Hall 4 - Natural Law and Reason & Faith
The fourth and fifth sections of the Outlines, chapter 1, continues Hall's attempt to delineate the natural and supernatural. In my reading, Hall suffers primarily here by delineating science and theology enough that, in so doing, creates an emancipated, secular science that is able to carry on entirely in the absence of theology, regardless of how much he wants it to want the input of faith and the church.
Hall begins by elucidating the "natural order" or the phenomenal world, in which certain observable "laws" or regulating forces maintain a uniformity of experience. However, this uniformity must not mislead one to believe that this is an eternal or everlasting cosmos, as neither science can prove nor revelation attests to such. Rather, revelation states that "this order will, in due time, give place to a new one." Moreover, the phenomenal world has seen the breaking in of miracles and the supernatural, as testified to by the ancients' preoccupation with the uniformity of the supernatural long before interest in natural laws grew. "Theological science is more ancient than physical science—in fact, the mother of it." As such, Hall posits the following division of disciplines:So long as natural science confines itself to the investigation of nature as such, and theological science to the theistic and spiritual interpretation of facts undeniably established, there can be no conflict. But when natural scientists undertake to advance theological interpretations of their results, a collision is apt to occur between their crude speculations and more mature Theology. And when theologians continue to rely upon exploded views of nature, basing theological speculations upon them, a conflict occurs between out-of-date and up-to-date natural science. As Dr. Pusey says, unscience, not science, is adverse to Faith.
Reason and faith, then, are both important in the theological project. Reason according to Hall is "an intellectual process making for the acquisition of truth... invariably conditioned in its exercise by the will and affections." Faith, while having several different modes, is here "a department of reason, although dependant upon supernatural grace... the spiritual faculty by which we discern spiritual things." Thus, being an exercise of reason, "the laws of human reason hold good." Grace becomes important to Hall here, in that grace is vital to one's very ability to grasp supernatural knowledge. Consequently, he grants a special place to the sacraments inasmuch as they expose one to grace. Access to grace through faith is most evident in the common statements of faith embraced by the "Greek, Latin, and Anglican (churches)... with but slight verbal variations and with the same meaning... significant, in view of the diversity of races and usages which exists, and the age-long mutual hostility which has prevailed. Such consent is not to be found elsewhere." Rationalism, then, is not some pure form of access to reason, but is a crippled endeavor simply by virtue of its prima facie rejection of ecclesial authority.
While it seems that Hall's definition of natural and supernatural probably got a lot of mileage, particularly among more technologically or scientifically minded Christians (Janet comments on this is a previous posting's comment section), and maybe I'm even detecting a hint of CS Lewis' Miracles, his language is ultimately uncompelling and rather flat to me. I'm especially uneasy about his division of territory between science and theology. This is possibly due to Hall attempting to hedge the claims of science, and my nostalgia for cosmologies like Maximus', in which a theological understanding of the world not only precedes but informs a natural one, in which there is no comprehensive understanding of the natural world that does not flow from an initial engagement with that world's creator. Furthermore, while he tries to ward off the notion of an universal scientific reason, his separation of powers between science and theology seem to grant that there is a space apart from theology in which a kind of positivist and exhaustive scientific knowledge is possible. Of course, it now is commonplace to reject such notions almost entirely on their naivete toward the place of interpretation in all things, scientific or theological. Similarly, one could ask exactly what Hall means by a natural order, and whether investigation of such includes ontology. He certainly isn't clear as to how broad or narrow he expects the study of the natural order to be, but philosophers might make a convincing case for their autonomy under Hall's system. Conversely, if anthropology and ontology are theological topics, or at least not wholly secular disciplines, then Hall's secular science will be surely lacking in its exercise. My thomist friends can probably spell out for me how Thomas answers many of these questions, and I probably should point you all to this book as it helped me flesh a little bit of this out for myself as I was typing this post.
8 comments:
Unfortunately, I think Aquinas is not a 'prime' example of a theologian who has theology 'overcome' some other discipline. Rather, he thinks that if a natural discipline follows its end correctly, it will not contradict conclusions of the Christian faith. The key notion is that the natural science 'done correctly' will co-operate with Christian Theology, given that both aim to express truth.
There are other theologians more interested in 're-doing' the conclusions of lower sciences given what a theologian knows qua theologian. This latter view has less 'trust' that a natural discipline can fully express its subject matter. This is a topic I run into with Henry of Ghent, who basically changes the metaphysics (i.e. aristotelian categories) given his theological position on the Trinity. I'm sure there are many others like this, but it remains to be seen whether the metaphysician would 'buy' such a 'redo'.
I agree with Mutabilitie about Aquinas. And I think a deeper grasp of Aristotelian ways of knowing, such as Aquinas possessed, would help us negotiate this tricky subject of overlap between natural disciplines and theology. Can "a natural discipline fully express its subject matter?" If the discipline is a genuine disciplinary community using dialectic to approach and formalize its subject matter, and thereby is developing its own methodologies and evidence and validity standards and mode of thinking, how COULD any other discipline better express its subject matter?
Where theology, like philosophy (of which theology or "first philosophy" is the highest branch), comes in, is in being an umbrella science or an interdisciplinary and metadisciplinary way of thinking. Since the other disciplines are not addressed to knowing God, or Origins, or ultimate Ends, how could there be a conflict? The various ways of knowing are addressed to different formalities and use different styles of formalization. Rising above and beyond their spheres belongs to the metadisicplines.
P.S. Why are we reading Hall, "she said plaintively"? Let's read von Balthazar...? No, obviously there must be a reason. But Hall is proving to be so very "modern" in a totally outdated sort of way, and he's not very hip to the theological tradition in a longer, premodern perspective...?
Thanks Mutabilitie and Janet. My problem with Hall isn't that Theology doesn't trump the other disciplines, but that there's such an artificial divide between it and theology. Anyway, to answer Janet's question about Hall, we chose to read him because 1. he's an example of an anglican systematic theology (ha!); and 2. his stuff was online for free. However, the management at TLOU had a phone conference last night and decided that Hall sucks, and we're quitting him. The next project will be announced at a special gala banquet. Invitations will be sent out shortly.
WooHoo! Gala Banquet!
Yes, gala banquet! (Only I'm not in Philly, but Caleb and me could have one anyway...)
I'm so glad you came to this conclusion about Hall.
Just to clarify, in a way what I was saying is that theology doesn't trump a natural science at all, because it is thinking at a different level, a meta-level, which (to me) makes it more inclusive and more integrative and therefore more tentative (because wiser) than any natural discipline needs to be.
In other words, a natural discipline is always on its own turf. Theology, once it gets beyond its various subdisciplinary turfs, is never on its own turf but on all turfs at once in a very equivocal and humbling manner...
I have started to equate theology with Freud's "other scene," also remembering what Barth said about theology being a tremendous landscape which one could delve into. Or something like that. . . anyone know the direct quote? I'm looking for ways to fit this into Lacan as well. . . perhaps somewhere in between the Other and the Other's Other (which of course doesn't exist)
You should have the Gala banquet here in Oxford -- people are generally better dressed here at formal events. :o)
Re: redescriptions of natural sciences (whether 'hard science' or e.g. 'hermeneutics') is a tough one for a theologian to give fuller description of its conclusions or premises. Scotus, to take another example, brought much more rigor, clarity, and theological clarity to 'metaphysics' but unless you generally like Scotus, you may dislike such 'theological accounts', and so go with a more indirect (vague/cautious) theological redescription. A hazards with both of these approaches is that unless a theologian is really quite skilled in the 'natural science' and in 'theology', s/he won't do either science justice or advance (contribute to) it.
So, sometimes when theologians take a (not necessarily 'the') Barthian line and refuse to wholly engage some other discipline or wholly reject any sort of natural theology, I wonder whether or not this is a desperate (or 'wise' act) act to methodologically separate the explication of doctrine from the tools of other 'natural sciences', which seems the reverse of Heidegger, who wants to bracket out theology from philosophy, whereas these 'ad hoc apologetics' theologians want to bracket out philosophy (and/or 'natural sciences) from theology.
Gone are the days when a student studies all the arts for 15 years before doing theology (as in the pre-modern world). No one can master or know all the arts anymore--which is why (pastorally) we've agreed to lower level criteria for what counts as a science.
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