ccf@cbosgd.UUCP (Chuck F.) (02/15/84)
It is refreshing to see philosophy raised to a professional level for a change. Certainly only a trained philosopher could notice that Big Bang relates "neither to miracles nor to creation, but rather a singularity in the retrospective history of the universe," even if singularities are found only in theories and not universes, and even if the concept of history rather intimately involves the concept of creation (as in, e.g., "judgement of history"). It is forceful thinking like this that academic training in philosophy is meant to produce, and we are all instructed by it. For, as Mr. Rosenberg (who hasn't "the vaguest idea what's supposed to be meant by 'miracle'") himself says, the virtue of theory is not its "predictive utility," which might be of some use, but its "explanatory force" ("a complicated business"), by which we are instructed. Now I must confess something, Explanatory force is absolutely my favorite kind of force. In fact, I have taken to measuring explanatory forces, empirically as it were, so as to judge the virtue of empirical theories; for that, we are instructed, is their virtue. I am moved by explanatory forces, in ways that can be predicted, but not for any utility, to be sure. Indeed, it is its explanatory force that no doubt drove Mr. Rosenberg, a trained philosopher, to use the metaphor "force" in explaining the force of explanatory theories; he used it because of its utility in explaining the force of explanatory theories, but not, to be sure, for its utility, except insofar as its utility refers to its force. Is this clear? Now, I don't mind any of this. In face, I find it instructive. The trouble is (and this might be a reason to reject a theory even though Mr. Rosenberg instructs us that theories are only rejected in favor of more forceful theories) that once the theory of the force of theories is shown to be circular, it loses, well, a lot of its force, if I may use this term here. Not that Mr. Rosenberg has to reject it. Indeed, if he is moved by the idea of explanatory force, he may find his way to understanding the word "miracle," of which he claims not to have the vaguest idea, or even the idea, or Idea, that the universe itself was created by "explanatory force," the force, then, of creative explanation, or the creative Word, which oddly resembles an idea we had all supposed he was rejecting when he called it "ill-formed." Virtuously, *<--- chuck --->* cbosgd!ccf BTL Columbus
ka@hou3c.UUCP (Kenneth Almquist) (02/15/84)
Congratulations on your flame, Chuck. As nearly as I could tell, it was completely devoid of content. Kenneth ("I thought this was net.philosophy") Almquist