of existence” in “The Ethics.” A line is a continuity of points. It has length. It extends in space. It is comparable to what Descartes identifies as thought.

The proof is written to prove the existence of goodness as the cause for ethics. God is posited as the absolute infinite. Divine existence is the essence of substance. This substance permeates existence. Infinity is used to contrast the finite.

The finite contains the substance of matter. Substance has attributes. The extension of substance however does not pertain to the essence of deity. This denies the notion of Platonic ideals with respect for destructiveness as an extension of the divine will through the elements.

Will is a particular mode of thought. It is a necessary cause. It is the search to draw function from purpose. Knowledge is the awareness of the cause of change.

Freedom is the image. Creativity is the likeness. Each person is the agent of personal will. Ethics is the discovery of functional benefit. It does not conflict with the law of causation.

Free Will
The Likeness of Accomplishment
American Philosophy in the 20th Century

Spinoza's influence found its way to the US through the French philosophy that agreed with his proposal for Constitutional law.

The Constitution was largely composed by James Madison. He borrowed from Locke, but he had to re-write a considerable amount of the material to make it apply to the whole public. It was an anticipation of a future republic in important respects.

The Bill of Rights was added to show the ability to amend law for the people.

Education in the country was not necessarily aimed toward this purpose. Institutions for higher education were organized to promote interest among the general population.

Only a few seminaries like Andover or Union offered post-graduate education before 1860. Yale awarded the first Ph.D. degree in 1861. Pennsylvania (1870); Harvard (1872); Johns Hopkins (1878); Princeton (1879) and Cornell (1880) followed.

Johns Hopkins was founded for graduate students in 1876. The first true professors of philosophy holding an American PhD were G. Stanley Hall (Harvard 1878) and Josiah Royce (Johns Hopkins 1878). Both of them had German educations.

Philosophers were scattered across the landscape during the Reconstruction era and the beginnings of the Gilded age. They were found only at the best colleges. Most of those granted the title of Professor of Philosophy were presidents of their colleges.

Not all of them had doctorates. Some held a bachelors of divinity degree. They taught the senior classes in denominational theology and religious ethics.

G. Stanley Hall reported that perhaps 40 of these professors actually had serious philosophical training in "Philosophy in the United States" in 1879.

Much of the important philosophical creativity was still generated by theologians. Those who responded to the issues of workers' rights or to the challenge of evolution were especially instrumental in shifting the focus from theology to political and social policy.

Social Science provided another fertile source for philosophical thinking. Thought was valued in the identification of social problems for cure.

Hundreds of scholars attended German universities during 1870-1900 for their higher prestige and lower cost. That trend would reverse by 1900. American universities would come to swell with graduate students.

The Calvinist tradition continued at Princeton, Yale, Union and innumerable smaller colleges. There was special attention to the history of religion in the US. Unitarian Harvard, Liberal Andover, Humanist Chicago and Personalist Boston had strong counter-balancing theological movements. Historicism, biblical hermeneutics and evolution became acceptable.

American theology was also re-energized by the new holiness churches. The Third Great Awakening would seek to make an impact on the 1880’s and 90’s.

Everyone was called to take notice of the Social Gospel and Christian Progressive movements that demanded new religious activism.

The focus for the awakening was on the consequences of unrestrained capitalism, industrialism and immigration. The religious movement had a strong association with socialist doctrine.

Evolution was accepted before Darwin even by clergy, but only as a theory of divine providence aiming at the eventual productivity of mankind.

Only a few daring thinkers embraced the theory of natural selection by random mutation after the publication of Darwin's Origin of the Species, (1859). Some applied evolution to metaphysics and cosmology. Others applied evolution to the human mind.

The philosophical category of "mental science" popularized by the Scottish realists was the original home to those who called themselves psychologists. Experiments for nerve and brain physiology trained subjects to track mental processes.

Some were eager to apply the new biological theories of evolution. The Scottish realist James McCosh, pragmatists Charles Peirce and William James belong to the early evolutionary philosophers.

The contrast between evolution and fundamentalism could not have been sharper than at Princeton in the 1860’s and 70’s. McCosh taught an evolutionary philosophy and Charles Hodge taught anti-Darwinian fundamentalism.

Many universities harbored such conflict during this period. The relations between philosophy and psychology were similarly contentious. Physiological and experimental methods challenged traditional introspection into the mind's operations.

Transcendentalism was evolving into Pragmatism's commitment to the notion that an idea is true if it a makes a practical difference in the life of the person who thinks it. Truth is not some abstract certainty that exists outside of human experience. It is a manifestation of practical reason.

The Cambridge Metaphysical club had its origins in James's 1868 proposal to Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (1841-1935). He proposed that they establish 'a philosophical society to have regular meetings and discuss none but the very tallest and broadest questions' (Kuklick 1974: 47).

The club was underway by 1871. It centered around six men with Harvard degrees: James, Holmes, Charles Peirce (1839-1914), Chauncey Wright (1830-75), Nicholas St. John Green and Joseph Bangs Warner.

Green, a Boston attorney, introduced the thought of the British psychologist and philosopher Alexander Bain (1818-1903) to the group. Bain’s definition of belief as 'that upon which a man is prepared to act' was highlighted.

Wright was a mathematician employed by the Nautical Almanac as a 'calculator.' He was also an occasional lecturer in psychology and physics at Harvard.

He applied Darwin's evolutionary theory to the development of consciousness in such publications as the “Evolution of Consciousness” (1873).

He maintained that consciousness comes about not from anything new but from the use of an old capacity. The forming of images in a new way shapes the structure of thought.

Josiah Royce
b. 11.20.1855  Grass Valley, CA
d. 9.14.1916 Cambridge, MA

Josiah Royce (1855-1916) was raised in the California gold rush town of Grass Mountain. He studied English at the University of California at Berkeley. He explored philosophy in Germany.

He studied with George Sylvester Morris at Johns Hopkins from 1876-8. Morris was a scholar of German philosophy and a proponent T. H. Green. Royce received his Ph. D. in 1878.

Royce taught English at Berkeley. Then he moved to Harvard to teach philosophy. He became a mainstay of the department. Royce introduced formal logic into the curriculum. He was a respected idealist opponent of James's more naturalistic, open-ended pragmatism.

Royce's early philosophical writing is in accord with his lifelong interests both in the history of philosophy and in developing his own version of metaphysical idealism.

His first book,”The Religious Aspect of Philosophy” (1885) argued for an Absolute Mind that contains all thoughts and their objects.

He traced 'the rediscovery of the inner life' from Spinoza to Kant in “The Spirit of Modern Philosophy: An Essay in the Form of Lectures” (1892). Special emphasis was given to Fichte for his 'beautiful waywardness,'

He revisited the Romantic School including Goethe, Novalis, Schelling and Hegel. Royce argued, however, that the inner life is essentially public. We live in the coherence of our relationships with other people.

Dewey's educational philosophy took shape in the 1890’s. He was a professor not only of philosophy, but of psychology and pedagogy. He also learned from German idealism.

He worked with high school faculty in Michigan and with the Laboratory School at Chicago. He argued that interest is a complex of felt worth and incipient action in 'Interest in Relation to the Training of the Will.'

When we are genuinely interested in something, we don't have to will to do it. It becomes automated in action. Only genuine interest 'marks the annihilation of the distance between the person and the materials and results of his action.'

The will is effectively trained by interest. (Dewey 1896: 122). He maintained that education is 'a process of living and not a preparation for future living,' in 'My Pedagogic Creed' (1897). Therefore inquiry must seek 'forms of life that are worth living for their own sake' (Dewey 1897: 87).

Materialism
American Materialism

The threats of scientific evolution and materialistic psychology had encouraged many scholars to study Kant and Hegel after the Civil War. Many took refuge in some form of idealism.

Idealism ranged from personal to the absolute. The comfortable alliance with Christianity put many idealists in charge of philosophy.

College presidents were fearful of evolution and materialism.

Idealism had dominated American philosophy and its professionalization from 1880 to 1920. The Hegelian and personalist themes for idealism were nearly extinguished during the second half of the 20th Century. The themes have been continued by some pragmatists, phenomenologists and pantheists.

Psychology departments had mostly split off from philosophy by 1920. Dewey's social behaviorism and Watson's reductionist behaviorism ensured evolution's dominance in philosophy.

Mid to late Victorian-age philosophy had its wild side also. It supplied many members for the American Society for Psychical Research.

Philosophers had been trained almost exclusively as ministers and theologians until 1880. Theological seminaries and their journals were still the center of philosophical energy.

The influence of denominational colleges and theological seminaries declined in prominence. The next generation of academic philosophers like Dewey, Baldwin, Royce, Santayana found their positions in the 1880's and 90's without a theological degree.

Their degrees were from German universities or from a handful of American universities like Harvard, Princeton, Cornell (founded 1865) and Johns Hopkins (founded 1876). These offered the new Ph.D.

The professionalization of philosophy was swiftly achieved in the 1890’s and early 1900’s. Enlarged universities separated the various social sciences and psychology from philosophy.

The philosophy departments were inflated by hiring the new graduates from Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Cornell, Columbia and Johns Hopkins.

Royce had formulated an American form of idealism. While continental Europeans were anti-capitalists, he was for industry broadly understood as the willful expression of community.

He wasn't as limited in terms of organization as the Calvinists. He had agreement with the pragmatists, but didn't identify himself as such. His philosophy expressed favor for practical idealism.

Dewey was the lone giant of pragmatism by 1920. He was supported in the next decades by second and third generation thinkers across the social sciences. The philosophy provided a forum for reconciliation in the conflict between ideals.

Pragmatism would not be eclipsed until the 1950’s. Philosophy departments would come to be consumed by reductive materialism and language analysis.

Theory of Justice


The moral philosophy of John Rawls looks inspired at first, but it results in a socialist form of materialism.

His philosophy was that which spoke most highly of the American experience during the Clinton presidency.

There was something about the experience of democracy in action that spoke volumes about potential. His looked like a true integration of moral and political philosophy.

The summation of the different ideas in his work however represents the monstrosity of the neo-liberalism that is being inflicted upon the world and the nation.

The two elements that contribute to the deviant abstraction are the doctrines of destruction and total depravity.

It is a mixture of the deviant elements from Locke and Calvin that we are given the basis for a foreign policy that uses the claim of human rights abuse as the justification for the greater abuse of human rights.

This is where the philosophy of Spinoza comes into play in the modern world. Here we find criticism of the deviant norms that have plagued the development of civilization since the inception.

Rawls is the optimist that requires the pessimism of the others. It is the abuse of great potential that inhibits our development more than the criticism of societal failure.

Spinoza may look like the father of neo-liberalism, but his philosophy promotes a conservatism for government intervention. Government is limited by the rights that are extended to the people by the social contract.

Look at all the amendments to the US except for the term limits for the president. Authority in the organization of political power is defined by representation for civil rights.

Conservatism in spending tax money is that which allows business and social organization to develop in relation to the free market. The free market is defined as legal commerce that isn't directed toward the continual increase in benefit for government officials.

SEP John Rawls
IEP Rawls

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Redeem

11.17.19

Rachel McAdams

Redeem
Time 
兑换时间 
Duìhuàn shíjiān
償還時間 
Shōkan jikan
ps98
Tunc redeem

The Creator established free will 
so the choice of goodness would fit the bill.

People are seen to dream as friends to be.
Each ascends or descends relation with the end to be free.

Heaven opens. Light descends.
Sight is given the right to see, believe and attend
to ends.




Light proclaims creation
for the discernment of sensation.

Angelic intelligence opens the mind to perceive.
People conceive what they believe they can achieve.
Insight is given the right to breathe.
Each seeks likeness above that which is beneath.

Love has redemptive power.
The power works by the hour
to make production a reality.
It transforms idiosyncrasy
into personal sociography.


Dependence on fossil fuel
risks toxin and pollutant duels.

Gas sparked in chambers burns to pop piston fueled 
to turn rods in the turbine for electricity in jules
and provides light to fight against violent disputants,
arrogant mules and criminal moles as mutants.

Electricity powered the hours taken to destroy the World Trade Center towers.
Medical care, business and transportation are powered.

Food is cooled or heated for storage or consumption.
Destruction was the consumption of function 
for the compunction of unction.

Horse poop in the street lost a ton of tossing in the transportation option.
Cool air wards off death by heat exhaustion.

Heat prevents frozen cardiac arrest in the stressed chest.
Sewage treatment reduced epidemic disease the best.

We are insignificantly significant.
Our unremarkable star is remarkably magnificent
in infinitely emitting energy for those who are innocent.
Our magnificence is a typical galaxy event.

Marvelous things have been done for us.
Victory with love makes our trust most august.

Justice must keep this thrust to meet morality's weather.
Medicine treats illness until we find something better.

Good diet and exercise improve health in competition.
The omission of cognition is not good for volition.
Health makes music with joy in the sight of all the nations.
The relation of ideation is the foundation for sensation's elation 
in education.

Lift up your voice. Rejoice and sing with jubilation.
Instruments make notes for the revelation to sensation.

The pluck or stroke of the string for the resonant ring is born.
The pumped force through the chambered conic adorns the sound of air as horn.

Each color that passion wore
made sadness or joy the thing to bring.
Let the hills ring with happiness galore.
Let the rivers speak sadly of tragic things.

We were not idle when we dwelt among you.
We worked so the group would not be burdened by our few.

Imitate us in the providence of faith.
Don't depend on being served by others as your state.

Let the alleys flatly express the cubic savvy and straightness of the less
than Stonehenge meant astronomical bent in the strategy for family gravity.
Let the world be judged for rightness
with the measure of equity's levity without depravity.

The less mess that the light does bless
will result in the most ecstatic content with consent.

Be brave for love. Be kind to others.
It will make you a better father, mother, 
sister, brother or other.

The bract fall softly 
by the gutter on the eaves.

My mind sits tired, awfully alone even for me.
My image is caressed on the surface of the water under trees.

I can hear the sound of voice stir uncertainty
as my mother and father whispering urgently 
after the spring shower had fed the intent pleas 
of the gentle leaves as they stirred emergently 
in the post storm breeze.

The novel was an instrument of victory
insofar as it predicted history.

The argument contained therein
promoted knowledge of evolution as the way to win.

Socialism demanded order by government control.
It was the forum for degenerates and trolls.

Knowledge of evolution in political form
shows a solution to the criminal norm. 

The tall tree stands strong with the ability to sway.
The wind gives the osprey a place to stay.
He cries crassly as the officer who arrests the day.

The heron's trail walks down the beach
like a broken comb sifting with sight and beak 
through wet sand for a peek of a slug as succulent as a peach.

The bikini clad chica walks slowly in the sand.
She takes a moment to block the sun with the palm of her hand.
The sun threatens to take her heart like an offering for the land.
Her blood flows firmly to deny the sacrifice as damned. 

The crow marches by the river
as the marshal whose parade the march delivered.
The rowboat sent out shivers that shimmered
as a sign of the movement giver.

Alligator, Weedon Preserve, Pinellas Co., Florida
Unshaken visitors thrash the river banks for relief
as the water wrings itself clean of grief 
through the dirty sponge of marshy disbelief 
while another coat of color is mixed for the bandstand seats.

A fleet of Harleys rumble through the square.
Some ride single; some in pairs.

We have seen the postcards of panthers,
funny answers and babies dressed in pampers.
We know that Florida harbors bikini clad dancers.

 Let winged fancy wander
 through the thought spread beyond her. 

Open wide the science conditioned door.
Imagination will dart out and upward soar.

The sobriety of Autumn watches dead leaves blow down the street
as the spring born calves break from their stalls and into the fields with leaps.  

The maker of the universe was the Father
with the Son as his Word for the power that bothers
to care for the creation by watching over the hours.

Essence was the compaction of the indivisible inside of corporeal form
that gave matter its shape as a functional entity from the immaterial storm.

This is the law that has been delivered.
Love others as you saw love given from the Giver.

Both boats were filled with fish 
in answer to the fisherman's wish.

A flash of light in the eye of Jesus saw
the location in the school of reality as law. 

Blood is pumped by the heart and cleansed by the liver.
Nutrients are delivered as the body's embodied dinner.

Love is the substance that makes your heart grow quicker.
Stand tall. Be brave. Please deliver as a giver.

Pragmatism turns from insufficiency as promoted by abstraction
towards action that results in benefit from power without factions.

Naming is rated by the modes of necessity.
Possibility precedes the charge of electricity.

Be strong with the strength 
that comes from the length 
of power in the knowledge of God with breadth
that you may be prepared for trials with patience
while giving thanks to the Father of relations
who has enabled you to share the spacious
station in the inheritance of the gracious
love of life in the light of the nations.  

The evil of the arrogant will be burned to ashes in a hot fired oven
to leave stubble without root or branch in the charcoaled rubble of repercussion.

The light of righteousness will rise like the sun with healing in its wings
in the hearts of those who love others with reverence for the goodness of things.

The dawn from on high will shine upon us
from the mercy of the God who is just.

There will be trials and tribulations before the end of time.
Live your life for goodness with joy that you may celebrate the sublime.

Redemption is against the compunction 
for unction, but last rites help society to function.

------------------------

Psalm 98
Cantate Domino
Sing Friend

1 Sing to the Lord a new song,
for he has done marvelous things.
2 With his right hand and his holy arm
has he won for himself the victory.
3 The Lord has made known his victory;
his righteousness has he openly shown in the sight of the nations.
4 He remembers his mercy and faithfulness to the house of Israel,
and all the ends of the earth have seen the victory of our God.
5 Shout with joy to the Lord, all you lands;
lift up your voice, rejoice, and sing.
6 Sing to the Lord with the harp,
with the harp and the voice of song.
7 With trumpets and the sound of the horn
shout with joy before the King, the Lord.
8 Let the sea make a noise and all that is in it,
the lands and those who dwell therein.
9 Let the rivers clap their hands,
and let the hills ring out with joy before the Lord,
when he comes to judge the earth.
10 In righteousness shall he judge the world
and the peoples with equity.

-----------------------

Malachi 4:1

The name Malachi is an abbreviation of "messenger of YHWH." The first verse of the third chapter reads, "Behold, I will send my messenger." (Malachi 3:1) Malachi is Hebrew for 'my messenger.'

The books of Zechariah and Haggai were written during the lifetime of Ezra. They are similar in style. The Persian-era term for governor (pehâ) is used in Mal.1:8. 'Try offering blind, lame or diseased animals to your governor! Would he be pleased with you?'

The themes of the book place it in a position after Haggai and Zechariah. It is close to the time of Ezra when Nehemiah traveled to Jerusalem in 445 BCE.

The prophets had urged the people of Judah and Israel to see their exile as punishment for failing to uphold their covenant with God. The people had been restored to the land and to worship that offered animal sacrifice in the Temple. The people's commitment began to wane.

The book is made up of 6 oracles. It is structured along the lines of a judicial trial, a suzerain treaty or a covenant.

Testament is one of the major themes throughout the Hebrew Scriptures. Faith in Yhwh is vindicated while those who do not adhere to the law of Moses are condemned.

Division within the community was described in terms of the story about Jacob and Esau. The descendants of Jacob (Israel) retained favor in Mosaic law.

Judaic law had demanded animals 'without blemish' (Lev. 1:3) for worship in the Temple. The priests were to determine whether the animal was acceptable. They had been offering blind, lame and diseased animals for sacrifice.

Divorce was not viewed as favored. Whether it was promoted for divorcing a Jewish wife for someone foreign or someone foreign for a Jewish woman, the action was viewed as a lack of fidelity in commitment to covenant.

Israel is figured as Yahweh's wife or bride in the Scriptures, particularly in the Book of Hosea.  Malachi's discussion of divorce may also be understood to conform to this metaphor.

The restoration to the land of Judah had not resulted in the expected splendor of the messianic age.

Some were becoming disillusioned with their religion. Marriage was a metaphor for commitment to faith.  Divorce was not.

Malachi reminded the people that God is just. Patience with faithfulness was essential while waiting for justice. Just as the priests had been offering unacceptable sacrifices, so the people had been neglecting to offer their tithe. The temple was a symbol for the life of the religious community in Judaic culture.

Mal.4:2


The day of the Lord is used as a vision to anticipate the end of time. Justice in the legal system is dependent upon the judgment of judges. The faith of the faithful is to be rewarded with divine recognition in joy. The arrogant will burn with indignation at the destruction of evil as power.

----------------------

Malachi 4:1-2

The day is coming, burning like an oven, when all the arrogant and all evildoers will be stubble. The day that comes will burn them up, says the LORD of hosts. It will leave them neither root nor branch. The sun of righteousness will rise with healing in its wings for you who revere my name. You shall go out leaping like calves from the stall.

-----------------------

The evil of the arrogant will be burned to ashes in a hot fired oven
to leave stubble without root or branch in the charcoaled rubble of repercussion.

The light of righteousness will rise like the sun with healing in its wings
in the hearts of those who love others with reverence for the goodness of things.

The dawn from on high will shine upon us
from the mercy of the God who is just.

=================

The Votum

The Bull of Sacrifice

Roman religion was practical and contractual. It was based on the principle of do ut des, "I give that you might give". Religion depended on knowledge and the correct practice of prayer, ritual and sacrifice.

Vota pro salute rei publicae ("vows for the security of the republic") were offered at the beginning of the year on the day the consuls took office in the Republic.

Vota publica continued even after Christianity had become the official religion of the Empire. This practice ran as late as the 6th century.

The vows were as much affirmations of political loyalty as religious expressions. The people assembled on January 3 to offer collective vows for the salus ("health, safety, wellbeing") of the emperor during the empire.

The public side of religion was more organized and more formal than the private. The paterfamilias or head of the family  performed religious rituals for the household at home.

Gods were worshiped for the benefit of the state beyond the home. Colleges of highly trained priests and priestesses were employed.

The government and the Romans in general tended to be tolerant towards most religions and cults. Some religions were banned for political reasons rather than dogmatic zeal. Rites which involved human sacrifice were banned.

The Patricians knew Greek philosophy as well as the stories of polytheism. The school of Elea promoted the monotheism of the monad as a way to consider the value of meaning in the expression of language.

The diversity of opinions founded on beliefs in different deities suggested a state of civilization that would not develop much beyond the primitive state of nature.

Cruelty and violence were entertained as natural elements in human nature. Social hierarchy was fractured to favor decentralization in political organization.

Monotheistic faith was viewed as a necessary development from polytheistic culture. Something unified for the state of the nation was necessary for the credibility of the social contract.

Christianity presented itself as a favorable vehicle for the Roman version of the Judaic moral code in societal relations.

There must have been a strong sense that the Roman polytheistic emphasis on tradition would never allow for a transition to the worship of a single deity, particularly one that was revered by the people of the Middle East.

They were viewed as too organized in their cruelty to those in their empire and in their violence to those outside of it. Some may have even been aware that the idea of covenant had been derived from the Middle East as drawn from the Far East.

The Roman perpetuation of Greek culture however favored the treatment of their civilization as barbaric. The stories circulated to promote the fear of imperial power didn't discourage the view.

The votum was a regular part of ceremonies conducted at the Capitoline by a general holding imperium before deployment. The triumph with its dedication of spoils and animal sacrifices at the Capitol was in part a fulfillment of such a vow.

Poor people had to be supplied with employment or some other means of conveyance. A basic feature in the system was that the organization of public religion would provide food for people through festival celebrations.

The distribution of the public duty to officials to provide for the feasts of the festivals found favor in that which was established about the polytheistic calendar of sacrifice.

The deacons in Christianity were placed in charge of the distribution of bread for those who were in need in the community. The name for the office indicated that those selected had to be willing to serve. They were appointed by the apostles for the distribution of alms (Acts 6:3).

The following passage from the second letter to the Thessalonians indicates that there were those who sough to exploit the distribution by not offering their labor in exchange for their food. 

2 Thess. 3:6-13

We command you, beloved, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to keep away from believers who are living in idleness and not according to the tradition that they received from us. You know how you ought to imitate us.

We were not idle when we were with you. We did not eat anyone's bread without paying for it. We worked night and day with toil so we might not burden any of you. This was not because we do not have that right, but in order to give you an example to imitate.

We gave you this command when we were with you: Anyone unwilling to work should not eat. We heard that some of you are living in idleness, mere busybodies, not doing any work. Such persons we command and exhort in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work quietly and to earn their own living.

Do not weary in doing what is right, brothers and sisters.

-----------------------

We were not idle when we dwelt among you.
We worked so the group would not be burdened by our few.

Imitate us in the providence of faith.
Don't depend on being served by others as your state.

=================

The Temple


The stones at the base of the western wall in Jerusalem tell the tale of what happened on August 10, 70 CE. The stones had been heaved 50 feet over the wall onto the Herodian street adjacent to the Temple. Every block had been pried apart. Not one was left standing on the site.

The only stone left from the building was the foundation stone. It is now located under the Dome of the Rock. There is a small hole in the southeastern corner that enters a cavern beneath the  called the Well of Souls.

The cave is partly natural and partly man made. The name is taken from a medieval Islamic legend. It was said that the spirits of the dead can be heard awaiting Judgment Day at this place.

When the Crusaders took Jerusalem in 1099 they converted the Dome of the Rock into a church. They called it the Templum Domini (Temple of the Lord).

Some of the physical changes to the site were radical. The entrance was enlarged. Much of the rock in the cavern was cut away to make staircases. The stone floor was paved over with marble slabs.  The shaft ascending from the center of the chamber was most likely added.

The Crusaders called the cave the Holy of Holies. It was identified as the location for the annunciation of John the Baptists birth. There had been a place in the Temple called the Holy of Holies.

The destruction of the Temple represented the dissolution of the capital for the kingdom that had been established by the Romans as a client state. The state religion was also dissolved. This made the synagogues the institution for the preservation of Judaism.

Most of the synagogues unearthed in archaeological excavations in Israel, the State of Palestine and the Golan Heights date from the Roman and Byzantine periods from the 3d to 7th centuries.

Synagogues from before the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE include Gamla, Masada and Herodium.

The earliest synagogue inscription uncovered to date is in Greek and dates to the first century BCE or the first century CE. It was discovered in the City of David, just south of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

It was inscribed to Theodotos. It described the purpose for the synagogue. It was for reading the Torah, study of the commandments and lodging travelers.

Jesus taught in synagogues according to the  gospels. There are more than 10 passages that refer to his instruction there.

One was in Capernaum in Galilee (Mk.1:21-8). The synagogue that stands in Capernaum in northern Israel on the coast of the Sea of Galilee was built several centuries after the time of Jesus. The evidence for a first-century construct there is disputed.

The Acts of the Apostles suggests that Paul taught in a synagogue in which he had been invited to speak. (Acts 17:1-2)

The practice of prayer with or without sacrifice which was to be so central to the synagogue had already begun in the Temple. There was a court yard where people could gather, but only Levites could enter the sanctuary and only the high priest could enter the holy of holies.

Synagogue is a Greek word meaning "assembly." It is compared with the Hebrew Qahal and contrasted with Ecclesia, a group called out from the larger community.

The assembly of people for the purpose of study and prayer started in the Babylonian exile after the destruction of the first Temple.

Jewish scholars believe Ezekiel's reassuring promise that God would provide a "sanctuary" (11:16) for his people is a reference to the small groups that gathered in their homes during the exile to recall God's covenant, his law and the redemptive promises of the prophets.

It is likely that these godly people, having learned a hard lesson about the importance of obedience to God, assembled regularly to study his Torah to prevent the sins of their ancestors from being repeated.

A group of experts in the law and its interpretation taught and studied in small associations at humble locations called "houses of study." These places of study are the roots of the synagogue, a sanctuary to inspire obedience to the law of God.

Communal worship in the time while the Temple still stood centered around the korbanot ("sacrificial offerings") brought by the kohanim ("priests") in the Temple in Jerusalem. The all-day Yom Kippur service was an event in which the congregation both observed the movements of the kohen gadol ("the high priest") as he offered the day's sacrifices and prayed for his success.

Synagogues were used for a variety of purposes in the first century according to Josephus. They were used as schools, hostels, courts and political meetings. Scholars disagree about the extent of communal prayers, but the literary sources suggest that Jews prayed in at least some synagogues at this time.

The prediction of the 'Day of the Lord" was first used by Isaiah in the Hebrew Bible. It refers to temporal events such as the invasion of a foreign army, the capture of a city and the suffering that befalls the inhabitants. Other prophets alluded to the presumption of a final judgment at the end of time.

The predictions in Christian Scriptures may refer to the writer's own times or it may refer to predicted events in a later age of earth's history including the final judgment. The following passage in the gospel of Luke alludes to the destruction of the Temple.

It was predicted that not one stone would be left to stand on another.

A number of wars in the form of Jewish rebellions had been fought. Josephus was a leader in the rebel army that made Masada its stronghold. This was also one of the locatons of a known synagogue in the first century.

There had been others who unlike Jesus claimed to be the Messiah.

The persecution of Christians was started presumably during the reign of Nero. This had preceded the invasion by Vespasian and the subsequent conquest of Jerusalem by his son, Titus.

https://www.sbl-site.org/assets/pdfs/pubs/9780884143208_OA.pdf

Luke 21:5-19

When some were speaking about the temple, how it was adorned with beautiful stones and gifts dedicated to God, he said, 'As for these things that you see, the days will come when not one stone will be left upon another; all will be thrown down.'

They asked him, 'Teacher, when will this be, and what will be the sign that this is about to take place?' He said, 'Beware taht you are not led astray; for many will come in my name and say. "I am he!" and "The time is near!" Do not go after them.

'When you hear of wars and insurrections, do not be terrified. These things must take place first, but the end will not take place immediately.' Then he said to them, 'Nation will rise against nation and kingdom against kingdom. There will be great earthquakes, famines and plagues in various places. There will be dreadful portents and great signs from heaven.

'They will arrest and persecute you before all this occurs. They will hand you over to synagogues and prisons. You will be brought before kings and governors because of my name. This will give you an opportunity to testify. So make up your minds not to prepare your defense in advance.

'I will give you words and wisdom that none of your opponents will be able to withstand or contradict. You will be betrayed even by parents and brothers, by relatives and friends. They will put some of you to death. You will be hated by all because of my name. Not a hair of your head will perish. You will gain your souls by your endurance.'

-----------------------

There will be trials and tribulations before the end of time.
Live your life for goodness with joy that you may celebrate the sublime.

=================

Monotheism

It is arguable that when Plato wrote about the god, he meant Apollo. This inference would be drawn from knowledge about Greek culture, not from the summary of quotes made in the Platonic dialogs.

There is a distinction to be drawn between the deity as divine nature and the chief among deities. The Hindus have abstracted the divine nature from polytheism. The Godhead was a step beyond that. Reference to faith was then theologically reduced to fidelity to one God.

The Eleatics expressed deference to the monad as the source for creation. That all else is illusion is a distinct doctrine that has been expressed in Hindu instruction also.

The bible documents that while the theology of the prophets was monotheistic, the belief of the aristocracy and the people didn't rule out polytheism. There is a value to psychology that is realistic about the reconstruction of classical consciousness in human nature.

Freud's psychoanalytic reduction appeared redundant in the identification of the Oedipal inclination as the cause of mental malady, but western civilization has suffered from a redundant obsession with rebellion, revolution, terrorism or invasion as the way to achieve political change.

Timaeus argued that since nothing "becomes or changes" without cause, then the cause of the universe must be a demiurge or a god. This demiurge was called the father and maker of the universe.

Insofar as fairness exists in the universe, the demiurge must have looked to the eternal model to make it. The perishable paradigm was subject to subjectivity in change.

Plato (429-348 BCE)
Timaeus (360)
Text

"God took of the unchangeable and indivisible and also of the divisible and corporeal, and out of the two he made a third nature, essence, which was in a mean between them, and partook of the same and the other, the intractable nature of the other being compressed into the same."   

-----------------------

The maker of the universe was the Father
with the Son as his Word for the power that bothers
to care for the creation by watching over the hours.

Essence was the compaction of the indivisible inside of corporeal form
that gave matter its shape as a functional entity from the immaterial storm.

=================
-----------------------

Idealism v. Pragmatism
Judaic and Roman religion had common elements. There was a high priest. There was the use of state religion to organize society with respect for law. Judaism was more developed in the cultural movement from polytheism to monotheism.

Roman state religion purported to be inclusive, but monotheism was persecuted as a form for centuries.

The kingdom of Judah was replaced with the republic of Palestine. Jews were forbidden to live in Jerusalem. Judaism was defined by the Roman media as the cause of rebellion. Christianity was treated as a delinquent derivative of Judaism.

Roman society entertained the consideration of monotheism through philosophy. The Eleatic school had adopted a distinctly Brahministic overview of religion. This was accepted and perpetuated by Plato and Aristotle.

The Timaeus presented the demiurge as the Creator. The metaphysics of Aristotle posited the existence of an unmoved Mover as the controlling principle for the universe. The one deity was not defined as the Creator. Matter was defined as eternal.

Traditional polytheists resisted the change with stories about the persecution of Jews and Christians.
Christianity did not hold true to the promise of an inclusive state religion. The edict of toleration was countered and contradicted by legislation that defined the official state religion as the only legal entity. 

It would seem at this point that the answer from the Republican or the Constitutional monarchical views would be to define legal religion legislatively. Given the experience with the institution of slavery, it seems likely that it will be easier to define that which is not legal.

Religion cannot promote rebellion, revolution, terrorism or invasion. There is legislation against terrorism. Terrorism presents as a base element for rebellion or revolution. No one whether he or she is a member of a religious community or not, can use the threat of damage or death to force political change on the government.

William James sidestepped the whole issue of official state sanction when he defined religion as a social institution derived from religious organization based on mystical experience.

The view entertained the consideration of psychological health as the baseline for the acceptance of variety. Pragmatic logical concerns were included with respect for coherence and consistency.

The variety proposed by James as healthy for society was more broad in scope than the treatment of legislation against terrorism. The essential consideration has been incorporated in state laws that prohibit harm to self or others. Harm that approximates damage is regarded as mentally ill.

Royce was more direct in his approach to the study of religion. He recommended objective analysis that favored community as opposed to personal organization. The consideration of the moral code as an object allowed for devotion in worship in religious ceremonies.

It seems that political as well as religious organization can only allow for so much debate or disagreement with respect for functional operation in practical application. The disruption of political events is punishable by removal from the event. Any property or bodily damage caused by the disrupter is charged as a criminal offense.

Religious worship cannot entertain dispute or debate during devotional celebration. The agreement of the religious community assumes that worship observe expressions that have been approved prior to the celebration. Any change has to be vetted in the poltical organization for the religious social body.

James defined pragmatism as the resolution of disagreement between empiricism and rationalism. The definition of religion that is legal is pragmatic. People are allowed by law to define the value of religion for themselves insofar as no damage is incurred in the process.

William James (1842-1910)
Pragmatism (1907)
Text

"Pragmatism represents a perfectly familiar attitude in philosophy, the empiricist attitude, but it represents it, as it seems to me, both in a more radical and in a less objectionable form than it has ever yet assumed. A pragmatist turns his back resolutely and once for all upon a lot of inveterate habits dear to professional philosophers. He turns away from abstraction and insufficiency, from verbal solutions, from bad a priori reasons, from fixed principles, closed systems, and pretended absolutes and origins. He turns towards concreteness and adequacy, towards facts, towards action, and towards power."

-----------------------

Pragmatism turns from insufficiency as promoted by abstraction
towards action that results in benefit from power without factions.

=================


Saul Kripke
b. 11.13.1940

Saul Kripke is an American logician associated with the development of modal logic. He has been a central figure in a number of fields related to mathematical reason.

His critical analysis is non-classical in the philosophy of language. He argued that necessity is a metaphysical notion that is not a priori. There are necessary truths that are a posteriori. That 'water is H2O' is an example.

His work Naming and Necessity (1970) evaluated the relation between names in terms of possibility or necessity. The distinction of what is necessary has significance in the meaning of the name in logical argument.

Gottlob Frege had said that if an identity statement such as "Hesperus is the same planet as Phosphorus" is to be informative, the proper names flanking the identity sign must have a different meaning or sense.

Hesperus is the evening star. Phosphorus is the name for the same planet as it appears in the sky in the morning. There would be no compelling reason to identify Hesperus with Phosphorus as the explanation of an event, if they were not the same planet.

The statement that 'Venus is Venus' is not meaningful. If is meaningful to those who didn't know to say that the morning and evening stars have been identified as the planet Venus.

The statement had to have the same descriptive reference to make it true. A 'mode of presentation' serves to illuminate only a single aspect of the referent.

The name "Aristotle" is just a sort of shorthand for a definite description such as "The last great philosopher of ancient Greece" or "The teacher of Alexander the great" or some conjunction of two or more such descriptions according to Bertrand Russell.

Such descriptions must be reduced to a certain very specific logical form of existential generalization according to his theory of definite descriptions.

The sentence "The king of France is bald" becomes ]x(K(x) &y(K(y) --> x = y) & B(x). This means that there is an object 'x' such that 'x' is the King of France and 'x' is bald. Definite descriptions or names have no reference. Their meanings are just the truth conditions of the logical forms illustrated.

Descriptivism and the descriptive theory of proper names came to be associated with both the views of Frege and Russell. Both addressed the problem of names without bearers in a similar way.
Kripke offered what has come to be known as "the modal argument" or the "argument from rigidity" against descriptivism.

Consider the descriptions "the greatest student of Plato," "the founder of logic" and "the teacher of Alexander." The name Aristotle satisfies all of the descriptions, but it is not a necessary truth that if Aristotle existed then he was any one, or all, of these descriptions.

He might have existed to not have become known to posterity or he might have died in infancy.
Suppose that Aristotle had been associated with the description “the last great philosopher of antiquity” by Terry and the actual Aristotle had died in infancy. Terry's description would then refer to Plato. Names have to be "rigid designators," according to Kripke. They refer to the same individual in every possible world in which that individual exists.

Aristotle means "the greatest student of Plato," "the founder of logic" and "the teacher of Alexander" for descriptivists. The expression “the greatest student of Plato" means that "Aristotle was the greatest student of Plato."

If there is a set of properties that speaker A believes to be associated with X, then these properties must be already known by the speaker. They are a priori in this sense.

The second argument employed by Kripke has come to be called the "argument from unwanted necessity". This is simply the observation that if the meaning of "Angela Merkel" is "the Chancellor of Germany," then the statement "Angela is the Chancellor of Germany" should seem to the average person to be a priori, analytic and trivial.

It would not merit the expression to someone who knew the association. It would be like saying that a bachelor is unmarried to those who were not trying to make the unmarried into criminals by the implication of homosexuality.

If a unique object satisfies the properties associated with 'X' such that A believes that 'X has such-and-such properties', it picks out or refers to that object.

People may associate inadequate or inaccurate descriptions with proper names. Kripke uses Kurt Gödel as an example. The only thing most people know about Gödel is that he proved the incompleteness of arithmetic.

Suppose he hadn't proved such a thing. What if his friend Schmidt had argued that arithmetic is incomplete. If most of the properties associated with 'Gödel' are satisfied by Schmidt, then he is the referent for 'Gödel.' 

Kripke wrote, "...even if archeologists or geologists were to discover tomorrow some fossils conclusively showing the existence of animals in the past satisfying everything we know about the unicorns from the myth, that would not show that there were unicorns."
(Naming and Necessity)

------------------------

Naming is rated by the modes of necessity.
Possibility precedes the charge of electricity.

===================

The discovery would lack cultural significance in the relevant necessity of truth.

That climate change is happening has not met with great debate. That industrial management is the only cause of the increase in global temperatures as a measure for the degree of change is subject to disagreement.

That climate change has contributed to the strength of hurricanes and tornadoes or the number of forest fires has not been denied. It is feasible that the size of the increase is measurable. The methods deemed necessary to decrease the increase are debatable.

Kripke's examples purported to render descriptivism implausible as a theory of how names get their reference determined.

Subsequent publications on Wittgenstein, the theory of truth, the semantics of belief reports and other areas sparked an industry of philosophical commentary and criticism.

----------------------


Alvin Plantinga
b. 11.15.1932 Ann Arbor, MI

Alvin Plantinga  is an American analytic philosopher who works primarily in the fields of philosophy of religion, epistemology and logic.

He served as president of the Society of Christian Philosophers from 1983 to 1986. He has delivered the Gifford Lectures two times and was described by Time magazine as "America's leading orthodox Protestant philosopher."

William Lane Craig wrote in his work Reasonable Faith that he considers Plantinga to be the greatest Christian philosopher alive.

Some of Plantinga's most influential works including God and Other Minds (1967), The Nature of Necessity (1974). He wrote a trilogy of books on epistemology, culminating in Warranted Christian Belief (2000). The epistemic justification was simplified in Knowledge and Christian Belief (2016).

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Ann Arbor is located in the southeastern part of Michigan. The speculators John Allen and Elisha Rumsey founded the city in 1824. They named it for their wives who shared the same name. The stands of bur oak in the area gave the attachment 'Arbor' its place next to their spouses' name.

The University of Michigan was established there in 1837 after the town lost the bid to become the state capital. The history of the university has been closely linked with that of Ann Arbor ever since.

The town became a regional transportation hub in 1839 with the arrival of the Michigan Central Railroad. A north–south railway connecting Ann Arbor to Toledo and other markets to the south was established in 1878.

Settlers continued to migrate to the area through the the 1840's and the 1850's. The earlier settlers were primarily of British ancestry. Germans, Irish and African Americans came later.

Ann Arbor was chartered as a city in 1851. The city showed a drop in population during the Depression of 1873. It saw robust growth in the early 1880's. New emigrants came from Greece, Italy, Russia and Poland.

Mills provided the predominant industry for growth for the manufacturing industry. Ann Arbor's Jewish community grew after the turn of the 20th century. Its first and oldest synagogue, Beth Israel Congregation, was established in 1916.

The city gained a reputation as an important center for liberal politics in the 1960's and 1970's. It became a locus for left-wing activism and anti-Vietnam War protests as a student movement.

Countercultural and New Left enterprises sprang up and developed constituencies within the city. These influences washed into municipal politics during the early and mid-1970's. Three members of the Human Rights Party (HRP) won city council seats on the strength of the student vote.

HRP representatives fought for measures that included an antidiscrimination ordinance, the decriminalization of marijuana possession and a rent-control ordinance during their time on the council.

A small group of conservative institutions were born along with the leftist groups. These included the Word of God. The a charismatic inter-denominational movement was established in 1967. The Thomas More Law Center was established in 1999. This was a religious-conservative advocacy group.

Alvin Plantinga

Alvin Plantinga was born on November 15, 1932, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. His parents were Cornelius A. Plantinga (1908–1994) and Lettie G. Bossenbroek (1908–2007). Plantinga's father was a first-generation immigrant, born in the Netherlands.

His family is from the Dutch province of Friesland. They lived on a relatively low income until he secured a teaching job in Michigan in 1941.

Plantinga's father earned a PhD in philosophy from Duke University and a master's degree in psychology. He taught several academic subjects at different colleges over the years.

His father urged him to skip his last year of high school and immediately enroll in college after Plantinga completed 11th grade. He reluctantly followed his father's advice  and enrolled in Jamestown College in Jamestown, North Dakota in 1949, a few months before his 17th birthday.

His father accepted a teaching job at Calvin College, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He moved to Grand Rapids with his family and enrolled in Calvin College in January 1950.

He spent two semesters at Harvard beginning in the fall of 1950. He attended a few philosophy classes at Calvin College during the Spring recess at Harvard. He was so impressed with the philosophy professor William Harry Jellema that he returned in 1951 to study philosophy there.

He  began his graduate studies at the University of Michigan in 1954. He  transferred to Yale a year later. He received his PhD in 1958.

Plantinga began his career as an instructor in the philosophy department at Yale in 1957. He became a professor of philosophy at Wayne State University during its heyday as a major center for analytic philosophy in 1958.

He accepted a teaching job at Calvin College where he replaced the retiring Jellema in 1963. He then spent the next 19 years at Calvin before moving to the University of Notre Dame in 1982. He retired from the University of Notre Dame in 2010.

He returned to Calvin College where he serves as the first holder of the William Harry Jellema Chair in Philosophy.

Plantinga has presented some major arguments with respect for science, religion and politics within the contest of this theism.

Naturalism and Science

Plantinga has argued that belief in naturalism and evolution doesn't work. Dawkins had asserted that theism is incompatible with naturalism. Plantinga argued that evolution is incompatible with atheistic naturalism.

Evolution selects for mechanisms that produce beliefs that perpetuate survival. The belief forming mechanisms that led us to accept evolution and naturalism are unreliable according to atheism. Naturalism rules out belief in evolution.

Plantinga argued that the conflict between science and theistic religion is superficial. The conflict is actually drawn from illusion. Religion is in accord with knowledge when it is scientific and morally sound. Objective science doesn't presume to argue against the existence of God. 

Plantinga's definition of "evolution" includes an ancient earth, the appearance of increasingly complex life forms over time and descent with modification from a common ancestor. The scientific definition for "Darwinism" is limited to the thesis that the principal mechanism driving evolutionary change is natural selection operating on random genetic change.

He expressed agreement with what C.S. Lewis defined as Christian in Mere Christianity. Christians who don't believe that God is a person are not categorized as Christian.

Christianity does not imply six literal days of creation or anything else that is obviously incompatible with the deliverances of science. The success of science is a striking yet unsurprising development of the imago dei in humanity.

Free Will and the Ontological Argument

The argument for the problem asserts that the existence of evil is inconsistent with the claim that God is omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent and omnibenevolent.

Kripke has added the modal considerations of necessity and possibility to critical analysis.

Plantinga added greatness and excellence to the ontological argument for the existence of God. This gave a form of weight to the logical considerations of necessity or possibility.

J.L. Mackie had removed the claim to omnipresence from the logical analysis.

Plantinga argued that it is possible that there is a being that has maximal greatness. A being has maximal excellence in a given possible world W if it is omnipotent, omniscient and all good in W. It is necessarily true that an omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent being exists.

The argument for excellence is beneficial in the identification of the question 'what is best' in any given situation. This position amounts to agreement to the claim of supremacy without the papal office as the key recipient of the benefit.

The king or chief elected official would be the key beneficiary of this argument. The religious leader appointed by him would be his advisor and co-beneficiary. It is still the major argument for Protestant reform. The leader of the state is the head of the Church.

The claim to papal supremacy had resulted in the competition for greater authority in the investiture of power to a person in office during the ontological controversy.

There is this difficulty.

Government that functions to represent rights for people is necessarily moral in order to achieve actual results in civility. This suggests favor for the religious office.

Those in government have to compete with those who claim that immorality is what actually works whether they are running for election or working from an appointed position.

This gives favor to political office whether inherited or elected.  This position is not a rejection of the authority of the pope. It argues against the claim to papal supremacy over political office.

The empirical argument against rationality affirmed that too much corporate knowledge was rejected with the reduction of consideration to personal agreement with logical expression in classical discovery.

Descartes didn't leave himself with less than enough to do, but the personal approval of what was logical and empirically verifiable necessarily became a social effort that required personal investiture in the exploration of knowledge derived from the classics.

Rationality also allowed for excessive reference to a priori argument or innate ideas as a form of justification. It can be asserted that Luther argued against slavery and colonial exploitation with his complaint against indulgences as the institutional error in the papal office.

While he was for moral rectitude as a duty and against rebellion as the means fo attain political change, socialism and radical political activism by reformed elements prevailed against his objections to immorality in leadership practice.

The empiricists for their part were too inductive in their argument. The royals had expressed a position against slavery and the mistreatment of primitive natives.

The empiricists allowed for the reincarnation of slavery and colonial exploitation. They added the requirement of experimental verification as a condition for the reconstruction of education that didn't necessarily include much investigation into the classics.

Their reduction of philosophical concern to perceptual particulars on the part of citizens limited reasonable participation in government. Participation by petition and logical argument were discouraged. The threat of rebellion anticipated the threat of revolution as the ways to control the decisions made by government.

Belligerent ignorance particularly from the House of Commons or the House of Representatives became the rule for 'order.' Whether the 'consensus' came from the Whigs with the threat of rebellion or Labour with the threat of revolution, mass media expression played a large role in the distortion of public perception to shape 'consensus.'

Plantinga's argument for excellence persuades against the formulation of false consensus.

Alvin Plantinga
T. 阿尔文·普兰丁加
S. 阿爾文·普蘭丁加

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-----------------------

The Creator established free will
so the choice of goodness would fit the bill.

=================

wiki Alvin Plantinga
Gifford Lectures bio Plantinga
SEP: Epistemology Religion
IEP: Epistemology
SEP: Ontological Arguments
NY Times Books: Religion Plantinga
wiki Ann Arbor, Michigan