Author Archives: Majken Hirche

Nietzsche on Parmenides

From ‘Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks’

While each word of Heraclitus expresses the pride and the majesty of truth, but of truth grasped in intuitions rather than attained by the rope ladder of logic, while in Sibylline rapture Heraclitus gazes but does not peer, knows but does not calculate, his contemporary Parmenides stands beside him as counter-image, likewise expressing a type of truth-teller but one formed of ice rather than fire, pouring cold piercing light all around.

Once in his life Parmenides, probably at a fairly advanced age, had a moment of purest absolutely bloodless abstraction, unclouded by any reality. This moment–un-Greek as no other in the two centuries of the Tragic Age–whose product is the doctrine of Being–became for Parmenides’ own life the boundary stone that separates two periods. At the same time however, this moment divides pre-Socratic thinking into two halves. The first might be called the Anaximandrian period, the second the Parmenidean proper. The first, older period of Parmenides’ own philosophizing still bears Anaximandrian traces; it brought forth an organized philosophic-physical system in answer to Anaximander’s questions. When later Parmenides was seized by that icy tremor of abstraction and came face to face with his utterly simple proposition as to being and non-being, his own previous teachings joined the rubbish-heap of the older doctrines. Still, he seems not to have lost every trace of paternal good-will toward the sturdy and well-made child of his youth, and he helped himself out by saying, “There is only one right way, to be sure, but if one wishes for a change to try another, then my former view, as to quality and consistency, is the only right one.” Guarding himself by this approach, he awarded to his former physical system a dignified and extensive position, even in that great poem on nature which was meant to proclaim his new insight as really the only way of truth. This paternal solicitude, even considering that it might have crept in by error, presents the only trace of human sentiment in a nature wholly petrified by logical rigidity and almost transformed into a thinking machine.

Parmenides, whose personal acquaintance with Anaximander does not seem unbelievable to me, and whose starting position from Anaximander’s doctrines is not merely credible but evident, had the same distrust toward a total separation of a world which only is and a world which only comes-to-be that Heraclitus too had seized upon and which had led him to the denial of all being. Both men sought a way out of the contradictoriness and disparity of a double world order. The leap into the indefinite, undefineable, by which Anaximander had once and for all escaped the realm of come-to-be and its empirically given qualities, did not come easy to minds as independent as those of Heraclitus and Parmenides. They sought to stay on their feet as long as they could, preserving their leap for the spot where the foot no longer finds support and one must jump to keep from falling. Both of them looked repeatedly at just that world which Anaximander had condemned with such melancholy and had declared as the place of wickedness and simultaneously of atonement for the unjustness of all coming-to-be. Gazing at this world, Heraclitus, as we have seen, discovered what wonderful order, regularity and certainty manifested themselves in all coming-to-be; from this he concluded that coming-to-be itself could not be anything evil or unjust. His look was oriented from a point of view totally different from that of Parmenides. The latter compared the qualities and believed that he found them not equal, but divided into two rubrics. Comparing, for example, light and dark, he found the latter obviously but the negation of the former. Thus he differentiated between positive and negative qualities, seriously attempting to find and note this basic contradictory principle throughout all nature. His method was as follows: he took several contradictories, light and heavy for example, rare and dense, active and passive, and held them against his original model contradictories light and dark. Whatever corresponded to light was the positive quality, whatever corresponded to dark, the negative. Taking heavy and light, for example, light [in the sense of ‘weightless’] was apportioned to light, heavy to dark, and thus heavy seemed to him but the negation of weightless, but weightlessness seemed a positive quality. The very method exhibits a defiant talent for abstract-logical procedure, closed against all influences of sensation. For heaviness surely seems to urge itself upon the senses as a positive quality; yet this did not prevent Parmenides from labelling it as a negation. Likewise he designated earth as against fire, cold as against warm, dense as against rare, feminine as against masculine, and passive as against active, to be negatives. Thus before his gaze our empirical world divided into two separate spheres, the one characterized by light, fieriness, warmth, weightlessness, rarification, activity and masculinity, and the other by the opposite, negative qualities. The latter really express only the lack, the absence of the former, positive ones. Thus he described the sphere which lacks the positive qualities as dark, earthy, cold, heavy, dense, and feminine-passive in general. Instead of the words “positive” and “negative” he used the absolute terms “existent” and “nonexistent.” Now he had arrived at the principle–Anaximander notwithstanding that this world of ours contains something which is existent, as well as something which is nonexistent. The existent should therefore not be sought out-side the world and beyond our horizon. Right here before us, everywhere, in all coming-to-be, there is contained an active something which is existent.

But now he was left with the task of formulating a more exact answer to the question “What is coming-to-be?” And this was the moment when he had to leap to keep from falling, although for natures such as Parmenides’ perhaps all leaping constitutes a kind of falling. Suffice it to say that we shall enter the fog, the mysticism of qualitas occulta and even, just a little, the realm of mythology. Parmenides, like Heraclitus, gazes at universal coming-to-be and at impermanence, and he can interpret passing-away only as though it were a fault of nonexistence. For how could the existent be guilty of passing away! But coming-to-be, too, must be produced with the help of the nonexistent, for the existent is always there. Of and by itself it could not come-to-be nor could it explain coming-to-be. Hence coming-to-be as well as passing-away would seem to be produced by the negative qualities. But since that which comes-to-be has a content which is lost in the process of passing away, it presupposes that the positive qualities (for they are the essence of such content) likewise participate in both processes of change. In brief, we now have the dictum that “For coming-to-be, the existent as well as the nonexistent are necessary; whenever they interact, we have coming-to-be.” But how are the positive and the negative to get together? Should they not forever flee each other, as contradictories, and thus make all coming-to-be impossible? Here Parmenides appeals to a qualitas occulta, to the mystic tendency of opposites to attract and unite, and he symbolizes the opposition in the name of Aphrodite and the empirically well-known relationship between masculinity and femininity. It is the power of Aphrodite that weds the opposites, the existent with the nonexistent. Desire unites the contradictory and mutually repellent elements: the result is coming-to-be. When desire is satiated, hatred and inner opposition drives the existent and the nonexistent apart once more-and man says, “All things pass.”

But no one lays hands with impunity on such fearsome abstractions as “the existent” and “the nonexistent.” Slowly, upon touching them, the blood congeals. There came the day when a strange insight befell Parmenides, an insight which seemed to withdraw the value from all his old combinations so that he felt like throwing them away like a bag of old worn-out coins. It is usually assumed that an external influence, in addition to the inwardly compelling consistency of such terms as “existent” and “nonexistent” shared in the invention of that fateful day. This external event is supposed to be Parmenides’ acquaintance with the theology of that ancient far-travelled rhapsodist, singer of mystic nature deification, the Colophonian Xenophanes. Throughout an extraordinary lifetime, Xenophanes lived as a travelling poet and through his travels became a widely informed and widely informative person who understood how to ask questions and tell stories. Heraclitus counted him among the polyhistorians and among “historical” natures in general, in the sense already alluded to. Whence and when he picked up the mystical tendency toward the one, and the “one forever at rest,” no one can now reconstruct. Perhaps it was the concept of an old man finally settled down, one before whose soul there appeared, after all the mobility of his wanderings and after all his restless learning and looking, the highest and greatest thing of all, a vision of divine rest, of the permanence of all things within a pantheistic archetypal peace. To me, by the way, it seems no more than accidental that in the same place, in Elea, two men should be living for a while who both carried in their minds a concept of unity. They did not form a school; they had nothing in common which one might have learned from the other and then passed along to others in turn. For the origin of their concepts of unity was a totally different one in each case, a downright opposite one in fact. If one of them did know the doctrine of the other, he would have had to translate it into a language of his own, even to understand it. But even in such translation the specific import of each would surely have been lost. Whereas Parmenides came to the unity of the existent purely by adherence to his supposed logic, spinning it out of the concepts of being and nonbeing, Xenophanes was a religious mystic who with his mystic unity belongs very typically to the sixth century. Even though he was not as cataclysmic a personality as Pythagoras, he shared his tendency and compulsion to improve human beings, to cleanse and to heal them, as he wandered from place to place. He is the teacher of ethics, though still on the rhapsodic level; in later times he would have been a Sophist. In his bold disapproval of the current mores and values he has not his equal in Greece. And to disapprove, he by no means withdraws into solitude, like Heraclitus and Plato, but stands up before the very public whose jubilant admiration of Homer, whose passionate yearning for the honors of the gymnastic festivals, whose worship of anthropomorphic stones he scourged wrathfully and scornfully, yet not in the quarrelsome fashion of a Thersites. The freedom of the individual finds its high point in Xenophanes, and it is in this almost boundless withdrawal from all conventionality that he is related more closely to Parmenides, not in that ultimate divine unity which he once saw in a vision befitting his century and which has hardly the expression or terminology in common with Parmenides’ one being, not to mention origin.

It was rather an opposite frame of mind in which Parmenides found his doctrine of being. On a certain day and in a certain frame of mind he tested his two interactive contradictories, whose mutual desire and hatred constitute the world and all coming-to-be. He tested the existent and the nonexistent, the positive and the negative properties-and suddenly he found that he could not get past the concept of a negative duality, the concept of non-existence. Can some-thing which is not be a quality? Or, more basically, can something which is not, be? For the only single form of knowledge which we trust immediately and absolutely and to deny which amounts to insanity is the tautology A = A. But just this tautological insight proclaims inexorably: What is not, is not. What is, is. And suddently Parmenides felt a monstrous logical sin burdening his whole previous life. Had he not light-heartedly always assumed that there are such things as negative qualities, nonexistent entities, that, in other words, A is not A? But only total perversity of thinking could have done so. To be sure, he reflected, the great mass of people had always made the same perverse judgment; he had merely participated in a universal crime against logic. But the same moment that shows him his crime illuminates him with a glorious discovery. He has found a principle, the key to the cosmic secret, remote from all human illusion. Now, grasping the firm and awful hand of tautological truth about being, he can climb down, into the abyss of all things.

On his way down he meets Heraclitus–an unhappy encounter. Caring now for nothing except the strictest separation of being from non-being, he must hate in his deepest soul the antinomy-play of Heraclitus. Propositions such as “We are and at the same time are not,” or “Being and nonbeing is at the same time the same and not the same,” tangle and cloud everything which he had just illuminated and distinguished. They drove him to fury. “Away with those people,” he screamed, “who seem to have two heads and yet know nothing. Everything is in flux with them, including their thinking. They stand in dull astonishment before things and yet must be deaf as well as blind to mix up the opposites the way they do!” The irrationality of the masses, glorified in playful antinomies and lauded as the culmination of all wisdom was now a painful and incomprehensible experience.

And then he really dipped into the cold bath of his awe-inspiring abstractions. That which truly is must be forever present; you cannot say of it “it was,” “it will be.” The existent cannot have come to be, for out of what could it have come? Out of the nonexistent? But the nonexistent is not, and cannot produce anything. Out of the existent? This would reproduce nothing but itself. It is the same with passing away. Passing away is just as impossible as coming-to-be, as is all change, all decrease, all increase. In fact the only valid proposition that can be stated is “Everything of which you can say ‘it has been’ or ‘it will be’ is not; of the existent you can never say ‘it is not.”‘ The existent is indivisible, for where is the second power that could divide it? It is immobile, for where could it move to? It can be neither infinitely large nor infinitely small, for it is perfect, and a perfectly given infinity is a contradiction. Thus it hovers: bounded, finished, immobile, everywhere in balance, equally perfect at each point, like a globe, though not in space, for this space would be a second existent. But there cannot be several existents. For in order to separate them, there would have to be something which is not existent, a supposition which cancels itself. Thus there is only eternal unity.

And now, whenever Parmenides glances back-ward at the world of come-to-be, the world whose existence he used to try to comprehend by means of ingenious conjectures, he becomes angry with his eyes for so much as seeing come-to-be, with his ears for hearing it. “Whatever you do, do not be guided by your dull eyes,” is now his imperative, “nor by your resounding ears, nor by your tongue, but test all things with the power of your thinking alone.” Thus he accomplished the immensely significant first critique of man’s apparatus of knowledge, a critique as yet in-adequate but doomed to bear dire consequences. By wrenching apart the senses and the capacity for abstraction, in other words by splitting up mind as though it were composed of two quite separate capacities, he demolished intellect itself, encouraging man to indulge in that wholly erroneous distinction between “spirit” and “body” which, especially since Plato, lies upon philosophy like a curse. All sense perceptions, says Parmenides, yield but illusions. And their main illusoriness lies in their pretense that the non-existent coexists with the existent, that Becoming, too, has Being. All the manifold colorful world known to experience, all the transformations of its qualities, all the orderliness of its ups and downs, are cast aside mercilessly as mere semblance and illusion. Nothing may be learned from them. All effort spent upon this false deceitful world which is futile and negligible, faked into a lying existence by the senses is therefore wasted. When one makes as total a judgment as does Parmenides about the whole of the world, one ceases to be a scientist, an investigator into any of the world’s parts. One’s sympathy toward phenomena atrophies; one even develops a hatred for phenomena including oneself, a hatred for being unable to get rid of the everlasting deceitfulness of sensation. Henceforward truth shall live only in the palest, most abstracted generalities, in the empty husks of the most indefinite terms, as though in a house of cobwebs. And be-side such truth now sits our philosopher, like-wise as bloodless as his abstractions, in the spun out fabric of his formulas. A spider at least wants blood from its victims. The Parmenidean philosopher hates most of all the blood of his victims, the blood of the empirical reality which was sacrificed and shed by him.

And this was a Greek who flourished approximately during the outbreak of the Ionian Revolt. In those days it was possible for a Greek to flee from an over-abundant reality as though it were but the tricky scheming of the imagination-and to flee, not like Plato into the land of eternal ideas, into the workshop of the world-creator, feasting one’s eyes on the unblemished unbreakable archetypes, but into the rigor mortis of the coldest emptiest concept of all, the concept of being. Let us be exceedingly careful not to interpret such a remarkable event according to false analogies. The Parmenidean escape was not the flight from the world taken by the Hindu philosophers; it was not evoked by a profound religious conviction as to the depravity, ephemerality and accursedness of human existence. Its ultimate goal, peace in being, was not striven after as though it were the mystic absorption into one all-sufficing ecstatic state of mind which is the enigma and vexation of ordinary minds. Parmenides’ thinking conveys nothing whatever of the dark intoxicating fragrance of Hindu wisdom which is not entirely absent from Pythagoras and Empedocles. No, the strange thing about his philosophic feat at this period is just its lack of fragrance, of color, soul, and form, its total lack of blood, religiosity and ethical warmth. What astonishes us is the degree of schematism and abstraction (in a Greek!), above all, the terrible energetic striving for certainty in an epoch which otherwise thought mythically and whose imagination was highly mobile and fluid. “Grant me, ye gods, but one certainty,” runs Parmenides’ prayer, “and if it be but a log’s breadth on which to lie, on which to ride upon the sea of uncertainty. Take away every-thing that comes-to-be, everything lush, colorful, blossoming, illusory, everything that charms and is alive. Take all these for yourselves and grant me but the one and only, poor empty certainty.”

The prelude in Parmenides’ philosophy is played with ontology as its theme. Experience nowhere offered him being as he imagined it, but he concluded its existence from the fact that he was able to think it. This is a conclusion which rests on the assumption that we have an organ of knowledge which reaches into the essence of things and is independent of experience. The content of our thinking, according to Parmenides, is not present in sense perception but is an additive from somewhere else, from an extra-sensory world to which we have direct access by means of our thinking. Now Aristotle asserted against all similar reasoning that existence is never an intrinsic part of essence. One may never infer the existentia of being from the concept being-whose essentia is nothing more than being itself. The logical truth of the pair of opposites being and nonbeing is completely empty, if the object of which it is a reflection cannot be given, i.e., the sense perception from which this antithesis was abstracted. Without such derivation from a perception, it is no more than a playing with ideas, which in fact yields no knowledge. For the mere logical criterion of truth, as Kant teaches it, the correspondence of knowledge with the universal and formal laws of understanding and reason, is, to be sure, the conditio sine qua non, the negative condition of all truth. But further than this, logic cannot go, and the error as to content rather than form cannot be detected by using any logical touch-stone whatever. As soon as we seek the content of the logical truth of the paired propositions “What is, is; what is not, is not,” we cannot in-deed find any reality whatever which is construrted strictly in accordance with those propositions. I may say of a tree that “it is” in distinction to things which are not trees; I may say “it is coming to be” in distinction to itself seen at a different time; I may even say “it is not,” as for example in “it is not yet a tree” when I am looking at a shrub. Words are but symbols for the relations of things to one another and to us; nowhere do they touch upon absolute truth. Above all, the word “being” designates only the most general relationship which connects all things, as does the word “nonbeing.” But if the existence of things themselves cannot be proved, surely the inter-relationship of things, their so-called being or nonbeing, will advance us not a step toward the land of truth. Through words and concepts we shall never reach beyond the wall of relations, to some sort of fabulous primal ground of things. Even in the pure forms of sense and understanding, in space, time and causality, we gain nothing that resembles an eternal verity. It is absolutely impossible for a subject to see or have insight into something while leaving itself out of the picture, so impossible that knowing and being are the most opposite of all spheres. And if Parmenides could permit himself, in the uninformed naivete of his time, so far as critique of the intellect is concerned, to derive absolute being from a forever subjective concept, today, after Kant, it. is certainly reckless ignorance to attempt it. Now and again, particularly among badly taught theologians who would like to play philosopher, the task of philosophy is designated as “comprehending the absolute by means of consciousness,” even in the form of “The absolute is already present, how could it otherwise be sought?” (Hegel) or “Being must be given to us somehow, must be somehow attainable; if it were not we could not have the concept.” (Beneke) The concept of being! As though it did not show its low empirical origin in its very etymology For esse basically means “to breathe.” And if man uses it of all things other than himself as well, he projects his conviction that he himself breathes and lives by means of a metaphor, i.e., a non-logical process, upon all other things. He comprehends their existence as a “breathing” by analogy with his own. The original meaning of the word was soon blurred, but enough remains to make it obvious that man imagines the existence of other things by analogy with his own existence, in other words anthropomorphically and in any event, with non-logical projection. But even for man-quite aside from his projection–the proposition “I breathe, therefore being exists” is wholly insufficient. The same objection must be made against it as must be made against ambulo, ergo sum or ergo est.

The second concept, of more content than being, likewise invented by Parmenides though not used by him as skillfully as by his disciple Zeno, is that of the infinite. Nothing infinite can exist, for to assume it would yield the contradictory concept of a perfect infinity. Now since our reality, our given world, everywhere bears the stamp of just such perfect infinity, the word signifies in its very nature a contradiction to logic and hence to the real, and is therefore an illusion, a lie, a phantasm. Zeno especially makes use of indirect proof. He says, for example, “There can be no movement from one place to another, for if there were such movement, we would have a perfect infinity, but this is an impossibility. Achilles cannot catch up with the tortoise which has a small start over him, for in order to reach even the starting point of the tortoise, Achilles must have traversed innumerable, infinitely many spaces: first half of the interval, then a fourth of it, an eighth, a sixteenth, and so on ad infinitum. If he in reality does catch up with the tortoise, this is an un-logical phenomenon, not a real one. It is not true Being; it is merely an illusion. For it is never possible to finish the infinite.” Another popular device of this doc-trine is the example of the flying and yet resting arrow. At each moment of its flight it occupies a position. In this position it is at rest. But can we say that the sum of infinitely many positions of rest is identical with motion? Can we say that resting, infinitely repeated, equals motion, which is its contrary? The infinite is here utilized as the catalyst of reality; in its presence reality dissolves. If the concepts are firm, eternal and exist-ent (remembering that being and thinking coincide for Parmenides), if in other words the infinite can never be complete, if rest can never become motion, then the arrow has really never flown at all. It never left its initial position of rest; no moment of time has passed. Or, to express it differently: in this so-called, but merely alleged reality, there is really neither time nor space nor motion. Finally, even the arrow itself is an illusion, for it has its origin in the many, in the sense-produced phantasmagoria of the non-one. Let us assume that the arrow has true being. Then it would be immobile, timeless, uncreated rigid and eternal-which is impossible to conceive. Let us assume that motion is truly real. Then there would be no rest, hence no position for the arrow, hence no space-which is impossible to conceive. Let us assume that time is real. Then it could not be infinitely divisible. The time that the arrow needs would have to consist of a limited number of moments; each of these moments would have to be an atomon–which is impossible to conceive. All our conceptions lead to contradictions as soon as their empirically given content, drawn from our perceivable world, is taken as an eternal verity. If absolute motion exists, then space does not; if absolute space exists, then motion does not; if absolute being exists, then the many does not. Wouldn’t one think that confronted with such logic a man would attain the insight that such concepts do not touch the heart of things, do not undo the tangle of reality? Parmenides and Zeno, on the contrary, hold fast to the truth and universal validity of the concepts and discard the perceivable world as the antithesis to all true and universally valid concepts, as the objectification of illogic and contradiction. The starting point of all their proof is the wholly unprovable, improbable assumption that with our capacity to form concepts we possess the decisive and highest criterion as to being and nonbeing, i.e., as to objective reality and its antithesis. Instead of being corrected and tested against reality (considering that they are in fact derived from it) the concepts, on the contrary, are supposed to measure and direct reality and, in case reality contradicts logic, to condemn the former. In order to impose upon the concepts this capacity for judging reality, Parmenides had to ascribe to them the being which was for him the only true being. Thinking and that single uncreated perfect globe of existentiality were not to be comprehended as two different types of being, since of course there could be no dichotomy in being. Thus an incredibly bold notion became necessary, the notion of the identity of thinking and being. No form of perception, no symbol, no allegory could help here; the notion was utterly beyond conceiving, but-it was necessary. In its very lack of any and all possibility for being translated into sensation, it celebrated the highest triumph over the world and the claims of the senses. Thinking and that bulbous-spherical being, wholly dead-inert and rigid-immobile must, according to Parmenides’ imperative, coincide and be utterly the same thing. What a shock to human imagination! But let their identity contradict sensation! Just that fact guarantees better than anything else that this was a conception not derived from the senses.

One might advance against Parmenides a sturdy pair of arguments ad hominem or ex concessis. They would not bring the truth to light, to be sure, though they do expose the falsehood inherent in the absolute separation of senses and concepts, and in the identity of being and thinking. In the first place: if thinking in concepts, on the part of reason, is real, then the many and motion must partake of reality also, for reasoned thinking is mobile. It moves from concept to concept. It is mobile, in other words, within a plurality of realities. Against this, no objection can be made; it is quite impossible to designate thinking as a rigid persistence, as an eternally unmoved thinking-in-and-on-itself on the part of a unity. In the second place: if only fraud and semblance emanate from the senses, and if in truth there is only the real identity of being and thinking, what then are the senses themselves? Evidently a part of semblance, since they do not coincide with thinking, and since their product, the sensuous world, does not coincide with semblance. But if the senses are semblance, to whom do they dissemble? How, being unreal, can they deceive? Nonbeing cannot even practice deceit. Therefore the whence of illusion and semblance remains an enigma, in fact a contradiction. We shall call these two argumenta ad hominem one, the argument based on the mobility of reason; two, the argument based on the origin of semblance. From the first follows the reality of motion and of the many, from the second the impossibility of Parmenidean semblance. In both cases, we are still accepting Parmenides’ main doctrine concerning being as well-founded. But this doctrine merely states, “The existent alone has being; the nonexistent does not.” Now if motion has being, then what is true of being in general and in all cases is true of motion: it is uncreated, eternal, indestructible, without increase or decrease. But if semblance is denied of this world (by means of the question as to its origin), if the stage of so-called coming-to-be, of change -in other words our whole multi-formed restless colorful and rich existence-is protected against Parmenidean discard, then it is necessary to characterize this world of interaction and transformation as a sum of such truly existent essences, existing simultaneously in all eternity. In this sup-position too there is no room for transformation in a narrow sense, i.e., for coming-to-be. But what we have now is a multiplicity which has true being; all the properties have true being, as has motion. About each and every moment of this world, even if we choose moments that lie a millenium apart, one would have to be able to say: all true essences contained in the world are existent simultaneously, unchanged, undiminished, without increase, without decrease. A millenium later exactly the same holds true; nothing has meanwhile changed. If, in spite of this, the world looks totally different from time to time, this is not an illusion, not mere semblance, but rather the consequence of everlasting motion. True being is moved sometimes this way, sometimes that way, together asunder, upwardly downward, withinly in all directions.

Coreheim Testimonials

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Vampire Counts in Mordheim

Count Vlad von Carstein and his wife Isabella have ruled the province of Sylvania for as long as anyone can remember – peasants whisper of some dark secret, Witch Hunters revile them, and the Priests of Sigmar shun their court. Indeed, Sylvania has the most dire reputation of all the provinces of the Empire. Few men sent to spy on the rulers of Sylvania have ever returned from those dark Sylvanian forests, and then rarely with their sanity intact.

In the dimly-lit chamber of the Drakenhof castle, on a throne of black obsidian, sits Vlad von Carstein, the ruler of Sylvania. He waits in shadows, having set himself apart from the politics and bickering of the Empire. For he holds a terrible secret: he, and all the ruling aristocracy of his province are Vampires, undying monsters from beyond the grave. Here he patiently waits, drinking the blood of maidens from gold goblets. For many long years Vlad has gathered his strength and mustered his Undead legions in secrecy. One day soon he will march from the forests of Sylvania at the head of an army of restless dead. The pieces of magic stone that lie scattered among the ruins of Mordheim can give the Count the power to challenge the nobles of the Empire and enslave the men of the Old World.

Wyrdstone holds enough captured magical energy to unleash a great spell of doom to rival that of Nagash the Black. If the Count is successful, he will raise all the dead between the Worlds Edge Mountains and the borders of Stirland, and go to war against the divided rulers of the Empire. His plans laid out, Vlad sends his thralls, the immortal Vampires, to do his bidding. During dark, moonless nights, black coaches arrive at the gates of Mordheim carrying coffins. Ghouls scuttle from their hiding places to greet them, and corpses are stirred by a command which the living cannot hear. Following the commands of the Vampire, they hunt for shards of wyrdstone. The night belongs to the Undead, and in Mordheim it is always night.

Official Coreheim FAQ

Q: Do you need Weapons Training to use Lance?

A: Yes. The only warrior who can use it from the start is the Freelancer Hired Sword.
This is confusing to some, but actually just copied over from normal Mordheim.

***

Q: A model is armed with a club and a sword and has the whirlwind skill. The model also has I 3. when you elect to have the combat resolved through whirlwind does that mean one attack is at I 4 (sword) and one attack at I 3 (club)?

A: Yes. A Model can have two I values because of this.

***

Q: Whirlwind and striking first for charging: If an enemy model charges my model with the whirlwind speed skill and both models have the same Inititative, does the charging model strike first or would it be a roll off?

A: Roll-off: Striking in I-order replaces the normal strike order.
Chargers striking first is part of the normal strike order.

***

Q: Magical Movement and Shooting. A goblin armed with a short bow half moves. Then in the shooting phase the shaman casts the “here we go” spell and the goblin with the bow half moves again. Does the goblin get to shoot this turn?

A: Yes, because not getting to shoot is a rule that is directly conditioned upon having made running move that turn. Since the goblin made no running move (but only two half-moves) it is legal for the goblin to shoot this turn.

***

Q: Can flagellants gain BS points? They start with a – for their BS skill but as they are humans their max BS can be 7. Just wondering if they can be improved or not.

A: No improvement. The – is to prevent the player from gaining a useless upgrade. Though if the player WANTS to have a BS increase, I see no problem with that.

***

Q: If somebody declares a charge against a unit that is both out of sight, and requiring a climbing test, which initiative test do you take first (the ‘do I see’ test, or the ‘can I climb’ test?).

A: Whatever comes first in the charge path (climb or corner).

***

Q: If you can climb but cannot see, do you still move forward the four inches for a failed charge?

A: Yes but stop before getting within 1″ so you’ll be a sitting duck for your opponent next turn.

***

Q: What about in the opposite circumstance?

A: If you can see but not climb, then stop where you would have climbed up/down.

***

Q: If you fail one initiative check, do you still have to take the second?

A: Depends. If you stop because you fail the climb test, then you don’t move any further, but if you stop because you fail the look-around-corners test then you may still be moved towards the place where you will climb as part of the “moved 4″ towards target” mechanic. In such a case, take a climb test unless successfully climbing up/down would place you within 1″ of an enemy (as that would trigger close combat.)

In either case, failing any one of these checks always results in a failed charge.

Antifon fragmenter på dansk

Sofisten Antifon (480–411 f.v.t.) var en græsk filosof, retoriker og statsmand, som levede samtidig med Sokrates. Antifon skrev flere større værker, men disse er kun overleveret som fragmenter. Antifon udtalte sig både om politik (se nedenfor) men også om generelle forhold i livet og mellem mennesker.

front.tif

Fragment DK 87B60: Der er intet, som er vigtigere for menneskene end uddannelse, for enhver ting, som påbegyndes korrekt, er også tilbøjelig til at ende korrekt. Det er ligesom, at det frø, som man sår i jorden, bestemmer, hvilke frembringelser man bør vente sig. Så når man sår god uddannelse i en ung krop, så lever og blomstrer den igennem den persons levetid, og hverken regn eller tørke ødelægger den.

Fragment DK 87B61: Der er intet værre for mænd end manglen på disciplin. Det var genkendelsen af dette faktum, som førte yngre generationer til at vænne deres sønner til disciplin og til at gøre, som der blev sagt, lige fra starten. Meningen med dette var, at de således ikke skulle lade sig gå på af alvorlige ændringer, de mødte [som voksne].

Fragment DK 87B62: Hvad end for en type person, som man tilbringer størstedelen af sin dag med, ham vil man uundgåeligt komme til at ligne, hvad angår egenskaber.

Fragment DK 87B59: En mand, som aldrig har begæret eller erfaret noget noget gement, er ikke en tilbageholden mand, for han har aldrig skullet overkomme noget for at styre sig selv.

Fragment DK 87B51: Det er utrolig nemt at finde fejl ved livet, min ven. Det indeholder intet agtpågiveligt eller bemærkelsesværdigt, men alt er småligt, skrøbeligt, flygtigt og bundet op på den argeste sorg.

Fragment DK 87B53a: Nogle mennesker lever ikke det liv, de har, men optager sig selv grundigt med planer, som om de havde et andet liv at leve end det, de har. Og i mellemtiden passerer tiden dem forbi.

Fragment DK 87B65: Mennesker, der har venner, fejler ofte i at genkende dem og opsøger i stedet dem, som smigrer [de folk, der har] velstand, og dåner over [folk, der har været] heldige i livet.

***

Antifons politiske teori var en slags forløber for naturretstænkningen. I et interview med Weekendavisen foretaget af Frederik Stjernfelt påstod den britiske historiker Jonathan Israel, at ingen af de gamle græske filosoffer var demokrater. Det er forkert – Antifon var demokrat.

I Antifons politiske traktat Om sandheden hedder det bl.a.:

Fragment: De, der er født af kendte fædre, viser vi respekt og ære, mens dem, der kommer fra ydmyge husstande, dem viser vi hverken respekt eller ære. I det henseende opfører vi os som barbarer mod hinanden. For af natur er vi alle lige, både barbarer og grækere har en tilsvarende oprindelse: for det er passende at opfylde den naturlige tilfredsstillelse, som er nødvendig for alle mennesker. Det er passende for alle mennesker at opfylde deres naturlige behov på samme måde, og i alt dette er ingen af ​​os anderledes enten som barbar eller som græker, for vi indånder alle luften med munden og næsebor, og vi alle spiser med hænderne.

På Antifons tid diskuterede sofister og filosoffer ivrigt, om menneskets lod primært skyldtes kultur (nomos) eller natur (physis). Her melder Antifon sig som naturtilhænger, idet han ser naturen som en tilstand af frihed, som mennesker har indskrænket med sine love:

Fragment: De fleste af de ting, der er lovlige, er [ikke desto mindre] … naturstridige. Ved lov er det blevet fastlagt for øjnene, hvad de skal se, og hvad de ikke bør se, for ørerne, hvad de skal høre, og hvad de ikke bør høre, for tungen, hvad den skal sige, og hvad den ikke skal sige, for hænderne, hvad de skal gøre, og hvad de ikke skal gøre … og for sindet, hvad det bør ønske, og hvad det ikke bør ønske.

I modsætning til den ældre generation af sofister bekendte Antifon sig som sagt til en form for naturret, som han så afspejlet i det større billede af naturlove. Han mente, at universets struktur kunne hjælpe os med at afgøre menneskets status i det biologiske og sociale liv. Alle mænd er af natur lige, som det fremgår af deres fysiske konstruktion og biologiske funktioner. Sociale divisioner skyldes menneskelige beslutninger og dermed kultur (nomos), der krænker den naturlige ret til ligestilling.

Fælles front mod Disneyficeringen af politik

af Ryan Smith, forfatter

Tak til Niels Jespersen for et godt indlæg om Disneyficeringen af politik i Information 10. september. Jespersen har ret i mange af sine pointer, deriblandt at konservatismen i dag er svundet ind til blot at være en værdipolitisk overbygning til liberalismen, at der ikke har været mange nye argumenter i sommerens liberalisme/konservatisme-debat i forhold til tidligere debatter om samme emne, at diskussionen om ‘dannelsen’ mest af alt har udfoldet sig som en negativ opbyggelighed, og at de konservatives fædrelandsfølelse bestemt ikke afholder dem fra at bruge polske håndværkere.

På den måde har det været forfriskende at læse Jespersens kritik fra venstre. Men set med borgerligt-liberale øjne, så tager Jespersen også fejl et par steder:

Først er der dæmoniseringen af spekulanter. “Hvis politibetjenten, skolelæreren eller dommeren tænkte som spekulanten, ville samfundet kollapse,” skriver Jespersen. Men et frit og moderne samfund er netop præget af en høj grad af specialisering. Derfor er der intet at sige til, at alle i samfundet ikke kan tænke som én specifik faggruppe. Samfundet ville også kollapse, hvis alle tænkte som sosu-assistenter, ejendomsmæglere eller journalister. Det liberale demokrati er netop kendetegnet ved, at det er større end nogen enkeltgruppes tankegang eller verdenssyn.

Dernæst er der tankerne om konservatismen som en “tabt allieret” i venstrefløjens søgen efter et samfund, der tjener det jævne folks interesser. Her burde Jespersen se til de liberale, blandt andet fordi de tanker, som Nyrup-regeringen søsatte i starten af 90’erne om nedsættelse af skatter og afgifter, lav skat på arbejde og stigende konkurrenceevne, i store træk er den politik, som Liberal Alliance kæmper for i dag. Som sociologen Henrik Dahl samt de livslange socialdemokrater Carsten og Karen West har sagt, så svigtede Socialdemokratiet sin arv, da der gik offentlig sektorisme i partiet. Siden folketingetsvalget 2011 har Socialdemokratiet genfundet noget af sin socialliberale arv, men denne arv har netop bragt Socialdemokratiet tættere på Liberal Alliance, alt imens det har bragt begge partier længere væk fra den æstetisk-konservative position, som vi har set udbasuneret i sommerens debat.

For det tredje lader Jespersen til at tro, at konservative og liberale har været lige gode om at æstetisere og Disneyficere politik i forbindelse med sommerens debat. Det har netop ikke været tilfældet. Det liberale grundsyn er, at æstetik ikke har noget at gøre i politik. Således skriver landsformand for Liberal Alliances Ungdom Rasmus Brygger: ”Forskellen mellem liberalismen og andre ideologier er netop, at vi ikke blander personlige præferencer sammen med politiske.” Det nye i sommerens debat om liberalisme og konservatisme har – som Jespersen rigtigt siger – ikke været de analytiske argumenter, men derimod de konservatives æstetiske mobning af liberale og venstreorienterede.

Således omtaler Jespersen den æstetiske mobning som ”en fiks måde, hvorpå hattedamer M/K uden politisk projekt kan lægge afstand til de lavere klasser ved at henvise til egne, udefinerbare fortræffeligheder.” Her ligger Jespersen på linje med Brygger, som skriver: ”Man foranlediges til at tro, at kulturkonservative ikke går i jakkesæt, i operaen eller på fint museum, fordi de kan lide det, men fordi det er et instrument, hvorved de kan hæve sig over ‘pøblen.’” Jespersen er altså enig med LA og Rasmus Brygger: Æstetiseringen af politik er et greb, som anvendes til at tryne de lavere klasser og ramme dem på deres person, snarere end på substansen af deres argumenter.

Jespersen skal have tak for sit indlæg om Disneyficeringen af politik. Men han bør genoverveje, om de liberale virkelig er hans fjender her. Der er nemlig god mening i, at liberale og venstreorienterede gør fælles front mod den konservative æstetisering af politik, som vi har set i løbet af sommeren.

Liberalisme og materialisme

Liberalisme og naturalistisk materialisme

I løbet af de sidste 15 år er materialismen begyndt at stå stadig stærkere blandt videnskabsformidlere som Steven Pinker, Sam Harris og Stephen Hawking. Ofte lader disse tænkere ikke selv til at være klar over, at deres materialisme har karakter af en metafysisk doktrin – selv tror de, at de ”bare følger videnskaben.” Samtidig udøver disse tænkere stor indflydelse på liberale, både i udlandet og herhjemme, og således får de smuglet en materialistisk metafysik ind i liberalismen, som ikke nødvendigvis er en velsignelse.

Af Ryan Smith

“Hvad er ​​virkelighedens karakter? Hvor kommer det hele fra? Har universet brug for en skaber? … Traditionelt har disse spørgsmål været spørgsmål for filosofien, men filosofien er død. Filosofien har ikke holdt trit med den moderne udvikling inden for videnskaberne, herunder især fysik. Videnskabsmænd er i dag dem, der bærer opdagelsens fakkel i vores søgen efter viden. ”  – Stephen Hawking og Leonard Mlodinow[1]

Den gren af filosofien, som beskæftiger sig med metafysik,  er i løbet af de sidste 15 år blevet tiltagende marginaliseret (og forståelsen af den tiltagende karikeret). Uden for akademia forveksles metafysik med okkultisme, vampyrer og spåkoner, og blandt veluddannede mennesker synes slutningen at lyde, at eftersom videnskaben har gjort store fremskridt i løbet af de sidste 25 år, så er det i sig selv et bevis på, at ”videnskaben har ret,” og at vi ikke behøver beskæftige os med metafysik.

Paradoksalt nok så har denne naive holdning til metafysikken dog gjort, at der i de senere års videnskabsformidling er opstået en standard-metafysik, nemlig materialismen (i nyere inkarnationer også kaldet fysikalismen), som man antager som sand ”hinsides metafysik” på utroligt løsagtige præmisser. Blandt de folk, som står på mål for denne ”naive materialisme,” er Steven Pinker, Sam Harris og Stephen Hawking, for nu blot at nævne nogle få af de helt store navne. Flere af baggrundsantagelserne i disse bøger peger frem imod ting, som styrker et liberalkonservativt verdenssyn og som på det deskriptive niveau er en udfordring for en socialistisk dagsorden, og derfor er disse tænkeres gennemslagskraft (samlet set) størst på højrefløjen. (Eksempelvis forklarede Harvard-psykologen Steven Pinker i sin bog The Blank Slate, hvordan der er forskel på mænd og kvinder, ligesom han i sin bog The Better Angels of Our Nature forklarede, hvordan frihandel og kapitalisme bør anskues som grundlæggende positivt. Kapitlets slogan: ”Make capitalism, not war.”)[2]

Det er i høj grad lykkedes disse tænkere at videregive deres materialistiske meta-antagelse om, at der ikke findes noget foruden materie i universet. Således argumenterer flere af ovennævnte forfattere for, at bevidsthed blot er et ubetydeligt epifænomen; en skyggelignende genspejling af materien (fra eksempelvis den fysiske konfiguration, som tilsammen udgør en hjerne).[3] Fri vilje afvises også med henvisning til videnskabelige forsøgsresultater, mens man ignorerer (eller ikke kender til) de svære spørgsmål, som står i vejen for sådan en afvisning, som fremsat af Popper og Kant.[4]

Materialisme som meta-antagelse

Via et af historiens mere ironiske luner er det således sket, at netop som den ordodokse marxisme er styrtet i grus, og venstrefløjen har forladt den metafysiske materialisme, som så mange læste ind i Marx, netop da melder der sig en frisk kohorte af liberale til at overtage den kasserede marxistiske metafysik – og tilmed uden at være klar over, at det, de støtter op om, er metafysik.[5]

Venstrefløjen har derimod reageret ved at bevæge sig i retning af epistemologisk relativisme: Efter marxismens sammenbrud er man nu blevet skeptisk over for videnskaben i det hele taget: Videnskaben er blot en ortodoksi, der har lukket sig om sig selv (Derrida),[6] sandheden er blot sand i forhold til vort eget begær for at finde den (Lyotard),[7]eller også er videnskabelige resultater blot et produkt af den magt, der er indlejret i de praksisser, der omgiver produktionen af viden (Foucault).[8]

Vi er således vant til at tænke på den naturalistiske materialisme, som fortrinsvis findes på højrefløjen, som videnskabelig, mens vi tænker på den epistemologiske relativisme, som fortrinsvis finder på venstrefløjen, som anti-videnskabelig. Men som vi skal se, er den poststrukturalistiske metafysik (trist som den er) faktisk mere kompatibel med videnskaben end den naive materialisme, som i disse år trives blandt liberale.

Tilbage til Hume og Kant

Så godt som alle veje i de sidste 100 års liberale tænkning fører på en eller anden måde tilbage til Hume. Selv Jefferson (og Rothbard), som ikke brød sig om den udvikling, som Hume havde haft på den liberale traditon, måtte dog erkende, at Hume var en kapacitet, som man blev nødt til at forholde sig til. (Undtagelsen herfor er Ayn Rand, som kaldte Kant og Hume for ”forrædere,” fordi deres filosofi gjorde menneskets erkendelseskræfter ”impotente” i forhold til hendes egen formodning om, at hun kunne erkende tingen-i-sig-selv.[9]) Og i det tyvende århundrede var f.eks. Popper og Hayek strikse humeanere, der tog Humes epistemologiske kritik alvorligt (Popper beskrives ofte som materialist, men hans metafysik er snarere en blanding af materialisme, cartesiansk dualisme, humeansk kausalitetskritik og platonisk idelære, alt sammen ”anvendt udad” med en selvkritisk mistillid til menneskets dømmekraft).[10]

Hvad angår den nylige udvikling inden for videnskabsformidling (og sågar også professional filosofi), så er man nu nået til et punkt, hvor man – tilsyneladende uden at tænke over det –  blæser løs, mens man endnu har munden fuld af mel. Resultatet er ikke kønt: På den ene side genspiller man ”Hume’s Greatests Hits”, idet man loyalt bekender, at man betvivler, at mennesket nogensinde kan kortlægge kausalitetsforhold pålideligt, mens man på den anden side opfører sig, som om argumenter, som er baseret på induktion, kan udstyre videnskaben med en sikkerhed, som er ”hinsides metafysik.”[11]

Men hvad er så Humes egen metafysik? Jo, i stor stil er det ikke at have nogen metafysik. Hume var empirisk-sindet skeptiker i disse ords oprindelige betydning (empirisk forstået som orienteret efter udefrakommende indtryk på forståelsen, og skeptiker forstået som at han undlod at fælde dom over de ting, som lå uden for selve disse indtryk). Humes empiriske skepticisme er dermed langt mere radikal, end de fleste filosofibøger i dag giver indtryk af. Således kunne Hume skrive følgende:

”Vores sanser informerer os om farven, vægten og konsistensen af brød, men hverken fornuften eller sanserne kan nogensinde informere os om de kvaliteter, som gør brødet passende for ernæring og opretholdende af den menneskelige krop.”[12]

”Kan nogensinde informere os…” ! Glem proteiner, kulhydrater, vitaminer, mineraler osv. Vi kan ikke erfare dem som indtryk, direkte, og således hører de under rubrikken metafysik. Så radikal en position er der ingen, som vil påtage sig i dag, og når det forholder sig sådan, så hænger det sammen med videnskabens stadig større succeser siden Humes tid. I dag ville det virke pubertært, hvis man insisterede på at undlade at fælde dom over, hvorvidt proteiner, kulhydrater, vitaminer, m.v. virkelig findes. Men den eneste epistemologiske forskel på vor egen tid og så Hume og Kants tid er en øget mængde empiriske tests, som – stik imod Humes anbefalinger til os – søger at kortlægge kausalitetsforhold.[13] Selvom moderne videnskabsmænd og filosoffer altså taler varmt om Humes epistemologi udadtil, så ignorerer de samtidig alt, hvad han hvad rådede dem til at huske på, indadtil. Få af de mennesker, som i dag går omkring og taler varmt om Hume, ville være enige i Humes synsmåde om, at der absolut intet håb er for, at mennesker kan opnå en rationel indsigt i virkelighedens struktur.[14] (Denne sidste overvejelse er ydermere ekstremt udslagsgivende for, hvilken type liberalisme det er meningsfuldt at tilslutte sig. Hvis Hume har ret i, at mennesker aldrig kan opnå en rationel indsigt i virkelighedens sande struktur, så kan vi højest være en slags klassisk liberale eller liberalkonservative. Det amerikanske Libertarian Party, med dets fokus på nonaggression og frivillighed baseret på et fuldstændig rationelt system, er således et eksempel på en art liberalisme, som det ikke ville give mening at tilslutte sig, hvis man var enig med Hume.)

Humes epistemologikritik blev aldrig løst tilfredsstillende (af andre end måske Kant), men videnskaben fortsatte med at producere eksperimentelle resultater, som altså hviler på et usikkert epistemologisk grundlag. Det er også ok; videnskaben behøver ikke nødvendigvis nogen ultimativ epistemologi. Men det er netop fraværet af en sådan, som betyder, at videnskabelige resultater ikke fortæller os noget om, hvad der er sandt i en metafysisk kontekst. Man kan således ikke slutte fra videnskabelige resultater, som peger i retning af en materialistisk kausalitet på fænomenniveau, til en bredere metafysik, som i sidste ende er materialisme.

Går man blot ét led tilbage i striben af ”naturalistiske materialister”, til biologen E.O. Wilson, som har lagt grundlaget for meget af den nuværende bølge af materialistisk naturalisme, og som Steven Pinker omtaler som en forgænger i The Blank Slate, så var Wilson ganske bevidst om dette ”trin op” fra fysik til metafysik:[15]

”Videnskabelig materialisme [er]et metafysisk verdenssyn. … Det kan hverken bevises med logik på baggrund af principper eller føres tilbage til nogen definitiv serie af empiriske tests … [Det er] ikke mere end en ekstrapolation af den konsistente succes, som kendetegner naturvidenskabernes historie.”[16]

Og det er netop dette trin, som Pinker, Harris, og Hawking m.fl. så frejdigt ignorerer, når de udbreder deres naturalistiske materialisme, som ”påvist af videnskaben.” (Alting var bedre før i tiden – det er lige til at blive konservativ af.)

Klassiske problemer med materialisme

Vi kender det klassiske omverdensproblem, som formuleret af Descartes: Vi kan også undergå sindstilstande, hvor vi oplever materie som virkeligt i drømme og trancer. Så hvordan kan vi overhovedet vide, at den materie, som vi oplever i vågen tilstand, er virkelig, når nu drømmestadiets materie er falsk? Descartes’ løsning var som bekendt at konstatere, at han tænkte, og at han derfor var. Han kunne altså være sikker på, at han eksisterede som subjekt, men han kunne stadig ikke være sikker på materien uden for sine tanker (selvom han selv mente, at det kunne han).[17] Således var døren blevet åbnet for den moderne filosofis senere kritik af materialisme som metafysik. En kritik, som materialismen aldrig kom sig over igen.

Men ikke engang Descartes’ bevis var skudsikkert: ”Jeg tænker, derfor er jeg.” Men hvor er dette jeg overhovedet henne? Er det hjernen som helhed, der er et ’jeg’? Eller sidder der en lille kerne i hjernen, som udgør jeg’et? Da den skotske filosof David Hume tænkte efter og satte sig for at lede efter dette ’jeg’, kunne han ikke finde det noget sted i sig selv.[18] Der var tanker, men tilsyneladende intet ’jeg’ til at tænke dem.

Dermed bragte Hume den moderne filosofi tilbage på linje med de klassiske græske og buddhistiske filosoffer, som også havde erfaret, at ideen om et ’jeg’ bryder sammen, når den udsættes for såvel konceptuel som empirisk undersøgelse. Man kan simpelthen ikke finde et ’jeg’ uden transcendentale (metafysiske) støttepiller såsom sjæl, atman, karma, osv. Således er både ideen om et ’jeg’ og ideen om den videnskabelige metodes absolutte epistemologiske validitet blevet henvist til samme skæbne efter Humes kritik af disse: Som konventionelt sande, men uden at hvile på noget absolut grundlag. Som et prægtigt højhus, som står fuldt udbygget fra tiende sal og opefter, men som svæver frit i luften, da det ikke har noget fundament.

Hvis det er sandt, at jeg’et kun eksisterer konventionelt, så ser vi, at de franske poststrukturalisters forsøg på at pille subjektet ud af filosofien til en vis grad er berettiget. De franske poststrukturalister ønskede at konstruere en filosofi, som var fuldstændigt hinsides metafysik, og altså er det ikke tilfældigt, at det værste, som de store navne inden for poststrukturalisme kunne sige om hinandens værker, var, at deres arbejde indeholdt metafysik.[19] Uheldigvis ser vi også i poststrukturalismen, hvad filosofi og videnskab bliver til, når disse aktiviteter udøves uden metafysik: Nihilisme. Således løb poststrukturalismen ned ad en blindgyde, som var en gold destruktivisme, et rent anti-projekt som kun kunne kritisere andres arbejde og kun uhyre vanskeligt selv bidrage med nyt. Til dens ære, så formår den nye bølge af naturalistisk materialisme som eksemplificeret ved Pinker, Hawking, Harris osv. netop at være et positivt og opbyggeligt projekt, men det formår den jo netop også kun, fordi dens grundsyn er metafysisk. At Pinker et al. så ikke selv tror, at de har en metafysik, ændrer dog ikke ved, at deres materialistiske grundsyn er en metafysik.

Moderne problemer med materialisme

Dog er det ikke kun den traditionelle filosofiske kritik (fra Descartes, Berkeley, Hume og Kant), som volder problemer for den naturalistiske materialisme i disse år: De tentative implikationer af kvantemekanikken, hvis mysterier nu har stået uløst hen i godt og vel et århundrede, peger nemlig væk fra materialismen og nærmere i retning af en form for observatørdeltagelse i universets orden. Vulgær som den poststrukturelle (venstreorienterede) metafysik om, at det er os selv, der skaber verden, er, så ligger den ikke desto mindre mere på linje med kvanteobservationerne, end en fuldstændig mekanisk materialisme gør det. Ikke blot har de naturalistiske materialister altså en metafysik, men deres metafysik fører dem altså også væk fra videnskaben.

Moderne problemer med materialisme (1): Fysik

I mere end hundrede år har fysikere og videnskabsteoretikere kæmpet med de anti-intuitive og tilsyneladende anti-materialistiske implikationer af subatomar fysik. At kunne levere en perfekt redegørelse for subatomar mekanik er en af den moderne fysiks mest succesfulde frembringelser. Det er også en af de absolut mærkeligste, set med materialistiske briller, idet forekomsten af såkaldte ’superpositioner’ lader til at indikere, at det samme partikel kan befinde sig to forskellige steder på én gang. Fysikerne er enige om empirien, men de er absolut ikke enige om, hvilken metafysisk fortolkning der egner sig bedst til at redegøre for empirien.

I moderne fysik opererer man således med flere konkurrerende metafysiske fortolkninger af kvantefænomener. At gennemgå dem alle her ville føre os for vidt, hvorfor vi vil nøjes med at se nærmere på de to mest populære: Københavnerfortolkningen, som fremsat af Niels Bohr et al., samt Mangeverdensfortolkningen, som fremsat af Hugh Everett et al.

Københavnerfortolkningen siger grundlæggende set, at ”Gud spiller med terninger”: Subatomar fysik er probabilistisk og indeterministisk. Hvis vi f.eks. kunne slå plat eller krone i kvantestørrelse, så ville udfaldet i virkeligheden være både plat og krone. Men hvis en observatør blev sat til at overvære fænomenet, så ville denne superposition, hvor resultatet af vort kvantekast både var plat og krone, ”kollapse” og blive til den konventionelle materialistiske verden, vi kender, hvor udfaldets resultat er enten plat eller krone.[20]

Københavnerfortolkningens løsning på kvanteproblematikken er således, at subjekt påvirker objekt, og at det er observatøren, som bestemmer virkeligheden. Således er vi nu ikke langt fra den venstreorienterede, poststrukturalistiske relativisme: Virkelighedens ultimative natur konstrueres socialt af observatørens forventninger til virkeligheden.

Københavnerfortolkningen udgør i sagens natur et kraftigt anslag mod den materialistiske metafysik. Som Bohrs elev, fysikeren Werner Heisenberg skrev, så er det lettere at begribe Københavnerfortolkningens fortolkning beskrivelse af kvantefænomener, hvis man ikke på forhånd har en baggrundsskoling som materialist.[21]

Hvis vi derimod ser på Mangeverdensfortolkningen, så bliver resultatet af vort kvantekast ved med at være både plat og krone, også efter vi har introduceret en observatør, men universet vil virke, som om det ”knækker over” i to forskellige verdener for observatøren, hvor resultatet af kvantekastet er plat i den ene verden og krone i den anden.[22] Da der hele tiden foregår ”kvantekast” i den virkelige verden, vil implikationerne af Mangeverdensfortolkningen hurtigt føre os ud et sted, hvor der er billioner og atter billioner af parallelverdener, som alle er variationer af vores. Såfremt Mangeverdensfortolkningen anlægges som grundantagelse for kvantefænomener, så udelukker den ikke, at virkelighedens ultimative natur er materialistisk, men vores ærinde her var jo også blot at bevise, at materialisme er en metafysik på lige fod med andre metafysiske positioner. Og forhåbentlig kan vi alle blive enige om, at en idé, som postulerer 1.000.000.000.000 parallelle universer, er en metafysisk idé.

Moderne problemer med materialisme (2): Fænomenologi

Et problem af en særlig slags, som er til irritation for både naturvidenskabsmænd og akademiske filosoffer, er det historiske faktum, at en vis gruppe mennesker, som har levet i vidt forskellige århundreder og på vidt forskellige kontinenter, har haft enslydende ”mystiske” oplevelser, hvor den materielle virkelighed samt ikke-kontradiktionsloven er brudt sammen. Det er måske ikke i sig selv så problematisk, men hvad ”værre” er, så har disse mennesker – som ikke har haft nogen jordisk chance for at have været i kontakt med hinanden – alligevel en tendens til at beskrive deres oplevelser enslydende helt ned i detaljen.[23]

Disse oplevelser falder typisk i en af to kategorier:

(1) Som en Heraklit’sk bevidsthed, hvor subjekt-objekt-dikotomien opløses, og hvor entiteter først og fremmest eksisterer som energipotentialer snarere end som materie.

(2) Som en Parmenides’sk bevidsthed, hvor subjekt-objekt-dikotomien opløses sammen med tid-rum-dikotomien, hvor alt ultimativt er ét, og hvor alle potentialer eksisterer på samme tid.

Ingen af disse synsmåder udelukker, at virkelighedens ultimative basis til dels kan være materialistisk eller fysikalistisk bestemt. Men de udelukker, at virkeligheden udelukkende kan være materialistisk eller fysikalistisk bestemt, sådan som Pinker, Hawking, Harris et al. agiterer for. (Hvis intet eksisterer som distinkte enheder, men tingene blot former sig sådan på grund af vores bevidsthed, så er vi pludselig meget langt fra enhver standarddefinition af fysikalisme og materialisme.) Og når sidstnævnte gruppe gerne vil præsentere det billede for offentligheden, at alle videnskabsmænd er enige i deres naturalistiske materialisme, så er det ganske enkelt forkert:

” … den moderne fysiks anskuelsesmåder er [hvad angår masse og energi] meget tæt på Heraklits…” – Werner Heisenberg[24]

”… efter min mening nåede Parmenides’ filosofi sin højeste indfrielse med Einsteins kontinuitetsteori [continuity theory]. (Jeg kan måske nævne, at jeg har diskuteret denne sag med Einstein, og han var enig i min karakteristik af hans teori som Parmenides’sk.)” – Karl Popper[25]

Ikke alene var Heisenberg-Einstein-Popper (og Bohr)[26] altså uenige i, at man kan slutte direkte fra fysikkens love om partiklers bevægelsesmønstre til virkelighedens ultimative natur, sådan som eksempelvis Steven Pinker gør det i The Blank Slate; de er også enige i, at de ovenfor beskrevne ”mystiske” oplevelser kan ligge tættere på virkelighedens ultimative natur end den naturalistiske materialisme, som er så populær i disse år. Dermed siger jeg ikke, at den ene fløj har ret, og at den anden tager fejl, men blot, at kampen mellem de to lejre er en kamp om et valg af metafysik, hvor den ene part er bevidst i sin skelnen mellem fysik og metafysik, og den anden part ikke er.

Hvad angår problematikkerne fra både den moderne fysik og fra de ”mystiske” fænomenologiske oplevelser, som vi netop har berørt, så gælder det, at det, der egentlig er på spil, er, at vi har at gøre med forskellige metafysiske systemer, som hver især tilbyder os modstridende fortolkninger af samme empiriske data. Men snarere end at anerkende, at begge metafysiske systemer fint kan gøre rede for de empiriske data, så forsøger de moderne materialister altså at udlægge de empiriske data som det endegyldige bevis på, at de har ret, og at modparten tager fejl. Undervejs har de behændigt glemt E.O. Wilsons formaning om, at ingen ”række af empiriske tests” kan bevise den metafysiske meta-antagelse.

Wilson havde ret: Enslydende beskrivelser af et transcendentalt virkelighedsaspekt fra kilder, som beviseligt aldrig har kendt hinanden eller været bekendt med hinandens udsagn, kan ikke afgøre, hvorvidt et sådant transcendentalt aspekt af virkeligheden findes. På akkurat samme vis kan videnskabelige forsøg ikke per se afgøre sagen, da det transcendentale aspekt af virkeligheden – såfremt det findes – ville høre under Kants positive noumenon fra Kritik af den rene fornuft og således være fuldstændig uerkendeligt.[27]

Hvad angår de enslydende mystiske oplevelser, som beskrevet ovenfor, så er det ydermere interessant, at den ontologi, der lader til at være indeholdt i dem, kan minde om indsigterne fra den subatomare fysik, hvad angår den observerende bevidstheds aktive indflydelse på de ting, den observerer, fraværet af ikke-kontradiktionsloven, m.v. Her ønsker jeg ikke at gå dybt ind i de mulige paralleller mellem sådanne ”mystiske” oplevelser og virkelighedens ultimative natur, men vil blot konstatere, at ingen ringere end William James har kastet sit lod i den lejr, at det da er fuldt ud muligt, at hjernen faktisk renderer virkeligheden mere korrekt under mystiske og unormale omstændigheder.[28] Hjernen er trods alt udviklet til at sikre vores overlevelse og ikke til at gengive virkelighedens finere ontologiske nuancer detaljeret og loyalt.[29] (Hvilket Pinker også selv medgiver, samtidig med at han dog undlader at tage den fulde konsekvens af denne observation.)[30]

Konklusion: De anti-humeanske humeanere

Som vi har set ovenfor, så er det fælles for den nye bølge af naturalistiske materialister, at de alle priser den skotske filosof David Hume som en forgænger for deres eget standpunkt. Men som vi også har set, så er de moderne forfattere ikke selv så humeanske, at det gør noget.

Moderne materialister falder f.eks. fra tid til anden tilbage på det indspark, at materialisme og de moderne varianter deraf har den klare fordel over for konkurrerende metafysiske systemer, at materialismen virker intuitivt overbevisende. Vi ser materie, og materien sætter håndfaste grænser for os i hverdagen; det er der vel ingen, der vil benægte?

Argumentet lyder måske humeansk på overfladen, men faktisk er vi her ovre i den decideret anti-humeanske grøft, nærmere bestemt i Thomas Reids kritik af Hume: Vi mennesker er tilbøjelige til at opfatte verden på en bestemt måde; det kan godt være, at vi ikke kan finde nogen særlig overbevisende forklaringer på, hvorfor verden skulle være sådan, som vi prima facie opfatter den, når vi udsætter denne opfattelse for en filosofisk kritik, men i og med at det nu engang er sådan, at mennesket fungerer, så ville det være irrationelt for os at abstrahere for meget fra udgangspunktet.

Reids kritik af Hume er uden tvivl en del af forklaringen på, hvorfor materialismen er så populær som meta-antagelse, at de fleste af os end ikke opfatter materialisme som metafysik. Men som filosofisk metode er Reids kritik ikke særlig potent, idet mennesket prima facie opfatter verden på en lang række tvivlsomme måder: De tror sædvanligvis på en eller flere Guder, de har som regel stor tillid til induktivisme som epistemologisk metode, og politisk ligger de uhyre langt fra nærværende blads læsere. Hvis man således, på Thomas Reid’sk manér, vil tillade, at materialismen er ”sand”, fordi den er prima facie selvindlysende, så mangler man samtidig at forklare, hvorfor alle mulige andre observationer, som er gjort på et lignende grundlag, så ikke også er ”sande.”

Et lignende argument fra de ”nye materialister” er appellen til Ockhams ragekniv: ”Hvis der er to forklaringer på samme fænomen, så er den simpleste at foretrække,” siger de. Men hvis det er Ockhams ragekniv, som skal bestemme virkelighedens natur, så er både idealisme og solipsisme jo simplere ontologiske konstruktioner end materialisme. Heller ikke med appel til Ockhams ragekniv kan vi altså begrunde et materialistisk verdenssyn uden i sidste ende at falde tilbage på en appel til prima facie– alias ”sådan er det bare!”-argumentation.

Et lignende pseudo-humeansk argument kører videre i prima facie-rillen: Det kan ikke være meningen, at vi skal rende rundt og bedrive en større epistemologisk-filosofisk kritik, før vi kan sige noget om noget. Argumentet virker humeansk i sin tilsyneladende appel til det humeanske slogan om at ”være filosof, men til stadighed at være et menneske i al sin filosoferen.”[31] – Nuvel, men netop her består forskellen på Humes egen naturalisme og så den materialistiske naturalisme, som i dag udbredes af Pinker et al.: Det er nemlig lige præcis forskellen på Hume og så nutidens naturalister, at Hume tog de refleksive konsekvenser af sin egen naturalisme og var skeptiker, hvad angår metafysiske spørgsmål.[32] Hume ville have medgivet, at subjektet, ikke-kontradiktionsloven, subjekt-objekt-dikotomien og materiens ontologiske forrang alle er konventionelt sande størrelser, men han ville aldrig have tilladt sig selv at slutte fra den konventionelle empiriske sandhed og så til virkelighedens ultimative natur à la Pinker, Harris et al. – ”vær et menneske, jovist, men tro ikke, at du med din blotte menneskelighed kan besvare de ultimative spørgsmål.”

Humes skeptiske position er stadig den rette at anlægge, hvis man mener, at man ikke har nogen metafysik, og at man ”blot følger videnskaben” (sådan som de nye materialister har for vane). Videnskaben er (eller burde ideelt set være) en neutral og rent empirisk funderet undersøgelsesmetode. Intet videnskabeligt forsøg har nogensinde vist, at kun de ting, som videnskaben kan studere, er virkelige,[33] og end ikke i teorien kender vi til en forsøgsopstilling, som kan bevise, at materialisme og fysikalisme er virkelighedens ultimative ontologiske fundament. Dermed har både materialisme og fysikalisme altså status af spekulative ekstrapolationer – af metafysiske postulater, lige så vel som de svar de giver på de evige spørgsmål om determinisme, fri vilje, m.v. ikke kan regnes for mere end konventionelt sande.

Referencer

Barrett, Michele: The Politics of Truth: From Marx to Foucault Stanford University Press 1992
Derrida & Caputo: Deconstruction in a Nutshell Fordham University Press 1996
Descartes, Rene: Meditations on First Philosophy Cambridge University Press 1996
Dews, Peter: Logics of Disintegration Verso 2007
Flanagan, Own: The Really Hard Problem The MIT Press 2007
Graham, Daniel W.: The Texts of Early Greek Philosophy Cambridge University Press 2010
Hawking & Mlodinow: The Grand Design Random House 2010
Heisenberg, Werner: Physics and Philosophy Harper & Row 1958
Huang Po: The Zen Teaching of Huang Po Grove Press 1958
Hume, David: An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Cambridge University Press 2007
Hume, David: A Treatise of Human Nature Penguin 1985
James, William: The Varieties of Religious Experience New American Library 1958
Kant, Immanuel: Critique of Pure Reason Penguin 2008
Kant, Immanuel: Prolegomena to any Future Metaphysics Kessinger Publishing 2005
Miller, James: The Passion of Michel Foucault Bantam Doubleday 1994
Pears, David Francis: David Hume: A Symposium Macmillan 1964
Pinker, Steven: The Better Angels of Our Nature Penguin 2011
Pinker, Steven: The Blank Slate Penguin 2003
Popper, Karl R.: Objective Knowledge Oxford University Press 1979
Popper, Karl R.: The Open Universe Routledge 1988
Popper, Karl R.: The World of Parmenides Routledge 2012
Rand, Ayn: Philosophy: Who Needs It MacMillan 1985
Ross, Kelley L.: The Fortunes of Materialism Proceedings of the Friesian Journal 2012
Tegmark & Wheeler: 100 Years of Quantum Mysteries Scientific American 2001
Wilson, Edward O.: Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge Alfred A. Knof 1998

Noter



[1] Hawking & Mlodinow: The Grand Design s. 5

[2] Pinker: The Blank Slate kapitel 18, cf. Pinker: The Better Angels of Our Nature s. 284 ff.
I forlængelse af den ovenstående pointe kan man også påpege, hvordan det er tydeligt fra The Blank Slate, at Pinkers research udi Marx ikke er specielt grundig. Her siger Pinker bl.a., at Marx og Engels mente, at mennesket fødes som en ”blank slate,” en tabula rasa. Men Marx og Engels benægtede ikke, at individer fødes med nedarvede forskelligartede dispositioner; de benægtede blot, at samfundet som helhed kunne forstås via disse dispositioner. Ligeså (men dog mindre alvorligt) gælder det for Pinkers research udi Kant i The Better Angels of Our Nature, at Pinker sætter Kants politiske filosofi ind i sin egen materialistiske metafysik uden at begrunde (eller tage stilling til) fravalget af Kants transcendentale metafysik. For Kant selv hang de to ting sammen.

[3] Pinker: The Blank Slate s. 177 ff.

[4] Popper: The Open Universe III.16, 24, cf. Kant: Prolegomena to any Future Metaphysics III

[5] Om end Marx selv benægtede, at hans materialisme var en ontologisk kategori. Denne benægtelse har dog ikke stoppet størstedelen af Marx’ fortolkere (både i og uden for Sovjet) fra at gøre Marx’ filosofi til en ontologisk materialisme.

[6] Derrida & Caputo: Deconstruction in a Nutshell s. 73

[7] Dews: Logics of Disintegration s. 256

[8] Barrett: The Politics of Truth s. 140

[9] Rand: Philosophy: Who Needs It s. 16

[10] Popper: Objective Knowledge s. 115-117

[11] Hvis man da ikke, som Sam Harris, går all-in og forsøger at påvise en objektiv og empirisk funderet moral, jf. ’The Moral Landscape.’

[12] Hume: An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding I.II.29

[13] Selvfølgelig er der yderligere epistemologiske innovationer siden Hume end den her nævnte. Men der er mig bekendt ingen sådanne epistemologier, som kan påvise eksistensen af eksempelvis proteiner i nogen ultimativ forstand. Det nærmeste, vi kan komme det, er, at proteiner findes på Kants fænomenologiske niveau, men her deltager observatøren i ’’påvisningen” af proteiner, og således er der ingen garanti for, at proteiner findes a priori.

[14] Pears: David Hume – A Symposium s. 4

[15] Pinker: The Blank Slate, s. 108 ff.

[16] Wilson: Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge s. 9

[17] Descartes: Meditation II, VI
Descartes mente dog selv, at han kunne være sikker på den ydre verdens materielle eksistens, da en sådan verden enten virkelig må findes eller være skabt af Gud. Da Gud imidlertid ikke bedrager mennesker, så må det logisk følge, at den materielle verden eksisterer, sådan som vi opfatter den.

[18] Hume: Treatise of Human Nature I.4.6

[19] Miller: The Passion of Michel Foucault s. 121 ff.

[20] Tegmark & Wheeler: 100 Years of Quantum Mysteries p. 57

[21] Heisenberg: Physics and Philosophy s. 173

[22] Tegmark & Wheeler: 100 Years of Quantum Mysteries p. 58

[23] Huang Po: The Zen Teaching of Huang Po s. 80n1

[24] Heisenberg: Physics and Philosophy p. 35

[25] Popper: The World of Parmenides s. 187

[26] Bohr: ‘Speech on Quantum Theory’ at Bologna, Italy (Oktober 1937)

[27] Kant: Critique of Pure Reason A250/B30

[28] James: The Varieties of Religious Experience s. 30

[29] Her gemmer der sig muligvis kimen til denne konflikts psykologiske (snarere end epistemologiske og filosofiske) ophav: Hvorfor gør fysikalister og materialister sig ofte den meta-antagelse, at menneskets normale bevidsthed er en adækvat basis for at forstå virkelighedens natur a priori, mens folk, som er skeptiske over for materialismen, gør sig den meta-antagelse, at der findes andet og mere, og at vor normale måde at opfatte virkeligheden på er inadækvat for sådanne anliggender?

[30] Pinker: The Blank Slate s. 43

[31] Hume: Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding 1

[32] Hume: Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding 5.5

[33] Flanagan: The Really Hard Problem s. 93

Anti-racistens racisme

af Ryan Smith

Hvordan skal man forstå de såkaldt konservative indlæg i debatten, som mestendels sviner andre mennesker til i nedladende vendinger uden at ulejlige sig med argumenter? Skulle netop konservative ikke kere sig om social ansvarlighed og anstændig adfærd?

En konservativ ven satte mig på sporet: Konservative er dannede og anstændige mennesker. Det kan man se på den rå mængde butterfly og champagne, som de omgiver sig med. Derfor må konservative gerne tage sig et par friheder i forhold til den anstændighed, som de synes mangler hos andre. Det er deres version af anti-racistens racisme.

Den kender vi bedst fra Politiken-segmentet, hvor de selv er nidkære med at være efter folk, der gør grin med race og køn. Samtidig gør Politiken dog selv grin med race og køn. Ayn Rand er en liberalistisk pin up-dulle, DF-vælgere er white trash og vuvuzela-horn får Politikens redaktion til at ønske sig apartheid tilbage.

Og hvad med de liberale? De liberale ser sig selv som særligt frihedsbevidste mennesker. Derfor tillader visse liberale sig en flirt med antidemokratiske regimer; en leflen for Singapore og Dubai. Det er naturligvis også uacceptabelt.

Alle fraktioner gør klogt i at huske Immanuel Kants ord: “If I am to constrain you by any law, it must be one by which I am also bound (and vice versa).”