AUB / FAS / CVSP 202 P. Shebay a

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AUB / FAS / CVSP 202 P. Shebay a ps01@aub.edu.lb

CVSP-exposure to a variety of modes of communicating insight into what gives meaning to human life ALL FORMS of art and literature, socio-economicpolitical life, science, technology, human relations, philosophical, religious, and spiritual experience CVSP201 exposes us to polytheistic experience expressed via poetry, myth, tragic, and scientificrationalistic visions of our human life CVSP202 introduces us into the worlds of monotheism CVSP203-204 into the modern and contemporary

Objectives Transition from world of Homer - tragic and rationalistic - to the Abrahamic monotheistic Basic vocabulary / concepts a comparative analysis in CVSP terms : world-views and the image of man Prepare for the reading of The Confessions More complete lecture next week on the text

ConstaCntine( the christianisation of the Roman Empire)C

Interaction of many cultures Ancient Mesopotamian, Accadian, Sumerian, Babylonian, Persian, Hittite, Phoenician Greek / Hellenic = a synthesis of elements from the above + North African + the specifically Greek Hellenistic (Alexander) and Roman (Republic + Empire) extended this rich process Far Eastern elements (very rich cultures) developed separately,but inevitably,were not totally absent Hebrew Abrahamic monotheism interacted with many of the above What (if any) contribution did this peoples make???

contributions??? All major categories of human cultural and intellectual creative activity (art, literature, history, science, philosophy, mysticism ) were established in other cultures. Perhaps one may conclude that their unique contribution is their presentation of the Divine, with its corresponding implications in the search for fundamental human self-understanding. Nature, the Human, Society, History, Knowledge, Excellence, Freedom / Slavery, Values It is helpful in our study to see their scriptures as an ongoing dialogue with the cultures of the day. Many common aspects/significant unique perspectives

The Divine and Nature(the Cosmos) Neither Tragic nor Rationalistic God : Unique, Creator, Transcendent the Cosmos has a beginning and an end Faithful Love, Compassionate, Merciful Free, Personal, Involved covenant, revelation, prophets, history Primacy of the personal and the human no rigid inflexible structure of the Cosmos that determines human life, but a Loving God

The Human: male and female in the image and likeness of God Family-relationship ; representative ruler over the creation Human dignity intrinsic Given freedom to live as God intended (Eden) OR to rebel and live the current condition (the natural consequence of their choice) The intended intimate relationship with God has been spoiled : exile/ alienation No fixed nature ; possibility of radical change in character; grace, repentance, conversion (or the opposite)

Human Society Family (brothers and sisters) : children of God Solidarity, mutual responsibility, communion ; organic relationship beyond the merely functional Alienation from God leads to alienation from fellow humans : violence, corruption, radical selfishness

Human History Finite, linear, purposive/developmental irreversible Stages corresponding to the interaction of God and His wayward children Eden (original power and innocence); alienation and preparation (Covenant, The Law, Prophets) The Christ : Salvation/ Redemption /Restoration The Last Days : working out restoration The Last Judgment : end of History and the New Creation

Human Knowledge existential (experiential) : concrete, personalsocial - historical complements theoretical, abstract, speculative knowledge ; not to be confused with it deals with specifically human experience that is not of the order of scientific and mathematical expertise

virtue (excellence) LOVE (God, Neighbor, Self, each other, enemy); relationship and service (not subjective feelings) Faith, Hope, Love complete the philosophical virtues (Justice, Wisdom, Courage, Self-Mastery) Humanization (personalization) of Goodness and Justice : focus on relationships and not only on impersonal order/structure/harmony

Vice and Evil SIN : betrayal of covenant partner (personal) not simply breaking a law (of the Cosmos or of God) EVIL : radical, conscious, personal is the true human problem Evil that is the result of ignorance, blindness, recklessness is negative but is not the sufficient cause of the radical human predicament

LOVE A term with a long history, many meanings, and subject to both idolization and vulgarization Initially always outward and action oriented Only recently primarily connected with subjective feelings EROS (amor ) : the response to, the search for, and the dedication to BEAUTY that begins in the appetitive realm but leads to and finds its fulfillment only in artistic and intellectual realities AGAPE : the active concern for the well-being of the other at the cost of personal loss (sacrificial) primary contrast is with selfishness and fear (not hate)

Title/Form/Style Autobiographical ; CONFESSION = primarily acknowledgment /testimony/ witness NOT focus on sins PRAYER as a dynamic expression of his concrete human reality (not merely a pious religious formula/ practice) NOT proving the existence of God but expressing his philosophical reflections as a human being who claims to have encountered God (how does human existence look to such a creature?)

MAN is an Abyss The Human Life-World Some enduring features/contributions to philosophical investigation first in-depth study of the human being in concrete experience (Inward Empiricism) first first candid/transparent autobiography depth-psychological exploration of the human mind (long before Freud) first exploration of Time in human terms

Ideology and socio-political life Augustine s world was turbulent, with different groups vying for power. The setting was not one of simple academic debate. Each group sought to impose its views on society as a whole. No option of a tolerant secular solution was available. Rightly or wrongly, Augustine sincerely saw his option as the most human one. It would be unfair to miss the authenticity of his Confessions by reducing it to propaganda

Existential Theology monotheist experience philosophizing WITNESS - not abstract or dogmatic assertions attempt to convey experience through description what beliefs mean in a person s life NOT a polemical or theoretical argument the human face of doctrine facilitates dialogue and empathy (NOT agreement) Examples

examples knowledge of God and God s love : ongoing personal relationship experience, directly and in society original sin : the ontological-theological expression of concrete experience (human struggle against the pressures of deep-rooted selfishness and resistance to the truth that one s own reason presents) - beyond ignorance and blindness evil : even in babies ( not responsible for exhibiting its original presence ) but the philosophical problem of evil (later in the lecture), foreknowledge and free-will, trinity, incarnation

REFERENCES F- " these are tentative theories not downright assertions." (p. 266) "Can any man say enough when he speaks of you? even those who are most gifted with speech cannot find words to describe you." (p. 23)

PLOTINUS (NEO-PLATONISM) NOUS PSYCHE THE ONE INTELLECT WORLD- SOUL BODY MATTER

Plotinus monotheized Augustine credits the Platonists with providing him with his philosophical vision beyond the materialism of the other major philosophies of the day (Stoicism, Epicureanism, Manichaeism ). He finds many points in common between the Christian view of God and that of Plotinus. He sees the major difference in the HUMILITY of GOD (and correspondingly in the human being). For him, this virtue makes ALL the difference. Without it PRIDE spoils all claims to Divinity and Wisdom. (Book 7 : chapters 9,20,21) He personalizes Plotinus structural system.

PLOTINUS (NEO-PLATONISM) NOUS PSYCHE THE ONE INTELLECT WORLD- SOUL BODY MATTER

Ideology and socio-political life Augustine s world was turbulent, with different groups vying for power. The setting was not one of simple academic debate. Each group sought to impose its views on society as a whole. No option of a tolerant secular solution was available. Rightly or wrongly, Augustine sincerely saw his option as the most human one. It would be unfair to miss the authenticity of his Confessions by reducing it to propaganda

exploring the life-world of the human self Inward empiricism : a new methodology Unity of the Self : three modes/ one substance Myself as Understanding Myself as Will Myself as Memory

A. Inward Empiricism " men go out and gaze in astonishment at high mountains, the huge waves of the sea, the broad reaches of rivers, the ocean that encircles the world, or the stars in their courses. But they pay no attention to themselves." (p.216) " the field of my labors is my own self. I have become a problem to myself I am investigating myself, my memory, my mind. There is nothing strange in the fact that whatever is not myself is far from me. But what could be nearer to me than myself?" (p.223)

B. Myself as Will "I knew that I had a will as surely as I knew that there was life in me. When I chose to do something or not to do it, I was quite certain that it was my own self, and not some other person, who made this act of will " so that I was on the point of understanding that herein lay the cause of my sin." (p.136)

paralysis of the will C. "My inner self was a house divided against myself I was... overcome with violent anger with myself for not accepting your will and entering into your covenant. Yet in my bones I knew that this was what I ought to do. In my heart of hearts, I praised it to the skies. I need not even walk as far as I had come from the house to reach this goal I needed no chariot or ship no more was required than a resolute and wholehearted act of the will." (pp. 170-1) "The mind orders itself to make an act of the will, and it would not give this order unless it willed to do so; yet it does not carry out its own command." (p. 172)

the two wills (pp.172-4) NOT literally TWO---he rejects this Manichaean dualism ; the struggle of the one Self as Will Two orientations of the ONE free-will ; -this is the concrete experience of an original enslavement,which he now understands to be the consequence of the original rebellion of the human race (Adam/Eve) against God, and the loss of original power and freedom This means a weakened will but one that is still free to make serious choices with serious consequences that affect the human race This highlights the need for God to restore original freedom

MYSELF AS MEMORY : history D. " as I rise by stages towards the God who made me. The next stage is memory, which is like a great field or a spacious palace, a storehouse (an) inner hiding place " (p. 124) "All this goes on inside me, in the vast cloisters of my memory. In it are the sky, the earth, and the sea, ready at my summons, together with everything that I have ever perceived in them by my senses, except the things which I have forgotten. In it I meet myself as well. I remember myself and what I have done, when and where I did it, and the state of mind at the time. In my memory, too, are all the events that I remember, whether they are things that have happened to me or things that I have heard from others. From the same source I can picture to myself all kinds of different images based either upon my own experience, or upon what others have told me. I can fit them into the general picture of the past; from them I can make a surmise of actions and events and hopes for the future; and I can contemplate them all over again as if they were actually present The power of the memory is prodigious, my God. It is a vast, immeasurable sanctuary. Who can plumb its depths?" (pp. 215-16)

Myself as Memory : the experiential knowledge of God above Self ( transcendent ) E. "See how I have explored the vast field of my memory in search of you, O Lord. And I have not found you outside it It is there that I find you when I am reminded of you and find delight in you." (p. 230) you are not the mind itself for you are the Lord God of the mind Where else, then, did I find you in yourself, above me. (p.231)

Some results God and Evil are presented as concrete realities experienced in human life ; not abstract concepts Encounter with God : always positive Evil : concretely experienced in connection with an abuse of the Will -not abstractions (an Evil God/the stars/no evil) -not false accusations (matter, the body, appetites, feelings, emotions, desires ) PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY

Mysterium caritatis (love) and Mysterium iniquitatis (evil) MYSTERIUM = a rich reality not reducible to abstract rationalistic formulae LOVE and EVIL : twin realities in human life LOVE : AGAPE and EROS CARITAS = AGAPIZED EROS Only existential description can adequately explore such rich realities