Metaphysics, Natural Theology, Philosophy, Philosophy of Science, Resources, Uncategorized

Resource: The Quantum Thomist

Photo courtesy of Nathan Perkins

A large part of this blog seeks to explore the intersection of physics and metaphysics from the standpoint of classical philosophy (I am not a physicist). Metaphysics is the study or theory of reality — what the ancient and medieval philosophers called Being. The questions metaphysics seek to explore are: What is reality? What can be counted as real? Are there things such as numbers, mathematics, or the logical axioms and propositions of all human reasoning that are not strictly empirical? In what ways do the physical laws and rules of logic point to extra-empirical, supernatural, or a transcendent reality?

Lately, I’ve been reading through this website called The Quantum Thomist by Dr. Nigel Cundy. If you are interested in how the study of physics points to metaphysics and transcendent reality, read this site. Dr. Cundy is a physicist who understands the connection between physics and metaphysics. I hope you enjoy it.

Philosophy

What is Philosophy?

Photo courtesy of Nate Seng

Wonder is the feeling of a philosopher, and the philosopher begins in wonder.

Plato, Theaetetus, 155

It is owing to their wonder that men both now begin and at the first began to philosophize.

Aristotle, Metaphysics, I, 2.

It is sometimes claimed that the borderlines between philosophy and all other disciplines are very blurred. After all, what was known in the ancient and medieval worlds as “natural philosophy” is now in the modern era simply called science. This is partly because what the ancient philosophers asked about the natural world has been answered through the course of time. In other words, philosophers set up the questions and through empiricism, trial and error, and eventually, the scientific method, those interested in questions about physical nature found answers. Does this mean, however, that science has discovered all the questions important to human existence? Furthermore, it is claimed that philosophy investigates the great questions of life—but doesn’t art, literature, music, and history explore the great questions of life also? After all, other disciplines are interested in these questions, so what makes philosophy unique? What is philosophy then, and why is it still considered an important and unique field of inquiry, at least for some?

Whenever one begins a study of something it is always best to begin with the name of the thing itself. This will also help us understand how the field of philosophy is set apart from other disciplines. The word “philosophy” comes from the Greek word which means “the love of wisdom.” It is a combination of the Greek words “philia” (love) and “sophia” (wisdom). It is said that the ancient philosopher Pythagoras (about 600 B.C.) was the first to use the term “philosopher” and likened philosophers—pursuers of wisdom—to spectators at ancient games:

…when Leon the tyrant of Philius asked him who he was, he said, “A philosopher,” and that he compared life to the Great Games, where some went to compete for the prize and others went with wares to sell, but the best as spectators; for similarly, in life, some grow up with servile natures, greedy for fame and gain, but the philosopher seeks for truth.”1 

Pythagoras certainly captures the spirit of the philosophical enterprise as one who seeks wisdom and truth. But what can we know about this project of discovering and loving wisdom? The first philosophers who left us a large body of work which we would now call philosophy were the ancient Greek thinkers, Plato and Aristotle. Plato and Aristotle held that philosophy—the love and pursuit of wisdom begins with the human propensity to wonder. After all, it is due to wonder that humans explore their world, discover new things, and create works of art, culture, and technology. In the ancient Greek world, however, sophia (wisdom) came to be known as the quest for the first principles of the world in which we live. As discoveries were made and conclusions were drawn, it became apparent that not all kinds of answers were the same. The inquiry into what a thing is, for example, is very different from the question of how to do something. Aristotle was the first to recognize that particular fields of investigation had to be separated out into geometry, biology, physics, and psychology (to name a few) because the kinds of questions each field seeks answers to has uniquely different starting points and methods. As Aristotle explains in his Metaphysics, wisdom is knowledge about the first principles and causes of the universe and is different from the arts of production and other fields. Ultimately, the term wisdom became reserved for the inquiry into the first principles of all reality. Philosophers seek the wisdom of the fundamental reality of things, where things come from, why there is anything at all, the truth or falsity of moral claims and whether or not humans can genuinely know anything, and one of the ultimate questions of all, is there a God or creator of the universe? These are among the greatest questions central to all of human experience. Philosophy seeks answers to the most general questions of existence. These questions have been the pursuit of humankind for many centuries, going as far back as to the beginning of written language and possibly further.

It should be clear by now that philosophy is a uniquely human enterprise. The philosopher Ed Miller defines philosophy as the attempt to think rationally and critically about the most important questions. I would add two words to the last sentence—of life. I am not an existentialist but philosophy, if it is going to be meaningful and important, needs to reflect on the nature, significance, and purpose of human existence and mankind’s place in the world. That is why Socrates said at his trial, “the unexamined life is not worth living for a man.” Humans are the only species that create libraries, schools, and hospitals. Cephalopods might have the most advanced brains and nervous systems of the animal kingdom, but they do not write books, program computers, or engage in rational self-reflection. The unexamined life is perfectly fine for a squid or cat but humans have the unique ability to engage in discovering truth through evidence, examination, reasoned evaluation and thoughtful analysis. The impulse to apply reason and to seek understanding, knowledge, and wisdom are uniquely human traits. It is always a tragedy when someone rejects their rationality or declines to develop their rational potential. That is why the UNCF correctly adopted the motto, “a mind is a terrible thing to waste.” Only humans have intellectual capacities. Philosophy seeks to understand the meaning, purpose, and significance of all fields and human inquiry.

Philosophy then, seeks to develop human potential through logic, the formulation and study of the principles of correct reasoning, and is one way it is different from other fields. It is true, that all other fields use logical reasoning in one way or another but in these cases it is used secondarily. Other fields, such as science and history are primarily empirical. It is philosophy, however, which lays out the principles and axioms that make deduction, inference, and valid conclusions possible to begin with. A rational argument is the attempt to show something to be true, well-founded, and coherent, by providing evidence for it. Philosophers examine the truth or falsity of the premises of an argument and what it means to come to a valid conclusion. Philosophy examines the nature of explanation. The laws of logic such as the law of non-contradiction, the law of identity, and the law of excluded middle are philosophical tools that the historian, scientist, and even the novelist have to assume and rely on to make their work comprehensible and conceptually coherent. Done appropriately, it is logic that provides the historian and scientist their methodology. The philosopher examines the principles which make logical and rational argumentation possible. Logic is simply a tool that anyone can use to sharpen their thinking through correct reasoning. Unlike history and the empirical sciences that use uniquely physical investigative methods, philosophy is thinking and inquiring about the ultimate questions of life through rational inquiry, logic, and argumentation alone. You will never find a philosopher researching the nature of moral values in a chemistry lab.

As we have seen, the content and methodology of philosophy are what makes it different from other fields. Philosophy centers itself on the great questions of life, questions which humans have been searching for answers to for thousands of years—moral questions, questions about the nature of reality, and what it means to be authentically human in what seems to be a physical universe. When human beings increase and develop their understanding of these great questions, they and their culture will ripen into what is most distinctively human.

1Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, VII, 8, tr. R.D. Hicks (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1925), II.

Metaphysics, Philosophy, Philosophy of Science

Epilogue: A Twenty-First Century Meditation on First-Philosophy

[Note: As July quickly approaches, I will not be making many posts on this blog. I will have my two beautiful daughters with me for the month and much of my time will be spent with my family. These are the times I rediscover that love is the primary matter which holds our family together.]

At any rate, here are some initial and unfinished thoughts regarding physics and metaphysics. The more I delve into the concept of Being, the further I seem to go into the philosophy of science and the existential import of what it means to be and become in this temporal world. I remain impressed by how the classical categories of Western thought (specifically, act and potency, accepted by both neo-Platonists and Aristotelians) hold up and have stood the test of time.

Part two of my essay on Heisenberg’s appeal to Aristotelian metaphysics can be found here.

I probably won’t be able to explicate these further until August, but here are a few rough and undeveloped reflections that came to me when thinking about the intersection of science and the philosophical first principles of reality. Post below if you have anything to add or something which you think needs further discussion.

1. The Copenhagen School interpretation of quantum mechanics seems to indicate that we can say nothing about the properties of an atom or sub-atomic particles. All scientists can do is provide the results of experiments on them. Would it be better to say that the strange behavior of quantum mechanics demonstrates the classical nature of potential waiting to be put into act? Perhaps that is the nature or essence of quantum physics?

2. The mystery of causality. Predictability in the quantum realm may not hold in particular cases. That does not mean, however, that there is no efficient cause or sufficient reason for its action. An efficient cause may be unpredictable but that does not mean it does not exist.

3. The actual world we live in is alive with potentialities from the smallest elements of matter to human individuals. This is what we mean when we speak of “human potential.” Our world is charged with real potentialities, relationships, and interactions between real beings.

4. Many of the early scientists and mathematicians working on quantum phenomena such as Planck, Heisenberg, and Bohr were not strict materialists. Neither were other influential thinkers of the time such as Bergson, Einstein, Whitehead, and Hardy. They all understood that something more is going on in our world than matter, energy, and motion. In other words, they would have rejected the undue and uncritical acceptance of the scientific method as it is applied to every other field of inquiry such as philosophy, history, or the humanities.

5. Perhaps Einstein’s formula regarding the convertibility of matter and energy (Energy = the mass x the speed of light squared), points to Aristotle’s “primary matter”? (It may of itself have no form but must always be structured by some form or essence?)

6. The classic question of the one and many. Heraclitus was only half correct when he stated that all reality is in flux. Our world is not in total or complete flow or chaos. Even Heisenberg’s Indeterminacy Principle is not infinite. There must be something that perdures or there would be no sense of continuity. In this regard, quantum physics point to the classical question of the one and many (which also speaks to the nature of relationships).

7. The great conversation regarding act and potency which was started by Aristotle, accepted by Plotinus, elaborated by Aquinas, and rediscovered by Heisenberg needs to be explored, developed, and integrated for our time. Metaphysics is about recovering the first principles of Being.

Metaphysics, Philosophy, Philosophy of Science

Between Possibility and Reality: Heisenberg’s Appeal to Aristotelian Metaphysics, Part Two

So what do Aristotelian-Thomist notions of act/potency and form/matter have to do with quantum dynamics? In 1975 Werner Heisenberg gave a lecture to German physicists and said, “good science is being unconsciously discarded because of bad philosophy” and sought to correct the situation with his book, Physics and Philosophy. The bad philosophy that Heisenberg wanted to redress was the materialistic, mechanistic, and deterministic view of nature assumed by Enlightenment physicists and philosophers. He specifically appealed to the metaphysics of Aristotle to correct the deterministic view of Newtonian physics. It is important to note at this point that much of Aristotle’s ideas were either thrown out or misinterpreted by early modern philosophers and scientists due to their materialist assumptions. Heisenberg’s appeal to Aristotle’s metaphysics was a bold new move for his day but he realized it made the most sense out the facts as they were presented to him.

So what was Heisenberg getting at when he explained the function of sub-atomic particles in the Aristotelian category of ‘potential’? In his book Physics and Philosophy, he tells us:

“In throwing dice we do not know the fine details of the motion of our hands which determine the fall of the dice and therefore we say that the probability for throwing a special number is just one in six. The probability wave of Bohr, Kramers, Slater, however, meant more that; it meant a tendency for something. It was a quantitative version of the old concept of “potentia” in Aristotelian philosophy. It introduced something standing in the middle between the idea of an event and the actual event, a strange kind of physical reality just in the middle between possibility and reality” (396).

According to Heisenberg, the probability inherent in quantum behavior is potential – a tendency for something. (This might also imply a ‘telos,’ or purpose, but we will not develop that here.) Heisenberg is clearly stating that the many abilities, capacities, possibilities, or dispositional properties a sub-atomic particle has is its potential.

When explaining the unity of matter as energy or universal matter (similar to Aristotle’s ‘prime matter”) Heisenberg says this, “If we compare this situation with the Aristotelian concepts of matter and form, we can say that the matter of Aristotle, which is mere “potentia,” should be compared to our concept of energy, which gets into “actuality” by means of the form, when the elementary particle is created” (440). Here Heisenberg is intuitively correct. Matter is always in potential. Contrary to early modern philosophers such as Descartes and others, matter and form are not so easily thrown out. Matter and form, or as Heisenberg might say, energy as a form of matter are necessary conceptual tools which physicists use to describe the world. Here, it is important to note two things, the first is that potential is not empirical, the second is that potency is not pure chaos.

First, potential is inaccessible to the strict empiricist. No empiricist who believes that all human knowledge is restricted to what can be observed by some sense experience can allow for potency. Why? Because although potency can be observed through act as an effect (in hindsight, so to speak), it can not be directly observed by itself through sense perception. This is why no real scientist is a strict empiricist because they are always appealing to properties, capacities, probabilities, or capabilities of matter, even though potential is never known by itself apart from that which is in act. The second thing to keep in mind is that at the quantum level, the range of probabilities (potential) is not absolutely indeterminable or chaotic. Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle states that the quantum mechanical behavior of sub-atomic particles is not absolutely indeterminate because it can only oscillate between a range of probabilistic values (Silva 638). This is why things correspond to their nature or essence. Potency can only have an effect on a range of possibilities to that which is in act.

Finally, Heisenberg claimed that many of his fellow physicists were coming to the same Aristotelian conclusions, “One might perhaps call it an objective tendency or possibility, a ‘potentia’ in the sense of Aristotelian philosophy. In fact, I believe that the language actually used by physicists when they speak about atomic events produces in their minds similar notions as the concept ‘potentia.’ So the physicists have gradually become accustomed to considering the electronic orbits, etc., not as reality but rather as a kind of ‘potentia’” (447). Heisenberg came to realize that many of his colleagues were beginning to understand the philosophical implications of quantum dynamics in Aristotelian terms. This should not be surprising since reality is the determinate of order and will always reveal its own intractable way of being.

Max Planck, who is considered the father of quantum theory, also held that scientific discoveries ultimately point to a metaphysical reality. Although he did not explicitly use the category of potential, he was very aware of the philosophical implications of quantum mechanics. “As there is a material object behind every sensation, so there is a metaphysical reality behind everything that human experience shows to be real” (97). Potency seems to be the best metaphysical category that explains the mysterious behavior of quantum particles. It certainly cannot explain the entire mystery, for there are still many remaining questions for science to explore but act and potency are viable options that the physicist and metaphysician can use to describe reality. These metaphysical co-principles have stood the test of time and point us to the nature of ultimate reality. In many ways, reality itself points to a metaphysical reality. Plank went on to explain that, “Metaphysical reality does not stand spatially behind what is given in experience, but lies fully within it. … The essential point is that the world of sensation is not the only world which may conceivably exist, but that there is still another world. To be sure, this other world is not directly accessible to us, but its existence is indicated time and time again” (98). The metaphysical co-principles of act/potency and form/matter help us understand what is happening in the physical realm.

From these remarks by Planck and Heisenberg, and through an investigation of the Aristotelian categories of act and potency, we see that reality by its very nature is oriented toward self-expressive action. In classical philosophy, the physical world is seen as “one and many” or “being and becoming” (both are needed to make sense of the world). Potentiality, however, is the category used for explaining the dynamic aspect of life. Nothing in the human, animal, or plant kingdoms can grow, develop, or meet its potential by being static. To stand out of nothing—the very meaning of existence—is to be oriented toward action and is the reason there is a metaphysical basis for reality, even at the atomic level. The Aristotelian categories of act and potency account for the dynamic and changing realities we experience in the world around us. Potency itself is not a strictly empirical phenomenon but is indispensable for accounting for and maintaining the integrity of the empirical data. There are all sorts of non-empirical realities that nature itself points us to—from the smallest sub-atomic particle to human nature itself.

[Special thanks and gratitude go to my friend Dr. Derek Gardner at the University of Arizona for keeping me pointed in the right direction regarding the issues around quantum physics. Without his guidance my ontology would have certainly failed.]

Works Cited

Heisenberg, Werner. Physics and Philosophy. Great Books of the Western World. Vol. 56. Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 1999

Planck, Max. Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers. Great Books of the Western World. Vol. 56. Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 1999

Silva, Ignacio. “Werner Heisenberg and Thomas Aquinas on Natural Indeterminism.” New Blackfriars, 2013, 635 – 653.

For further reading:

Clarke, Norris. The One and The Many: A Contemporary Thomistic Metaphysics. University of Notre Dame, 2001.

Goetz, Stewart and Charles Taliaferro. Naturalism. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2008.

Trigg, Roger. Beyond Matter: Why Science Needs Metaphysics. Templeton Press, 2015.

Moreland, J.P. Scientism and Secularism: Learning to Respond to a Dangerous Ideology. Crossway, 2018.