Quite near the beginning of this atrociously dense and technical piece of writing, the author throws in the line: "The first three of Aquinas's Five Ways are metaphysical arguments on any conception of metaphysics." — Theologian
Perhaps we've been reading different articles, because my impression of the SEP is the exact opposite. — SophistiCat
Quite near the beginning of this atrociously dense and technical piece of writing, the author throws in the line: "The first three of Aquinas's Five Ways are metaphysical arguments on any conception of metaphysics." — Theologian
I don't understand why you find this sentence problematic. English is not my first language, so tell me, I am curious: is it the style? Or do you really not understand what it is saying? — SophistiCat
What is the intelligent lay person supposed to make of that? What, I could not help but wonder, even the first time I read it, was the genius lay person supposed to make of it? You either have the highly technical background knowledge required to make sense of this or you don't. Of course in this day and age you can always go look it up elsewhere, but to demand that kind of thing from your reader is just bad writing. To explain the technical in terms of the even more technical is appalling pedagogical practice. And this is far from the only instance in the article where the author does this. Indeed, the practice almost seems to be his standard operating procedure. — Theologian
I have no idea what you are talking about. Technical terms? What technical terms? — SophistiCat
You either have the highly technical background knowledge [emphasis added] required to make sense of this or you don't. — Theologian
you would still be able to infer from the context that some famous historical philosophical text is a paradigmatic example of metaphysical writing — SophistiCat
five logical arguments regarding the existence of God summarized by the 13th-century Catholic philosopher and theologian St. Thomas Aquinas in his book Summa Theologica. — SophistiCat
The following theses are all paradigmatically metaphysical:
“Being is; not-being is not” [Parmenides];
“Essence precedes existence” [Avicenna, paraphrased];
“Existence in reality is greater than existence in the understanding alone” [St Anselm, paraphrased];
“Existence is a perfection” [Descartes, paraphrased];
“Being is a logical, not a real predicate” [Kant, paraphrased];
“Being is the most barren and abstract of all categories” [Hegel, paraphrased];
“Affirmation of existence is in fact nothing but denial of the number zero” [Frege];
“Universals do not exist but rather subsist or have being” [Russell, paraphrased];
“To be is to be the value of a bound variable” [Quine]. — van Inwagen, Peter and Sullivan, Meghan
why do you have this expectation that learning it should be effortless for everyone, no matter their background? — SophistiCat
an encyclopaedia article should be comprehensible to an intelligent lay person willing to put in a little effort. — Theologian
There is a difference between not dumbing a subject down, and explaining it in such a way that your explanation can only be understood by someone who has a sophisticated understanding of that subject already.
The following is a direct copy and paste from the article:
The following theses are all paradigmatically metaphysical:
“Being is; not-being is not” [Parmenides];
“Essence precedes existence” [Avicenna, paraphrased];
“Existence in reality is greater than existence in the understanding alone” [St Anselm, paraphrased];
“Existence is a perfection” [Descartes, paraphrased];
“Being is a logical, not a real predicate” [Kant, paraphrased];
“Being is the most barren and abstract of all categories” [Hegel, paraphrased];
“Affirmation of existence is in fact nothing but denial of the number zero” [Frege];
“Universals do not exist but rather subsist or have being” [Russell, paraphrased];
“To be is to be the value of a bound variable” [Quine]. — van Inwagen, Peter and Sullivan, Meghan
Hmm... Okay. Cool.
My personal favorites are the final three. Although "Existence is a perfection" has its charms too. — Theologian
What I actually said was:
an encyclopaedia article should be comprehensible to an intelligent lay person willing to put in a little effort. — Theologian — Theologian
Try reading the article in its entirety and then get back to me. Of course, you do realize that I suggest this only because you have now earned sufficient enmity that I want to make you suffer... — Theologian
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