Review of Oppenheimer plus FRANCIS SCHAEFFER QUOTES OPPENHEIMER Part 6  Whitehead and Oppenheimer insisted that modern science could not have been  born except in the Christian milieu. As Whitehead so beautifully points out, these  men all believed that the universe was created by a reasonable God, and therefore the universe  could be found out by reason. Modern science is the original science, in  which you had men who believed in the uniformity of natural causes in a limited system, a  system which could be reordered by God and  by man made in the image of God. This is a  cause and effect system in a limited time span.  But from the time of Newton (not with Newton  himself, but with the Newtonians who followed  him), we have the concept of the “machine”  until we are left with the only machine, and you  move into the “modern modern science,” in  which we have the uniformity of natural causes  in a closed system, including sociology and  psychology. Man is included in the machine!


Oppenheimer parents guide

OPPENHEIMER PARENT GUIDE

“Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.”

Release date July 21, 2023

Theaters: During World War 2 J. Robert Oppenheimer works on a team to develop a weapon to end the war, if it doesn’t end the world.

Why is Oppenheimer rated ? The MPA rated Oppenheimer

Run Time: 180 minutes

Violence: The creation of nuclear weapons is a significant part of the film. A character has terrifying visions of a nuclear holocaust, complete with burned bodies and radiation sickness. It is implied that a woman is deliberately drowned in her bathtub. There are frequent mentions of bombing raids and associated deaths and injuries. It is suggested that a suicide is not what it appears to be. 
Sexual Content: There are two sex scenes that include visible breasts and buttocks. Breasts are also visible in non-sexual contexts. 
Profanity: There are over a dozen uses of profanity, including sexual expletives, scatological curses, and terms of deity.
Drugs/Alcohol: Alcohol is consumed in social situations and in an addictive context. Alcoholism is a recurring issue in the film. Characters frequently smoke cigarettes, as is historically accurate for the time period.

On Science and Culture by J. Robert Oppenheimer, Encounter (Magazine) October 1962 issue, was the best article that he ever wrote and it touched on a lot of critical issues including the one that Francis Schaeffer discusses in this blog post!

Oppenheimer

OPPENHEIMER and EINSTEIN

Passage from chapters 3 and 4 from Francis Schaeffer book HE IS THERE AMD HE IS NOT SILENT:

This is where Leonardo da Vinci is so  important. He was the first modern mathema-  tician, and he really understood this dilemma. It  is not that I am reading back into him our  dilemma of modern cynicism. He really under-  stood it. He understood, in the passage of all  these hundreds of years between himself and  modern man, where rationalistic man would  end up if man failed to find a solution. This is  what real genius is—understanding before your  time—and Leonardo da Vinci did understand.  He understood that if you began on the basis  of rationalism—that is, man beginning only from himself, and not having any outside  knowledge—you would have only mathematics  and particulars and would end up with only  mechanics. In other words, he was so far ahead  of his time—that he really understood that  everything was going to end up only as a ma-  chine, and there were not going to be any univ-  ersals or meaning at all. The universals were  going to be crossed out. So Leonardo really be-  came very much like the modern man. He said  we should try to paint the universals. This is re-  ally very close to the modern concept of the  upper-story experience. So he painted and  painted and painted, trying to paint the univer-  sals. He actually tried to paint the universal just  as Plato had had the idea that if we were really  to have a knowledge of chairs, there would have  to be an ideal chair somewhere that would  cover all kinds of chairs. Leonardo, who was a Neo-Platonist, understood this, and he said,  “Let man produce the universals.” But what  kind of man? The mathematical man? No, not  the mathematical man but the painter, the  sensitive man. So Leonardo is a very crucial  man in the area of humanistic epistemology.  

At this point in Escape from Reason, I devel-  oped the difference between what I call “mod-  ern science” and the “modern modern sci-  ence.” 

 In my earlier books I have referred to  Whitehead and Oppenheimer, two  scientists—neither one a Christian—who insisted that modern science could not have been  born except in the Christian milieu. Bear with  me as I repeat this, for I want in this book to  carry it a step further, into the area of knowing.  As Whitehead so beautifully points out, these  men all believed that the universe was created by a reasonable God, and therefore the universe  could be found out by reason. This was their  base. Modern science is the original science, in  which you had men who believed in the unifor-  mity of natural causes in a limited system, a  system which could be reordered by God and  by man made in the image of God. This is a  cause and effect system in a limited time span.  But from the time of Newton (not with Newton  himself, but with the Newtonians who followed  him), we have the concept of the “machine”  until we are left with the only machine, and you  move into the “modern modern science,” in  which we have the uniformity of natural causes  in a closed system, including sociology and  psychology. Man is included in the machine.  This is the world in which we live in the area of  science today. No longer believing that they can  be sure the universe is reasonable because created by a reasonable God, the question is  raised that Leonardo da Vinci already under-  stood and that the Greeks understood before  that: “How does the scientist know; on what  basis can he know that what he knows, he really  knows?”  

So rationalism put forth at this point the  epistemological concept of positivism. Posi-  tivism is a theory of knowing which assumes  that we can know facts and objects with total  objectivity. Modern “scientism” is built on it.  

It is a truly romantic concept, and while it  held sway, rationalistic man stood ten feet tall  in his pride. It was based on the notion that  without any universals to begin with, finite man  could reach out and grasp with finite reason  sufficient true knowledge to make universals  out of the particulars. 

 Jean-Jacques Rousseau is crucial at this point, because he changed the formulation  from “nature and grace” to “nature and free-  dom,” absolute freedom. Rousseau and the  men around him saw that in the area of “na-  ture,” everything had become the machine. In  other words, “downstairs” everything was in the  area of positivism, and everything was a ma-  chine. “Upstairs” they added the other thing,  namely, absolute freedom. In the sense of  absolute freedom upstairs, not only is man not  to be bound by revelation, but he is not to be  bound by society, the polis, either. The concept  of autonomous freedom is clearly seen in Gau-  gin, the painter. He was getting rid of all the re-  straints, not just the restraint of God, but also  the restraint of the polis, which for Gaugin was  epitomized by the highly developed culture of  France. He left France and went to Tahiti to be  rid of the culture, the polis. In doing this, he practiced the concept of the noble savage that,  of course, Jean-Jacques Rousseau had previ-  ously set forth. You get rid of the restraints, you  get rid of the polis, you get rid of God or the  gods, and then you are free. Unhappily, though  not surprisingly, this did not turn out as he ex-  pected.  

So what we have is not a destructive free-  dom only in morals (though it shows itself very  quickly in morals, especially quickly, perhaps,  in sexual anarchy), but in the area of knowledge  as well. In metaphysics, in the area of being, as  well as morals, we are supposed to have abso-  lute freedom. But then the dilemma comes:  How do you know and how do you know you  know?  

We may imagine the Greeks and Leonardo  da Vinci and all the Neo-Platonists at the time  of the High Renaissance coming in and asking Rousseau and his followers, “Don’t you see  what you have done? Where are the universals?  How are you going to know? How are you  going to build enough universals out of partic-  ulars, even for society to run, let alone build  true knowledge, knowledge that you really know  and are sure that you know?” 

 It is only a step, really, from men like Gau-  gin to the whole hippie culture, and as a matter  of fact, to the whole modern culture. In one  sense there is a parenthesis in time from  Rousseau until the birth of the hippie culture  and the whole modern culture that is founded  on the view that there are no universals  anywhere—that man is totally, hedonistically  free; the individual is totally, hedonistically  free—not only morally, but also in the area of  knowledge. We can easily see the moral  confusion that has resulted from this, but the epistemological confusion is worse. If there are  not universals, how do we know reality from  non-reality? At this point, we are right in the lap  of modern man’s problem, as I will develop  later.  

Now let us go back to the period immedi-  ately after Rousseau, to Immanuel Kant, and  Hegel, who changed the whole concept of  epistemology. Before this, in epistemology,  man always thought in terms of antithesis; the  methodology of epistemology had always been  antithesis. That is, you learn by saying “a” is  not “non-a.” That is the first step of classical  logic. In other words, in antithesis, if this is  true, then its opposite is not true. You can  make an antithesis. That is the classical  methodology of epistemology, of knowing. But  Hegel argued that antithesis has never turned  out well on a rationalistic basis, so he proposed to change the methodology of epistemology.  Instead of dealing with antithesis, let us deal  with synthesis. So he set up his famous  triangle—everything is a thesis, it sets up an  antithesis, and the answer is always synthesis.  The whole world changed in the area of morals  and political science, but it changed more pro-  foundly, though less obviously, in the area of  knowing and knowing itself. He changed the  whole theory of how we know. 

 In my books I move quickly to Kierkegaard,  who took this a step further. He set up, as I  have indicated, the absolute dichotomy be-  tween reason and non-reason. Kierkegaard, and  especially Kierkegaardianism that followed him,  teaches that that which would give meaning is  always separated from reason; reason only  leads to knowledge downstairs, which is  mathematical knowledge without any meaning, but upstairs you hope to find a non-rational  meaning for the particulars. This is  Kierkegaard’s contribution.  

All of this flows from four  men—Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, and  Kierkegaard—and their thinking in the area of  epistemology. From Hegel, this kind of think-  ing has replaced antithesis with synthesis, so  turning the whole theory of knowledge upside  down. Today, existentialism has three forms:  the French, Jean-Paul Sartre; the German, Hei-  degger; and that of Karl Jaspers, who is also a  German but lives in Switzerland. The distinc-  tions between the forms of existentialism do  not change the fact that it is the same system  even though it has different expressions with  these different men, namely, that rationality  only leads to something horrible in every area,  including knowledge. Indeed, not including knowledge, but first of all  knowledge—principally knowledge. To these  men as rationalists the knowledge we can know  with our reason is only a mathematical formula  in which man is only a machine. Instead of rea-  son they hope to find some sort of mystical  experience “upstairs,” apart from reason, to  provide a universal.  

Here we can feel again the whole drift of  the hippie movement and the drug culture as  well. Man hopes to find something in his head  because he cannot know certainly that anything  is “out there.” This is where we are. I am con-  vinced that the generation gap is basically in  the area of epistemology. Before, man had a  romantic hope that on the basis of rationalism  he was going to be able to find a meaning to  life, and put universals over the particulars. But  on this side of Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, and Kierkegaard, this hope no longer exists; the  hope is given up. Young people today live in a  generation that no longer believes in the hope  of truth as truth. That is why I use the term  “true truth” in my books to emphasize real  truth. This is not just a tautology. It is an  admission that the word “truth” now means  something that before these four men would  not have been considered truth at all. So, in  desperation, I have coined the expression “true  truth” to make the point, but it is hard to make  it sharp enough for people to understand how  large the problem is.  

  After Kierkegaard, rationality is seen as  leading to pessimism. We can have mathe-  matical knowledge, but man is only a machine,  and any kind of optimism one could have concerning meaning would have to be in the  area of the non-rational, the “upstairs.” So  rationality, including modern science, will lead  only to pessimism. Man is only the machine;  man is only a zero, and nothing has any real  meaning. I am nothing—one particular among  thousands of particulars. No particulars have  meaning, and specifically, man has no  meaning—specifically the particular of myself. I  have no meaning; I die; man is dead. If stu-  dents wonder why they are treated like IBM  cards, it is for no less reason than this. 

 So man makes his leap “upstairs” into all  sorts of mysticisms in the area of  knowledge—and they are mysticisms, because  they are totally separated from all rationality.  This is a mysticism like no previous mysticism.  Previous mysticisms always assumed  something was there. But modern man’s mysticisms are semantic mysticisms that deal  only with words; they have nothing to do with  anything being there, but are simply concerned  with something in one’s own head, or in lan-  guage in one form or another. The modern tak-  ing of drugs began as one way to try to find  meaning within one’s head.

  The present situation is one where we have  in the area of the rational positivism for “scien-  tific fact,” that which leads to mathematical for-  mulae and man as a machine; and in the non-  rational area we find all kinds of non-rational  mysticisms. 

 Now we must turn our attention again to  the “downstairs” positivism. This was the great  hope of rationalistic man, but gradually posi-  tivism has died. I remember when I first lec-  tured at Oxford and Cambridge, one had to  change gears between the two great universities because in Oxford they were still teaching log-  ical positivism, but in Cambridge it was all lin-  guistic analysis. Today it is linguistic analysis  almost everywhere in the world. Gradually,  positivism has died. For a careful study as to  why this has happened, I would recommend  Michael Polanyi’s book Personal Knowledge: An  Introduction to Post-critical Philosophy. Polanyi is  a name that hardly ever appears in the popular  press, and he is unknown by many, but he is  one of the dominant thinkers in the intellectual  world. His book shows why positivism is not a  sufficient epistemology, and why the hope of  modern science to have any certain knowledge  is doomed to failure. And truly there is probably  not a chair of philosophy of importance in the  world today that teaches positivism. It is still  held by the undergraduate and by the naive  scientist who, with a happy smile on his face, is building on a foundation that no longer exists.  Now we must notice where we have come. The  first of the modern scientists—Copernicus,  Galileo, up to Newton and Faraday, as White-  head pointed out—had the courage to begin to  formulate modern science because they be-  lieved the universe had been created by a rea-  sonable God, and therefore, it was possible to  find out that which was true about the universe  by reason. But when we come to naturalistic  science, that is all destroyed; positivism is put  in its place, but now positivism itself is de-  stroyed.  

Polanyi argues that positivism is inade-  quate because it does not consider the knower  of what is known. It acts as though the knower  may be overlooked and yet have full knowledge  of certain things, as though the knower knew  without actually being there. Or you might say positivism does not take into account the  knower’s theories or presuppositions. You can  assume that he approaches the thing without  any presuppositions, without any grid through  which he feeds his knowledge.  

But there is the dilemma, as Polanyi  shows, because this simply is not true. There is  no scientist in the positivistic position who  does not feed knowledge through a grid—a the-  ory or worldview through which he sees and  finds. The concept of the totally innocent,  objective observer is utterly naive. And science  cannot exist without an observer.  

When I was younger, people would always  say that science is completely objective. Then,  some years ago in Oxford, it began to be in-  sisted that this is not true, that there is no such  thing as science without the observer. The  observer sets up the experiment and then the observer observes it—then the observer makes  the conclusions. Polanyi says the observer is  never neutral; he has a grid, he has presuppo-  sitions through which he feeds the thing that he  finds. 

 I would go a step further. I have always in-  sisted that positivism has an even more basic  problem. One must always judge a system in  its own total structure; you cannot mix systems,  or you get a philosophical chop suey rather  than any real thought. Within positivism as a  total structure there is no way of saying with  certainty that anything exists. Within the system  of positivism itself, by the very nature of the  case, you simply begin nakedly with nothing  there. You have no reason within the system to  know that the data is data, or that what is reach-  ing you is data. Within the system there is no  universal to give you the right to be sure that what is reaching you from outside is data. The  system of positivism itself gives you no cer-  tainty that anything is there, or that there is re-  ally in the first move any difference between  reality and fantasy. 

 There is a further problem. Not only does  the positivist not know certainly that anything is  there, but even if it is there, he can have no rea-  son to think he knows anything truly nor any-  where near truly. There is no reason within the  system to be sure that there is a correlation be-  tween the observer—that is, the subject—and  the thing—that is, the object. 

 To bring it further up to date, Karl Popper,  who is another of the well-known thinkers of  our own day, has until recently argued that a  thing is meaningless unless it is open to verifi-  cation and falsification. But in a recent book he  has taken a step backwards. He now says there is no possibility of verification. You cannot verify  anything—only falsify. That is, you cannot say  what a thing is; you can only say certain things  that it is not. When Polanyi finished destroying  logical positivism so beautifully, he was left  with total cynicism in the area of epistemology  concerning knowing; in his new book Karl Pop-  per has really come to the same place. In sci-  ence the same problem is involved with much  of the “model” concept. One often finds that  the objective reality is getting dim, and all that  remains is the model in the scientist’s head.

  We are left then with this. Positivism died  and has been replaced everywhere by linguistic  analysis. Positivism did not leave one with  knowledge but only with a set of statistical aver-  ages and approximations, with no certainty that  anything was there finally and no certainty of  continuity in the things that were there. 

One can relate this to Alfred Korzybski’s  and D. David Bourland’s “General Semantics,”  which would not allow the verb “to be” ever to  be used. All their books are written without the  use of the verb “to be.” Why? Because they say  there is no certainty of continuity. I would add  that it seems to me also to be related to the  stream-of-consciousness psychology that ends  up with nothing but a stream-of-consciousness  because it is not sure that an “I” is there. 

 I should like to turn to the philosopher  Ludwig Wittgenstein, who is in many ways the  key to this whole matter. There is an early  Wittgenstein, and there is a later Wittgenstein,  but in his Tractatus, to which we refer here, we  are concerned with the early Wittgenstein. Later  he moved into linguistic analysis, but in this  early stage, he argued that down here in the  world (in the area of reason) you have facts: 

you have the propositions of natural science.  This is all that can be said; it is all that you can  put into language. This is the limit of language  and the limit of logic. “Downstairs” we can  speak, but all that can be spoken is the mathe-  matical propositions of natural science. Lan-  guage is limited to the “downstairs” of reason,  and that ends up with mathematical formu-  lations.

  But, as Bertrand Russell emphasizes,  Wittgenstein was a mystic. Even in his early  days, there were already the elements of mysti-  cism. In the “upper story” he put silence, be-  cause you could not talk about anything out-  side of the known world of natural science. But  man desperately needed values, ethics, mean-  ings to it all. Man needs these desperately, but  there is only silence there. It was at this point  that the title of this present book was born. It is Wittgenstein’s word “silence” that has given me  this title. Wittgenstein says that there is only si-  lence in the area of the things man desperately  needs most—values, ethics, and meanings.  Man knows it needs to be there, he argues, but  he cannot talk or even think about it. Values,  ethics, meanings are all upstairs. No matter  how much we need them, there is only silence.  

From this he plunged into linguistic anal-  ysis, which is now the dominant philosophy all  over the world. It was born at this place in the  desperation that followed when positivism was  seen to be inadequate. The “old” Wittgenstein  and the existentialist really are very, very close  at this particular point, though if you move  from England to the Continent in the study of  philosophy you find that people usually assume  that they are completely at variance. Yet there is  a way of looking at them in which they are very close: at the moment when Wittgenstein says  there is no real value or meaning in all these  things, only silence. 

 For those who know Bergman’s film The  Silence, this will ring a very familiar bell.  Bergman is a philosopher who came to the  place where he decided that there would never  be anything spoken from this upper level, that  God (even as the existentialist would use that  word) was meaningless. At that point he made  the film The Silence, and Bergman himself  changed from that point onward. In other  words, he agreed with what Wittgenstein, the  brilliant philosopher, had said many years be-  fore. So really Bergman and Wittgenstein must  be seen together, and the film The Silence was a  demonstration of this particular point.  

What we are left with, let us notice, is an  anti-philosophy, because everything that makes life worthwhile, or gives meaning to life, or  binds it together beyond isolated particulars, is  in an “upstairs” of total silence.  

Thus we are left with two anti-philosophies  in the world today. One is existentialism, which  is an anti-philosophy because it deals with the  big questions but with no rationality. But if we  follow the later Wittgenstein’s development, we  move into linguistic analysis, and we find that  this also is an anti-philosophy, because where  it defines words in the area of reason, language  leads to language, and that is all. It is not only  the certainty of values that is gone but the cer-  tainty of knowing.  

Speaking of Wittgenstein and his moving  into the area of language, as we have seen, it is  well to mention at this point the later Hei-  degger, who also dealt with language, though in  a very different way. Heidegger was originally an existentialist who believed that there was  only the angst toward the universe that gave the  hope that something was there. But later he  moved on into the view that because there is  language in the universe, we may hope that  there is something there, a nonrational hope of  an ultimate meaning to it all. So Heidegger  says, “Just listen to the poet,” not the content of  the poet who is speaking. In other words, be-  cause there is a being—that is, the poet—who  speaks, we can hope that Being—that is,  existence—has meaning. He adds a different  note in an attempt to make his position empir-  ical and not just abstract. What he did was to  claim that there was, in the far past, in the pre-  Socratic age before Aristotle, a great, golden  language when there was a direct, “first-order  experience” from the universe. This was purely  hypothetical. It had no base historically, but he proposed it as an act of desperation in an at-  tempt to lay a historical foundation on or under  an otherwise purely hypothetical and nebulous  concept.

  We must understand that these things are  not just theoretical in their effects. The later  Heidegger is crucially important in theology, in  the new hermeneutics. These things have their  effect in the student world as well. They are not  abstract. They are changing our world.  

Let us at this point note an important fac-  tor. Whether we are dealing with Heidegger say-  ing, “Listen to the poet,” and offering an upper-  story semantic mysticism that seems to give  hope, or with Wittgenstein who moves in the  opposite direction and is more honest in saying  that there is only silence upstairs, and there-  fore, all we can do is define words, which will  never deal finally with meanings or values; whether we look at Heidegger or Wittgenstein,  who move in opposite directions at the point of  language, the interesting thing is that modern  man has come to conclude that the secret of  the whole thing lies somehow in language. This  is the age of semantics at this very basic point.  

Notice what this means to us. The whole  question with Heidegger and  Wittgenstein—and with Bergman—is whether  there is anyone adequately there in the universe  to speak. We are surrounded by a sea of anti-  philosophy. Positivism, which was an opti-  mistic rationalism and the base of naturalistic  science, has died. It has been proved to be an  insufficient epistemology. But the remaining  alternatives—existentialism on the one hand,  and linguistic analysis on the other—are anti-  philosophies that cause man to be hopeless  concerning ethics, values, meaning, and the certainty of knowledge. So in epistemology we  are surrounded by a sea of anti-philosophy.  Polanyi, for example, who was so magnificent  in destroying logical positivism, ends up with  pure cynicism in the area of epistemology and  knowing. So, as we have seen, does Karl Pop-  per. Modern man is stuck right here. Positivism  is dead and what is left is cynicism as to know-  ing. That is where modern man is, whether the  individual man knows it or not.  

Those who have been raised in the last  couple of decades stand right here in the area  of epistemology. The really great problem is  not, for example, just drugs or amorality. The  problem is knowing. This is a generation of  anti-philosophy people caught in an uncer-  tainty of knowing. In the downstairs area that  modern man ascribes to rationality, and  concerning which he talks with meaningful language, he can see himself only as a ma-  chine, a totally determined machine, and so has  no way to be sure of knowing even the natural  world. But in the area of the upstairs, which he  ascribes to nonrationality, modern man is com-  pletely without categories, for categories are re-  lated to reason and antithesis. In the upstairs  he has no reason to say that this is right as op-  posed to that being wrong (or non-right, per-  haps, to use the more modern idiom). In the  area of morals, in the upstairs he has no way to  say one thing is right as opposed to another  thing being non-right. But notice it is more pro-  found and more horrible. Equally, living up-  stairs he has no way to say that this is true as  opposed to that which is non-true. Don’t you  feel the desperation? This means that he has no  control (and I use the word “control” with the  French meaning, the possibility of checking something), he has no way of having such con-  trol in the upstairs.  

Now we see this vividly in the cinema. I  have dealt with this already at some length in  Escape from Reason and elsewhere, but it is a  necessary part of the picture here, too, and so I  am going to repeat myself. Antonioni’s film  Blowup is an example of this. The main char-  acter is the photographer. He is a perfect  choice because what he is dealing with is not a  set of human values but an impersonal photo-  graphic lens. The camera could be just as easily  hooked up to an impersonal computer as to  this photographer. The photographer runs  around taking his snapshots, a finite human  being dealing only with particulars and totally  unable to put any meaning into them, and the  cold camera lens offers no judgment, no  control in any of what it sees. We recall the posters advertising Antonioni’s film: “Murder  without guilt, love without meaning.” In other  words, there are no categories in the area of  morals—murder is without guilt; but equally,  there are no categories in the human  realm—love is without meaning. So Antonioni  pictures the death of categories. 

 In the area of morality, there is no uni-  versal above; we are left only with particulars.  The camera can click, click, click, and we are left  with a series of particulars and no universals.  That is all that rationalistic man can do for him-  self, Antonioni says, and he is absolutely right.  All the way back to the Greeks, we have for two  thousand years the cleverest men who have  ever lived trying to find a way to put meaning  and certainty of knowledge into the area of  rationalistic man, but man, beginning with  himself with no other knowledge outside of himself, is a total failure, and Antonioni points  it out beautifully in his film.  

But the modern cinema and other art  forms go beyond the loss of human and moral  categories. They point out quite properly that if  you have no place for categories, you not only  lose categories where moral and human values  are concerned, but you also lose any categories  that would distinguish between reality and fan-  tasy. This is seen in many modern films and  novels, for example, Belle de Jour, Juliet of the  Spirits, In the Balance, Rendezvous, and—closest  to our own moment as I write this, and very  well done—the film of Bergman, The Hour of  the Wolf.  

The drug culture enters into this, too. At  the very heart of the thing is the loss of distinc-  tion between reality and fantasy by the taking of  drugs. But even if modern man does not take drugs, he has no categories once he has moved  out of the lower area of reason. Downstairs he  is already dead; he is only a machine, and none  of these things have any meaning. But as soon  as he moves upstairs, into the area of the  upper-story mysticism, all that is left is a place  with no categories with which to distinguish the  inner world from the outer world with any cer-  tainty or to distinguish what is in his head from  that which is in the external world.  

What we are left with today is the fact that  modern man has no categories to enable him  to be at all sure of the difference between what  is real and what is only in his head. Many who  come to us at L’Abri have suffered this loss of  distinction between reality and fantasy.  

There are four groups of categories in-  volved here. We have considered three of these:  first, the moral category; second, the human; third, the categories of reality and fantasy. The  fourth, which we examine now, concerns our  knowing other people.  

The third group of categories is concerned  with moving from inside the head to outside  the head with certainty, and being sure that  there is any difference between reality and fan-  tasy. The fourth group is the reverse: how can  two people meeting ever know each  other—moving from outside their heads into  each other’s heads? How do we have any cate-  gories to enable us to move into the other per-  son’s thought world? This is the modern man’s  alienation; this is the blackness that so many  modern people face, the feeling of being totally  alienated. A couple can sleep together for ten or  fifteen years, but how are they going to get in-  side each other’s heads to know anything about  the other person as a person, in contrast merely to a language machine? It is easy to know the  façade of a language machine, but how can you  get in behind the language and know the per-  son in this kind of setting? This is a very special  modern form of lostness

.  I had this brought strongly to my attention  a number of years ago when a very modern  couple came to L’Abri. We put them in one of  the chalets. They keep everyone awake night  after night because they would talk all the way  through the night until morning—talk, talk, talk.  They were driving everyone crazy. Naturally, I  became intrigued. I wondered what they were  talking about. These people had been together  for a long time; what did they talk about all the  time? When I got to know them, I found out,  and it turned on a new dimension for me as it  dawned on me what the dilemma really is. I  found out that they talked because they were trying desperately to know each other. They  were really in love, and they were talking and  talking in order to try to find one sentence or  one phrase that they could know exhaustively to-  gether so that they could begin to know each  other and to move inside of each other’s heads.  They had no universals in their world, and thus  they had to make a universal by a totally ex-  haustive point of contact. Being finite, they  could not reach this. 

 So how do you begin? You are left with  only particulars. Moving outward, you have no  certainty that there is anything there, outside.  Moving inside, inward, you are trying to move  into somebody else’s head. How do you know  you are touching him? In this setting, human  beings are the only ones who are there. There is  no one else there to speak—only silence. So if  you do not have the exhaustive phrase, how do 
you begin? You just cannot begin by knowing  something partially; it must be exhaustive be-  cause there is no one else anywhere to provide  any universals. The universal, the certainty,  must be in your own conversation, in one ex-  haustive sentence or one exhaustive phrase to  begin with. The problem is in the area of episte-  mology, and it centers on language. 

 Modern man is left either downstairs, as a  machine with words that do not lead either to  values or facts but only to words, or he is left  upstairs, in a world without categories in regard  to human values, moral values, or the differ-  ence between reality and fantasy. Weep for our  generation! Man, made in the image of God  and intended to be in vertical communication  with the One who is there and who is not silent,  and meant to have horizontal communication  with his own kind, has, because of his proud rationalism, making himself autonomous,  come to this place.  

I would end this chapter with a quotation  from Satyricon of Fellini. Toward the end of the  film, a man looks down at his friend, who is  dying a ridiculous death, an absolutely absurd  death. With all his hopes, he has come to a  completely absurd end. Modern man, made in  the image of God and meant to be in communi-  cation with God and then with his kind, has  come to this place of horrible silence. In the  film Fellini has the voice say, “O God, how far  he lies from his destination now.” There was  never a truer word. 


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CHAPTER 4    THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL NECESSITY

    THE ANSWER    

There is a Christian answer to the epistemo-  logical problem. Let us begin by remembering  that the High Renaissance had a problem of na-  ture and grace: their rationalism and humanism  had no way to bind nature and grace together.  They never achieved an answer to the problem, and the dilemma of the twentieth century really  springs from this. Rationalistic and humanistic  men, brilliant as they were, could never find the  way to bind nature and grace together. How-  ever, at about the same time, as I have empha-  sized in my earlier books, the Reformation was  taking place, and the Reformation had no prob-  lem of nature and grace. This is really a tremen-  dous distinction. Nature and grace arose as a  problem out of the rationalistic, humanistic Re-  naissance, and it has never been solved. It is  not that Christianity had a tremendous problem  at the Reformation, and that the reformers  wrestled with all this and then came up with an  answer. No, there simply was no problem of na-  ture and grace to the Reformation, because the  Reformation had verbal, propositional reve-  lation, and there was no dichotomy between  nature and grace. The historic Christian position had no nature and grace problem be-  cause of propositional revelation, and reve-  lation deals with language. 

 In our own generation, we have reached  the core of the problem of language. We have  already discussed the later Heidegger’s use of  language, and also Wittgenstein’s use of lan-  guage and linguistic analysis. But the difference  is that Heidegger and Wittgenstein realized that  there must be something spoken if we are  going to know anything, but they had no one  there to speak. It is as simple and as profound  as that. Is there anyone there to speak? Or do  we, being finite, just gather enough facts,  enough particulars, to try to make our own  universals?

  In the Reformation and the Judeo-Christian  position in general, we find that there is  someone there to speak, and that he has told us about two areas. He has spoken first about  himself, not exhaustively, but truly; and second,  he has spoken about history and about the cos-  mos, not exhaustively, but truly. This being the  case, and as he has told us about both things  on the basis of propositional, verbalized reve-  lation, the Reformation had no nature and grace  problem. They had a unity, for the simple rea-  son that revelation spoke to both areas, thus  the problem simply did not exist. Rationalism  could not find an answer, but God, speaking,  gives the unity needed for the nature and grace  dilemma.  

This brings us to a very basic question. Is  the biblical position intellectually possible? Is it  possible to have intellectual integrity while  holding to the position of verbalized, proposi-  tional revelation? I would say the answer is this:  It is not possible if you hold the presupposition of the uniformity of natural causes in a closed  system. If you do, any idea of revelation be-  comes nonsense. It is not only that there are  problems in such a case, but that it becomes  absolute nonsense if you really believe in the  uniformity of natural causes in a closed system,  namely, that everything is a machine. Whether  you begin with a naturalistic view in philosophy  or a naturalistic view in theology makes no dif-  ference. For the liberal theologian, it is quite  impossible to think of real propositional reve-  lation. Discussion only about detail is not  going to solve the problem. The big thing has  to be faced, the question of the presuppo-  sitions. If I am completely committed, without  question, to the uniformity of natural causes in  a closed system, then, whether I express myself  in philosophical or religious terms,  propositional, verbalized revelation—knowledge that man has from  God—is a totally unthinkable concept. This is  because by definition everything is a machine,  so naturally there is no knowledge from  outside—from God. If this is your worldview,  and you refuse to consider the possibility of  any other, even though your naturalistic world-  view leads to the dehumanization of man and is  against the facts that we know about man and  things, you are a dead end. You must remem-  ber you can only hold the uniformity of natural  causes in the closed system, which is the  monolithic consensus today, by denying what  man knows about man. But if you insist upon  holding this view, even though it dehumanizes  man, and even though it is opposed to the evi-  dence of what man knows about man, then you  must understand there is no place for  revelation. Not only that, but if you are going to hold to the uniformity of natural causes in the  closed system, against all the evidence (and I  do insist it is against the evidence), then you  will never, never be able to consider the other  presupposition, which began modern science  in the first place: the uniformity of natural caus-  es in a limited system, open to reordering by  God and by man. 

 There is an interesting factor here, and that  is that in modern, secular anthropology (and I  stress secular), the distinction of man against  non-man is made in the area of language. It was  not always so. The distinction used to be made  in the area of man as the toolmaker, so that  wherever you found the toolmaker, it was man  as against non-man. This is no longer true. The  distinction is now language. The secular an-  thropologists agree that if we are to determine  what is man in contrast to what is non-man, it is not in the area of toolmaking, but in the area  of the verbalizer. If it is a verbalizer, it is man. If  it is a non-verbalizer, it is not man.  

We have now concluded that what marks  man as man is verbalization. We communicate  propositional communication to each other in  spoken or written form in language. Indeed, it  is deeper than this because the way we think in-  side of our own heads is in language. We can  have other things in our heads besides lan-  guage, but it always must be linked to language.  A book, for example, can be written with much  figure of speech, but the figure of speech must  have a continuity with the normal use of syntax  and a defined use of terms, or nobody knows  that the book is about. So whether we are talk-  ing about outward communication or inward  thought, man is a verbalizer.  

Now let us look at this argument from a non-Christian view, from the modern man’s  view of the uniformity of natural causes in a  closed system. Here all concept of proposi-  tonal revelation, and especially verbalized,  propositional revelation, is totally nonsense.  The question I have often tried to raise in con-  nection with this presupposition of the unifor-  mity of natural causes in a closed system is  whether it is viable in the light of what we know.  I would insist it is not. It fails to explain man. It  fails to explain the universe and its form. It fails  to stand up in the area of epistemology.

  It is obvious that verbalized propositional  revelation is not possible on the basis of the  uniformity of natural causes. But the argument  stands or falls upon the question: Is the pre-  supposition of the uniformity of natural causes  really acceptable? In my earlier books, and in  the previous chapters of this book, we have considered whether this presupposition is in  fact acceptable, or even reasonable, not upon  the basis of Christian faith, but upon the basis  of what we know concerning man and the uni-  verse as it is.  

Albert Einstein and Robert Oppenheimer, 1947: Flickr, James Vaughn

File:Francis Schaeffer.jpg

Francis Schaeffer above


Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki – August 6 and 9, 1945


From left to right: Robertson, Wigner, Weyl, Gödel, Rabi, Einstein, Ladenburg, Oppenheimer, and Clemence

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