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Problem or pseudo-problem?
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Orthodox Gnosiology
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The two types of knowledge
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God-Man dialectic
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Transplantation of the Western Problem to the
Orthodox East
A. Problem
or pseudo-problem?
The
antithesis and consequent collision between faith and
science is a problem for western (Franco-Latin) thought
and is a pseudo-problem for the Orthodox patristic
tradition. This is based upon the historical data of
these two regions.
The
(supposed) dilemma of faith versus science appears in
Western Europe in the 17th century with the simultaneous
development of the positive sciences. About this same
time we have the appearance of the first Orthodox
positions on this issue. It is an important fact that
these developments in the West are happening without the
presence of Orthodoxy. In these recent centuries there
has been a spiritual estrangement and differentiation
between the [rational] West and the Orthodox East. This
fact is outlined by the de-orthodoxiation and de-ecclesiastication
of the western European world and the philosophication
and legalization of faith and its eventual forming as a
religion in the same area. Thus religion is the
refutation of Orthodoxy and, according to Fr. John
Romanides, the sickess of the human being. Therefore,
Orthodoxy remained historically as a non-participant in
the making of the present western European civilization,
which is also a different size than the civilization of
the Orthodox East.
The
turning points in western Europeans course of alteration
include: scholasticism (13th century), nominalism (14th
century), humanism/renaissance (15th century),
Reformation (16th century) and the Enlightenment (17th
century). It is a series of revolutions and, at that
same time, breaches in the structure of western European
civilization, that was created by the dialectic of these
two movements.
Scholasticism
is supported on the adoption of the Platonic realia. Our
world is conceived of as an image of the transcendent
universalia (realism, archetype). The instrument of
knowledge is the mind-intellect. Knowledge (including
knowing God) is accomplished through the penetration of
logic in the essence of beings. It is the foundation of
metaphysic theology, which presupposes the Analogia
Entis, the consequitive ontological relation between God
and the world, the analogy between the created and
uncreated. Nominalism accepts that the universalia are
simple names and not beings as in realism. It is a
struggle between Platonism and Aristotelian thought in
European thought. However, nominalism turned out to be
the DNA, in a way, of European civilization, whose
essential elements are dualism philosophically and
individualism (eudomenism) socially. Prosperity will
become the basic quest of the western man, theologically
based on the scholastic theology of the middle ages.
Nominalism (that is dualism) is the foundation of
scientific development of the western world, that is the
development of the positive sciences.
The
Orthodox East had had another spiritual evolution, under
the guidance of its spiritual leaders the saints – and
of those who followed them, the true believers--who
remained loyal to the prophetic-apostolic-patristic
tradition; this tradition stands at the opposite end of
scholasticism and all the historic spiritual
developments in the European word. In the East,
hesychasm or prayer of the heart is dominant (and is the
backbone of patristic tradition) it is expressed with
the ascetically experienced participation in the Truth
as communion with the Uncreated. The faith in the
possibility of the joining of God and the world (the
Uncreated and the created) within history is preserved
in the Orthodox East. This, however, means the rejection
of every form of dualism. Science, to the degree it
developed in Byzantium/Romania, developed within this
framework.
The
scientific revolution in Western Europe of the 17th
Century, contributed to the separation of the fields of
faith and knowledge. It resulted in the following
axiomatic principle: New (positive) philosophy only
accepts truths which are verified through rational
thought. It is the absolute authority of Western
thinking. The truths of this new philosophy are the
existence of God, soul, virtue, immortality, and
judgment. Their acceptance, of course, can only take
place in a theistic enlightenment, since we also find
atheism as a structural element of modern thought. The
ecclesiastical doctrines that are rejected by
rationality are the Triune nature of God, the
Incarnation, glorification, salvation, etc. This natural
and logical religion, from the Orthodox viewpoint, not
only differs from atheism but is much worse. Atheism is
less dangerous than its distortion!
B. Orthodox
Gnosiology
It
has been said that in the East the antithesis between
faith and science is a pseudo-problem, Why? Because
gnosiology in the East is defined by the object to be
known which is twofold: the Uncreated and the created.
Only the Holy Trinity is Uncreated. The universe (or
universes) in which our existence is realized, is
created. Faith is knowledge of the Uncreated, and
science is knowledge of the created. Therefore, they are
two different types of knowledge, each having its own
method and tools of inquiry.
The
believer, moving within the territory of supernatural,
or knowledge of the Uncreated, is not called to learn
something metaphysically or to accept something
logically, but to experience God by being in communion
with Him. This is accomplished by introducing him to a
way of life or method which leads to divine knowledge.
It
has been correctly stated that if Christianity were to
appear for the first time in our era, it would have
taken the form of a therapeutic institution, a hospital
to reinstate and restore the function of man as a
psychosomatic being. That is why Saint John Chrysostom
calls the Church a spiritual hospital.
Supernatural-theological knowledge is understood in
Orthodoxy as pathos (experience of life), as
participation and communion with the transcendent and
not an unreachable personal truth of the Uncreated and
certainly not a mere exercise in learning. Thus, the
Christian faith is not the abstract contemplative
adoption of metaphysical truths, it is rather, the
experience of beholding True Being: the experience of
the Supersubstantial (Superessential) Trinity.
This
clearly expresses that in Orthodoxy, authority is found
in experience. The experience of participating in the
Uncreated, of seeing the Uncreated (as expressed by the
terms and "theosis" and "glorification"), and is not
based on texts or in the Scriptures. The tradition of
the Church is not preserved within texts but in people.
Texts help, but they are not the bearers of the Holy
Tradition. Tradition is preserved by the Saints. Human
beings are the bearers of the Gospel. The placing of
texts above the actual experience of the Uncreated (an
indication of the religionizing of faith) leads to their
ideologization and in fact to their idolization. This in
turn leads to the absolute authority of the text
(fundamentalism) and all the well understood
consequences.
The
presupposition of the function of knowing the Uncreated,
for Orthodoxy, is the rejection of every analogy (either
Entis or Fide) in this relationship of
the created and the Uncreated. St. John of Damascus
summarizes this previously extant patristic tradition in
the following manner: It is impossible to find, in
creation, an icon that would reveal the way of existence
of the Holy Trinity. Because, how could it be possible
for the created, which is complex and changeable and
describable, which has shape and is perishable, to
clearly reveal Superessential Divine Essence, which is
free of all these categories? (P.G. 94,821/21).
Therefore,
it now becomes apparent why school education and
philosophy more specifically, according to the patristic
tradition, are not presuppositions for knowledge of God
(theognosia). Alongside the great academic St. Basil the
Great (+379) we also give honor to St. Anthony (+350),
who by wordly standards was not wise. Yet they are both
teachers of the faith. Both witness to knowledge of God,
St. Anthony as someone uneducated and St. Basil as
someone who was more highly educated than Aristotle. St.
Augustine (+430) differs (something that the West would
find very painful, if they knew about it) from patristic
tradition at this point when he ignores scriptural and
patristic gnosiology and is in essence a Neo-platonist!
With his axiom credo ut intelligam (I believe
in order to understand) he introduced the principle that
man is lead to a logical conception of Revelation
through faith. This gives priority to the intellect (the
mind), which is considered by this form of knowledge to
be the instrument or tool of knowing both the natural as
well as the supernatural. God is considered as a
knowable object that can be conceived of by the human
intellect (mind) just as any natural object can be
conceived of. After St. Augustine the next step in this
evolution (with the intervention of the scholasticism of
Thomas Aquinas+1274) will be made by Decartes (+1650)
with his axiom cogito, ergo sum (I think
therefore I am) in which the intellect (mind) is
declared as the main basis of existence.
C. The two
types of knowledge
It
is the Orthodox Tradition that puts and end to this
theoretical collision within the field of gnosiology. It
does so by differentiating the two types of knowledge
and of wisdom:
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divine or that which is "from above" and
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secular (thyrathen) or lower.
The
first knowledge is supernatural and the second is
natural. This corresponds to the clear distinction
between the Uncreated and the created, between God and
creation. These two types of learning require two
methods of learning. The method of divine
wisdom-knowledge is the communion of man with the
Uncreated through the heart. It is accomplished through
the presence of the Uncreated energy of God in man's
heart. The method of secular wisdom-knowledge is
science, it is accomplished by exercising the
intellectual/ logical power of man. Orthodoxy
establishes a clear hierarchy in the two types of
knowledge and their methods.
The
method of supernatural gnosiology, in the Orthodox
Tradition, is called hesychasm and is identified with
watchfulness and purification (nepsis and
katharsis) of the heart. Hesychasm is identified
with Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy, patristically speaking, is
inconceivable outside its hesychastic practice.
Hesychasm in its essence, is the ascetic-curative
practice of cleansing the heart of passions to rekindle
the noetic faculty within the heart. It must be noted at
this point, that the method of hesychasm as a curative
practice is also scientific and practical. Therefore,
theology, under proper conditions, belongs to the
practical sciences. Theology's academic classification
among the theoretical sciences or arts began in the 12th
century in the west and is due to the shift of theology
into metaphysics. Therefore, those in the East who
condemn our own theology, demonstrate their
Westernization, since they, essentially, condemn and
reject a disfigured caricature of what they regard as
theology. But what is the noetic function? In the Holy
Scriptures there is, already, the distinction between
the spirit of man (his nous) and the intellect
(the logos or mind). The spirit of man in
patristics is called nous to
distinguish it from the Holy Spirit. The spirit, the
nous, is the eye of the soul (see Matt.
6:226).
The
noetic faculty is called the function of the nous within
the heart and is the spiritual function of the heart,
its parallel function is the heart as the organ that
pumps the blood throughout our bodies. This noetic
faculty is a mnemonic system that exists with the brain
cells. These two are known and are detectab1e from human
science, which science cannot, however, conceive of the
nous. When man attains illumination by the Holy Spirit
and becomes the temple of God, self-love changes to
unconditional love and it then becomes possible to buiId
real social relations supported upon this unconditional
reciprocity (a willingness to sacrifice for our fellow
man) rather than a self- interested claim of individual
rights according to the spirit of western European
society.
Thus
some important consequences are understood: First, that
Christianity in its authenticity is the transcendence of
religion and a conception of the Church as merely an
institution of rules and duties. Furthermore, Orthodoxy
cannot be conceived as an adoption of some principles or
truths, imposed upon from above. This is the
non-Orthodox version of doctrines (absolute principles,
imposed truths). Conceptions and meanings in Orthodoxy
are examined through their empirical verification. The
dialectical-intellectual style of thinking about
theology, as well as dogmatizing, are alien to authentic
Orthodox Tradition.
The
scientist and professor of the knowledge of the
Uncreated, in the Orthodox Tradition, is the
Geron/Starets (the Elder or Spiritual Father), the guide
or "teacher of the desert". The recording of both types
of know1edge presupposes empirica1 knowledge of the
phenomenon.
The
same holds true in the field of science, where only the
specialist understands the research of other scientists
of the same field. The adoption of conclusions or
findings of a scientific branch by non-specialists (i.e.
those who are unable to experimentally examine the
research of the specialists) is based on the trust of
the specialists credibility. Otherwise, there would be
no scientific progress.
The
same holds true for the science of faith. The empirical
knowledge of the Saints, Prophets, Apostles, Fathers and
Mothers of all ages is adopted and founded upon the same
trust. The patristic tradition and the Church's Councils
function on this provable experience. There is no
Ecumenical Council without the presence of the
glorified/deified (theoumenoi), those who see
the divine (this is the problem of the councils of
today!) Orthodox doctrine results from this
relationship.
Therefore,
Orthodox faith is as dogmatic as science is. Those who
speak of bias in the filed of faith, must not forget the
words of Marc Bloch, that all scientific research is
biased from the beginning, otherwise research could not
have been possible. The same holds true of faith.
Orthodoxy, makes a distinction between the two types of
knowledge (and wisdom), and their methods and tools,
thus, avoiding any confusion between them as well as any
conflict. The road remains open to confusion and
conflict only where the conditions and essence of
Christianity are lost. However, in the Orthodox
environment, some illogical analogies exist. Such as the
possibility of having someone who excels in science, yet
with regard to divine knowledge is a child spiritually;
and vice-versa, someone who is great in divine knowledge
and completely illiterate in human wisdom as the
aforementioned St. Anthony the Great. Nothing, however,
precludes the possibility of possessing both types of
wisdom/knowledge, as is the case of the Great Fathers
and Mothers of the Church. This is exactly what the
Church hymns for the 3rd century mathematician Saint
Catherine the Wise as possessing both types of
knowledge: The martyr having received God's wisdom since
childhood, learned all secular wisdom well...
D. God-Man
dialectic
Thus
the Orthodox believer experiences in the correlation of
the two knowledge-wisdoms a God-man dialectic. And to
use the Christological terminology, every knowledge must
stay put and move within its limits. The problem of the
limits of each kind of knowledge is put thus: The
surpassing of those limits leads to the confusion of
their functions and finally to their conflict. According
to the above, the Holy Fathers defended the correct use
of science and education. Saint Gregory the Theologian
states: "Education should not be dishonored." The same
Father in his second theological Oration also sets the
limits of both kinds of wisdom. Saint Gregory says that
the ancient sage (Plato in Timaeus) said: "It is
difficult to know God and impossible to express Him
[verbally]." However the same Greek yet Christian St.
Gregory understands that it is impossible to express
(describe) God with words, moreover it is absolutely
impossible to understand Him! That is, Plato has already
pointed out the limits of human reason and it is
important to add that there is no rationalism in the
ancient Greek philosophy. Saint Gregory also
demonstrates the impossibility of surpassing those
limits and the conception of the Uncreated by means of
the knowledge of the created.
The
distinction and simultaneous hierarchy of the two kinds
of knowledge have been pointed out by Saint Basil the
Great when he states that faith must prevail in words
concerning God and the proofs made by reason. That faith
originates from the action and energy of the Holy
Spirit. Faith for St. Basil is the illumination of the
Holy Spirit in the heart. (P.G. 30,104B-105B). He also
gives a classic example of the Orthodox use of
scientific knowledge in his Hexameron (P.G. 29,
3-208). He repudiates the cosmological theories of the
philosophers on the eternity and self-existence of the
world and proceeds to the synthesis of biblical and
scientific facts, through which he surpasses science.
Furthermore, by rejecting materialistic and heretical
teachings, he gets to the theological (but not
metaphysical) interpretation of the nature of creation.
The central message of this work is, that the logical
support of dogma is impossible based only on science.
Dogma belongs to another sphere. It is above reason and
science, yet within the limits of another knowledge. The
use of dogma with wordly knowledge leads to the
transformation of science into metaphysics. Whereas the
use of reason in the domain of faith proves its weakness
and relativity. Therefore, there is no belief that is
not searched in Orthodox gnosiology, but each field is
searched with its own criteria: Science with its
presuppositions and Divine Knowledge with its
presuppositions.
The
most tragic expression of the alienated Christian body
is the ecclesiastica1 attitude in the West towards
Galileo. The case could be characterized as surpassing
the limits of jurisdiction. But it is much more serious,
it is the confusion of the limits of knowledge and their
conflict. It is a fact that this loss of the wisdom from
above in the West and the way of achieving it have
caused the intellect (mind) to be used as a tool of not
only human wisdom, but of Divine Wisdom too. The use of
the intellect in the field of science leads unavoidably
to the rejection of the supernatural as
incomprehensible, and its use in the field of faith can
lead to the rejection of science when it is considered
to be in conflict with faith. This same way of thinking
and the same loss of criteria is also betrayed by the
rejection of the Copernican system in the East
(1774-1821). Science, in turn, takes its revenge for the
condemnation of Galilee by the Roman Church, in the
person of Darwin, with his theory of evolution.
E.
Transplantation of the Western Problem to the Orthodox
East
The
European Enlightenment consisted of a struggle between
physical empiricism and the metaphysics of Aristotle.
The Enlighteners are philosophers and rationalists as
well. The Greek Enlighteners, with Adamantios Korais as
their patriarch, were metaphysical in their theology and
it was they who transported the conflict between
empiricists and metaphysicists to Greece. However, the
Orthodox monks of Mount Athos, the Kollyvades and other
Hesychast Fathers remained empiricists in their
theological method. The introduction of metaphysics in
our popular and academic theology is due, principally,
to Korais. For this reason Korais became the authority
for our academic theologians, as well as for the popular
moral movements. This means that the purification of the
heart has ceased to be considered as a presupposition of
theology and its place has been taken by scholastic
education. the same problem appeared in Russia at the
time of Peter the Great (17-18th century). Thus the
Fathers are considered to be philosophers (principally
Neo-platonists like St. Augustine) and social workers.
This has become the prototype of the pietists in Greece.
Furthermore, Hesychasm is rejected as obscurantism. The
so-called progressive ideas of Korais comprise from the
fact that he was a supporter of the Calvinistic and not
the Roman Catholic use of metaphysics, and his
theological works are intense in this Calvinistic
pietism (moralism).
However,
for the Fathers,Orthodoxy is anti-metaphysical, as it
continually searches empirical certainty, by means of
the hesychastic method. This is why the hesychasm of the
Kollyvades is empirical and scientific. Ratio according
to Saint Nicodemus the Hagiorite is empirical. This is
illustrated by the Hesychasts of the 18th century in the
way in which they accept the scientific progress of the
West. The Kollyvades acknowledged scientific viewpoints
like, for example, Saint Nicodemos the Hagiorite did in
his work, Symbouletikon, where he accepts the
latest theories of his time on the functioning of the
heart. Saint Athansios Parios does not fight science
itself, but its use by the Westernized Enlighteners of
the Greek nation. They regarded science as God's work
and as an offering for the improvement of life. But the
use of science in a metaphysical struggle against faith,
as was practised in the West, and as was transferred to
the East, is opposed quite rightly by the traditional
theologians of the 18th and 19th century. The mistakes
lies on the side of the Greek Enlighteners who, without
having any relationship with the patristic viewpoint of
knowledge, although they themselves were priests and
monks, transferred the European conflict of
metaphysicists and empiricists to Greece, talking about
irrational religion. Whereas, the Fathers of Orthodoxy,
discriminating between the two kinds of knowledge making
a distinction at the same time between the rational from
the super-rational.
The
problem of conflict between faith and science, apart
from the confusion of knowledge, has caused the
idoloziation of the two kinds of knowledge. Thus, a weak
and morbid apologetic has resulted in Christianity (e.g.
a Greek professor of Apologetics many years ago produced
a mathematical proof of the existence of God !). In
Orthodoxy, however, this dualism is not self-evident.
Nothing excludes the co-existence of faith and science
when faith is not imaginary metaphysics and science does
not falsify its positive character with the use of
metaphysics. The mutual understanding of science and
faith is helped by current scientific language.
The
principle of indetermination (that there is no causality)
is a kind of apophatism in science. The return to the
Fathers therefore, helps to overcome the conflict. The
acceptance of the limits of the two kinds of knowledge (Uncreated
and created) and the use of the suitable organ or tool
for each one, is the element of Orthodoxy and of the
Fathers which places earthly wisdom under higher or
divine knowledge.
In
contrast, the confusion of the two types of knowledge in
Western thought promotes their mutual misinterpretations
and continues and fosters their conflict. A Church which
persists in metaphysical theology, will always be
obliged to beg Galileo's pardon. But a Science that also
ignores its limits, will deteriorate into metaphysics
and will either deal with the existence of God (which is
not its responsibility) or reject God completely.