Tuesday, February 28, 2006

My Weight in Kilograms

Aka the 7 by 7 meme. Sephora and Sapientiae Amator have both tagged me, so here it goes. Seven things to do before I die: 1. Clean my room 2. Make beer 3. Visit St. James Gate 4. Overcome the corrupting influence of the free market 5. Circumnavigate the world in a sail boat 6. Hike the Appalachian trail 7. Learn to please the Lord Seven things I cannot do: 1. Bench my weight 2. Listen to NPR for more than 10 minutes 3. Concentrate on my studies for more than 50 minutes 4. Fix a timing belt 5. Install a water heater 6. Enjoy the pain of others 7. Throw away receipts Seven things that attract me to my other half: 1. I can't see it 2. It's not afraid to let me know if I'm working out too hard 3. It saves my guts from spilling out behind me 4. It is very faithful 5. It doesn't cause too much trouble (cf, however, #2) 6. It never leaves home without me 7. It grows as I grow Seven things I say: 1. Interesting 2. It's just that ... 3. Yeah, but ... 4. [heumpfh] 5. Hey friend 6. Bueno 7. I don't do that, do I? Seven books I love: 1. A Tale of Two Cities, Dickens 2. Kristen Lavransdatter, Undset 3. TLOTR, Tolkien 4. Joan of Arc, Twain 5. Don Quixote, Cervantes 6. The Return of Don Quixote, Chesterton 7. Shadows on the Rock, Cather Seven movies I love: [n.b.: This was at the time I saw them -- many I haven't seen in a while and might no longer love if I were to see them again.] 1. Donnie Brasco 2. Tombstone 3. The Great Escape 4. Yours, Mine and Ours (the old one) 5. The Thin Man 6. Casablanca 7. Schindler's List Seven people to meme: How 'bout 4. 1. Benthegreen 2. Clashing Symbol 3. Lord Sebastian Flyte 4. Windmilltilter

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

The Muse

I sent around these questions via email maybe 9 months ago, with the promise that I would summarize the responses and give my own position. I will fulfill that promise soon, but I wanted to post the questions first, for a refresher, and to allow others who haven't commented yet to comment. Because I don't understand what people mean when they talk about the muse: Thanks for your time, you who respond. 1. Do you believe in the Muse? If yes, continue to the rest of the survey. If not, why? and then you're done. 2. What is the Muse? [this is a question of ontology. Is the muse a material substance, an immaterial substance, or God? Immaterial substances are angels, which come in two kinds, fallen and unfallen. If the Muse is an immateral substance, is it a fallen or unfallen angel, and how do you know? If the Muse is a material substance, like the brain, is it distinct from chance? If the Muse is God, is it God's substance, or a Divine attribute, like His providence? If so, why is the term Muse used?] 3. How do you feel about question 2? Do you think this kind of question removes us from the reality of the Muse rather than bringing us closer to it? Or do you think that this question helps us to understand the Muse better? Why do you feel this way? 4. What is the relation between the Muse in Homer and the Muse you believe in? Thanks, Whiskey

Papists

Some of these pictures are really funny. Found at American Papist. H/t Dawn Eden.

Saturday, February 18, 2006

De Ludo

It's commentary like the following which make me glad to be alive.
“Lucky shot,” Pirie said modestly as Harness congratulated her. Exchanges like this are one of the reasons curling is so appealing to many, including Shane Lynch, Lacey Lynch’s husband and a University of Washington music doctorate student. “It’s a very anti-American activity,” Shane Lynch said. Not in the way attacking an embassy is an anti-American activity, but in the way curling is the antithesis of me-first American sports. “Terrell Owens probably wouldn’t make it as curler,” Shane Lynch said. While American sports like the NFL pay lip service to sportsmanship only to have their game regularly overshadowed by prima donna players such as Owens, curling has intertwined sportsmanship into its game.
If anyone can find links to video of people playing curling, could you leave them in the comments? Thanks.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Patron Saint of the Internet

Some time ago, benthegreen emailed me this link, which I didn't pay any attention to at the time, but today as I was going through old emails, I came across it again and realize that it is just the thing that I and everyone else who spends excessive time on the internet needs. Someone to pray to who will watch over us as we use the internet: ladies and gentlemen, I give you Saint Isidore of Seville. Oratio ante colligationem in Interrete factam Omnípotens aetérne Deus, qui nos secúndum imáginem Tuam plasmásti, et omnia bona, vera, pulchra, praesértim in divína persóna Unigéniti Fílii Tui Dómini nostri Iesu Chrísti, quaérere iussísti, praesta quaésumus ut, per intercessiónem Sancti Isidóri, Epíscopi et Doctóris, in peregrinatiónibus per interrete factis et manus oculósque ad quae Tibi sunt plácita intendámus et omnes quos convénimus cum caritáte ac patiéntia accipiámus. Per Christum Dóminum nostrum. Amen.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Lincoln's Second inaugural

I'm sure that everyone's read this before -- if you haven't, don't tell me -- but I think it's so marvelous that I'm posting it so that everyone can read it again and marvel at it's timelessness. Consider in particular this fact, that today our country's elites, our pundits, our government, our CEOs -- most anyone of any prominence -- are divided so severely that no conversation is possible. Think of abortion: can there really be a conversation on this issue? How about gay 'rights'? How about global warming? And most insidiously, perhaps, how about our fearless leader himself? Those who think Bush is actually evil, is truly equivalent to Hitler, and those who defend Bush in all things, fair or foul, fill the air with such shouting that nothing can be heard but their caterwaling, a mean-spirited, hateful game of one-ups-manship. In GW's State of the Union speech he pleaded for these power games to be put aside for the common good of the nation. Good ol' GW. But he hasn't a snowflake's chance in hell. If only he could command English like Lincoln. If I get around to it, I'll do a rhetorical analysis of this speech later.

At this second appearing to take the oath of the presidential office, there is less occasion for an extended address than there was at the first. Then a statement, somewhat in detail, of a course to be pursued, seemed fitting and proper. Now, at the expiration of four years, during which public declarations have been constantly called forth on every point and phase of the great contest which still absorbs the attention, and engrosses the energies of the nation, little that is new could be presented. The progress of our arms, upon which all else chiefly depends, is as well known to the public as to myself; and it is, I trust, reasonably satisfactory and encouraging to all. With high hope for the future, no prediction in regard to it is ventured. On the occasion corresponding to this four years ago, all thoughts were anxiously directed to an impending civil war. All dreaded it--all sought to avert it. While the inaugeral [sic] address was being delivered from this place, devoted altogether to saving the Union without war, insurgent agents were in the city seeking to destroy it without war--seeking to dissole [sic] the Union, and divide effects, by negotiation. Both parties deprecated war; but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive; and the other would accept war rather than let it perish. And the war came. One eighth of the whole population were colored slaves, not distributed generally over the Union, but localized in the Southern part of it. These slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All knew that this interest was, somehow, the cause of the war. To strengthen, perpetuate, and extend this interest was the object for which the insurgents would rend the Union, even by war; while the government claimed no right to do more than to restrict the territorial enlargement of it. Neither party expected for the war, the magnitude, or the duration, which it has already attained. Neither anticipated that the cause of the conflict might cease with, or even before, the conflict itself should cease. Each looked for an easier triumph, and a result less fundamental and astounding. Both read the same Bible, and pray to the same God; and each invokes His aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men's faces; but let us judge not that we be not judged. The prayers of both could not be answered; that of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has his own purposes. "Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!" If we shall suppose that American Slavery is one of those offences which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but which, having continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both North and South, this terrible war, as the woe due to those by whom the offence came, shall we discern therein any departure from those divine attributes which the believers in a Living God always ascribe to Him? Fondly do we hope--fervently do we pray--that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue, until all the wealth piled by the bond-man's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said "the judgments of the Lord, are true and righteous altogether" With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan--to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.

Chesterton

Today is picture day, I guess. I love a good Chesterton pic. There's something about his roundness that makes me feel comfortable. I guess I feel the same about Aquinas. They remind me of going to visit my grandparents when I was little. We would drive up to their house after 4 days of hot car rides, and Granddaddy would come out of the house with a huge smile and I would run up to him and give him a big hug, and my arms would reach about half-way around his belly, and my head would give his stomach a good solid thump, as I reveled in his roundness.

VEEP

Not that I dislike Mr. Cheney, mind you. But when you shoot someone in a hunting accident, well, old pictures start cropping up.
(h/t The Corner.)

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Barbar

Evidence. Look at #81. I also maintain my second line of defense, should anyone attempt to submit contrary evidence (not that I admit that any such thing could exist). Regarding the pronunciation, the accent is most definitely on the final syllable (scroll down a little ways to find it), making the presence or absence of a final consonant on the initial syllable difficult for my weak memory, such as it is, to recall. Not that I'm admitting I'm wrong, or anything.

Thursday, February 09, 2006

More PVS talk

I know I've been posting a lot of links lately, rather than serving up my own thoughts, and further, I know that no one really wants to talk about Terri Schiavo anymore, but this letter from her brother, Haleigh Poutre, to Cathy Young of the Boston Globe is excellent. The scientific usurpation of morality is a serious problem. In this, as in so many other spheres of life, I think we see the folly of pretending to ignore the pre-scientific philosophical exploration of the issue at hand, while simultaneously assuming a conclusion to such an exploration. Scientists, at least in their popular self-presentation, assume absolute objectivity, and hence claim themselves to be sole defenders of fact and truth. Thus, they claim to be free from the "uncertainty" of philosophy, and especially of ethics. Yet they are rooted in a philosophy of science which says that what is real is what is able to experimentally validated -- a proposition which of course cannot be experimentally validated. Thus they implicitly assume the un-grounded-ness of ethics, and of ethical descriptions of the human. To the extent that we accept science's claims to be the only or highest domain of truth, to that extent we verge on becoming amoral.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Could You Embrace That?

A friend from my undergrad just wrote this amazing post. The poem she quotes of St. Thomas is incredible; her reflections on childhood that follow are almost unbearable. God help us, sinners all.

Dorm Room Rube Goldberg

This is awesome.

Sunday, February 05, 2006

You know what this world needs?

Saturday, February 04, 2006

Super Prediction "Sure to go wrong" ™

34-31

Thursday, February 02, 2006

SSPX, etc.

Lord Sebastian posted this a few days ago regarding the possible imminent return of the society to communion with Rome. Such a thing is devoutly to be wished, for many reasons. For example, one of the greatest scandals the church gives to non-believers is due to internal disunion. Furthermore, the SSPXers have a very strong sense of the church militant, something that we could use some more of. Finally, and most importantly, those within the Society may be endangering their souls through the schism. For all these reasons, (plus for two others much more personal,) I pray that the Society will indeed return to Rome. But looking at things within my fallen, human perspective, I am not confident that such a reunion will take place. To understand this, I think we need to go back to the Reformation and Counter-Reformation, to come to grips with the psychology involved. Luther, an intelligent but hard-headed man, saw many abuses in the church (whether there actually were any I don't know, but his writing against the Curia is vitriolic), and like a good pastor, began to teach against those abuses. His teaching, however, was infused with a proto-Cartesian philosophy: a radical separation between the substance of the soul and the substance of the body. For this reason, Luther taught that justification lay in the purification of the soul, or in other words, absolute faith, and that works were simply to condition the body so that it would not "war against the spirit." This is all in Luther's Freedom of a Christian. The Council of Trent's reaction to Luther was to affirm the unity of body and soul in the human person, and thus to affirm the importance of merit in justification, even as it granted the absolute dependence of the person upon the grace of God. Thus, the Tridentine liturgy, common enough as I understand it before the council, simply universalized those practices that speak to the human person as a unity of body and soul, under the conditions of fallenness but sanctified by the blood of the cross, etc. Jump now to the sixties. Descartes is no longer the spirit of the age, but rather Heidegger. Heidegger's philosophy is a radical anti-Metaphysics, "pure" phenomenology. Heidegger's project is to de-sediment the philosophical concept of 'being' from the layer upon layer of conceptual encrustation caused by 2000 years of philosophizing. Heidegger thus speaks of Dasein (a fancy term for the human) as the ground of the givenness of things. With Heidegger, there is a radical turn to the subject, away from Being qua divine. I think that the "novel" formulations of Church teaching in Vatican II are a result of the Church's attempt to come to grips with this new extraordinary phenomenon. The Church, and especially Pope John Paul II in his implementation of the council, is attempting to formulate the truths of the faith in a way which accepts the truth in phenomenology, while at the same time affirming the possibility and reality of metaphysics and of theology. It seems to me that this is always how it has been with the church: in the early church, Plato; in the medieval period, Aristotle. Of course, some in the church took this as an opportunity to reject previous church teaching in toto -- we only need think of contraception, woman's ordination, gay marriage, and so on, not to mention the radical and violent abandonment of the monastery by monks for marriage. This is of course a scandal, but some in the church were scandalized, not just by the abuses, but by the attempt to use the language of phenomenology at all. This is how I characterize SSPX. They are rejecting, not "new" doctrines, but new formulations of old doctrines. They reject the language used, more than they reject the content signified by that language. I suppose that they would not formulate what they do in that way themselves, but that is what they are doing nevertheless. This has a two-fold problem. First, they do not recognize the value in the new formulations of doctrine. The great advantage of phenomenology is that it reduces everything to experience -- to this extent, I think that all good philosophy is phenomenology. Furthermore, by reformulating the doctrines of faith, the phenomenological method is able to revitalize them and make them present and active within the soul in a powerful and all encompassing way. In other words, the phenomenological formulation of doctrine is in precise continuity with the scholastic formulations of the Council of Trent in this, that both are concerned to address the person as a whole, as a union of body and soul. Just as Trent glorified the union of body and soul, in its response to Luther, so Vatican II stresses the integralness of the whole person in worship, in the communion of saints, etc. The point I'm getting at is that phenomenology provides the church with a powerful means of understanding the person as a unity, over and against the bifurcating influences of the modern world, thereby providing once again a radical (in the etymological sense) ground for the doctrines of the faith. By rejecting Vatican II, the SSPXers fail to see the good that is in the churches appropriation of phenomenology. But as a consequence of this, the SSPXers fall into a second and more dangerous error. Because of their insistence upon the language of Trent, they become legalistic, concerned with words more than with the meaning behind words; concerned with the form of liturgy rather than the spirit in which the liturgy occurs. Because of this, because they insist on the formulations of doctrine and worship which came about as a response to Luther, they become subject to Luther's own criticism. Luther accused the church of believing that people could be saved by works without faith. SSPXers, psychologically, fall subject to this critique, to the extent that they fail to realize that it is the spirit with which worship occurs which makes worship valid. Let me stress, I do not think that the effects of Vatican II have been positive here in a practical way in many, many churches through out our land. But the point is that by insisting on the Tridentine formulations, of doctrine and of worship, SSPX has lost the spirit that lives within them. They have become a society of works without faith. This is of course in a literal sense true: for they lack faith in the Holy Spirit to guide the church when it meets in an Ecumenical council. But it is also psychologically true: for they lack the ability to think radically (again, in the etymological sense) about their faith. Lets consider the example I mentioned before on Flyte's blog. Receiving Holy Communion in the hand. I've heard many Society members say that this is an abomination against the Lord. There is of course Biblical support for this. Someone or other (I can't remember who) touched the Arc of the Covenant (not even the Lord, but simply the throne of the Lord) to keep it from falling over, and was immediately struck dead. But let us consider this a bit more fully. It is of course indubitable that in the early church people received Holy Communion in the hand. There is definite textual evidence to support this. If this is the case, then it cannot be that receiving Holy Communion in the hand is a sin in itself. The church as such cannot permit its members to commit mortal sin! If you don't believe this, you don't believe in the church. But if it's not a mortal sin by nature, then it's only a moral sin by convention. But who has the power to make such conventions? The church. ("What you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, ...") So if the church says that it is acceptable to receive on the hand, then it's acceptable. By asserting that this is a mortal sin, SSPXers demonstrate their inability to think radically about their faith, to think about what worship is. What can in fact be adequate to God? God has become incarnate, He sacrifices Himself for us on the Altar daily. Is there anything which is adequate to that mystery? Let's be more explicit. Is there anything external which is adequate to that mystery. "For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it: thou delightest not in burnt offering. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise" (Ps. 51:16-17). What makes the sacrifice of the mass acceptable to God is the spirit in which it is offered. A humble and contrite spirit. That is what justifies every jot and tittle of the form of the liturgy. I can see someone receiving on the hand because they hold the Host to be of little value; I can also see someone receiving on the tongue because they are proud like the Pharisee. Which, on the basis of the externalities, is better? Neither. Both are justified by the spirit in which they are done, and both are an abomination when done in the wrong spirit. This all finally comes down to obedience. There is a great danger in being more holy than the church. If the church permits something, it is permitted. It is not permitted sort-of, or permitted only for those who would be in moral sin otherwise. It is permitted. To be a member of the church demands that one accept the things permitted by the church as permissible. This is a great test of obedience, for every one of us, not just for the SSPXers. Why has God allowed the church to permit so many things which seem counter to good prudence to you and I? There is of course no way to answer that question really till the final judgment, but this is how it strikes me. We live in a world which rejects all claims to validity unfounded on evidence. Modern physics is the highest science, precisely because it has the strongest methodological claims to evidentiary support. Reason, and in particular, reason grounded on evidence, is the single judge between the factual and the unfactual. The corollary to this is that all authority is questioned. The modern world admits no authority (of course, it implicitly accepts millions of authorities, like physicists, for example, but it pretends that it isn't). So here we are, members of a church founded on authority, where the authority figures are making what seems to you and me poor prudential decisions. I take this to be God's way of testing his followers, as we are forced to choose between Him and modern skepticism. Will we choose our reason, our judgments about the way things ought to be, or will we choose to follow the church, even when it seems like things aren't really being worked out all that well? SSPX chose the first; I choose the second. My mother, drunk or sober, my mother.