Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
OK, I think then that what you are saying is simply that a story can be a metaphysical one, perhaps as opposed to one devoid of either metaphysical assertion or allusion.
Yes, but there's more to it than that: in the case of Christianity, that which you've (we've) been referring to as the Story (with a capital S) is not
mere story (in the sense of narrative) but is
also and
already comprised of metaphysical principles. An example is original sin. This is part of the Story but it is also very much a metaphysical principle: the principle that the consequences of the abrogation by the first created human beings of the divine commandments are inherited by their descendants.
With that said...
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
However, in the way I create a separation between *story* and *metaphysical principles*
...I don't think that this separation that you make holds very well in the context of Christianity's Story (with a capital S).
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
[The] Story [...] is replete with principles, metaphysical principles. First, we have to identify what those metaphysical principles are
And this is where my critique of your process comes in. The metaphysical principles that I consider to be truly Christian in the Story are those such as I gave an example of above: original sin (I can supply other examples on request). They are
straightforwardly a part of the Story.
You, though, claim to be abstracting metaphysical principles from the Story. This is
not straightforward, and results in principles that are too generic and divorced from the Christian context to be
considered to be truly Christian. The example you've given - and it is the only example of which I'm aware - is that to which I've referred as your Principle of Incarnation, a principle which - as best as I can tell - kind of vaguely states that divine concepts are manifest and embedded into reality in some undefined(?) way.
To the extent to which you base your claim to value Christian metaphysics on your endorsement of such abstracted principles as this, I think your claim is false: this is not a "Christian" principle; it is far too generic for that. At the very least, you would have to
also endorse more specific, straightforwardly Christian principles for your claim to hold.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
If one asserts that metaphysics is false then one is making declarations about what is
really true, and if one denies metaphysical reality (the realness and the power of principles in our human world) one then, necessarily and without any further choice, must
reduce our being to purely physical reality.
Yes, but there is more to metaphysics than just principles. There is also a sense in which "metaphysical reality" refers to a transcendent reality (including the divine) beyond physical reality, and, too, there is a sense in which "a metaphysic" refers to an overarching ontological view, thus...
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
When metaphysics is destroyed one walks back into a prison. The prison of a mutable, meaningless world in which one is powerless.
...this does not require the "destruction" of metaphysics, but rather the
choice of, say, "atheism plus physicalism plus hard determinism" as one's metaphysic rather than, say, "theism plus substance dualism plus libertarian free will".
While your thrust here
is relevant in the sense that the atheist-physicalist types often
do claim to have dispensed with metaphysics, they are wrong, because atheistic physicalism
is a metaphysical view, and we should not grant them the concession that you do here: that they really
have "destroyed" metaphysics.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
When I say *powerless* I mean that in a world ruled by physical principles that mirror the (cruel) reality of nature, one cannot put together an argument against those who apply natural principles to your control.
I don't think it's useful to conflate ethical principles with metaphysical principles as you do in this context. Of course there is some overlap, but it's clearer to be more specific when discussing ethics.
In any case, I disagree with your deterministic and rule-driven view of the natural world (and physical reality in general). The natural world is in my view much more animistic and consciousness-driven than you allow.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
When the Self is undermined -- that is when the metaphysical principles that undergird it are no longer seen as 'real' and validatable -- I assert that the Self begins to collapse.
It would be helpful if you listed some of these metaphysical principles, because it isn't clear to me what you're referring to here.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 1:48 pm
It falls back from being understood as being eternal (immortal if you wish) to being merely an epiphenomenon and essentially unreal. The Self and then everything human is invalidated and reduced to meaninglessness.
We see eye-to-eye here: physicalism, including epiphenomenalism, is obviously and demonstrably false, and, in all honesty, pretty much deserving only of contempt.
The odd thing for me though is that - as I commented above - you actually
endorse a sort of biological determinism that is not all that divorced from the hard determinism that follows from physicalism.