Showing posts with label Epistemology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Epistemology. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Contarini's Response to Pomponazzi


Gasparo Contarini's Response to Pomponazzi: A Methodic Antidote to Physicalism of the Mind

Paul Richard Blum (Loyola University Maryland, Baltimore; currently Palacky University Olomouc, Czech Republic)
The printed version is now accessible here.

Abstract: Gasparo Contarini (1483-1542) was the first to write a critique of Pietro Pomponazzi's treatise On the Immortality of the Soul. Pomponazzi, his former teacher, appreciated the critique so much that he published and republished it as the most comprehensive and serious contribution to the debate. This study suggests a close examination of the work because Contarini approaches the issue from a methodological, rather than dogmatic or ideological point of view, showing that the distinction between mortality and immortality is one of seamless transition. Concluding this sketch it is suggested to study Contarini's career as a diplomat and Cardinal as coherent with his philosophical achievements.

It is the purpose of this chapter to underline the importance and character of Gasparo Contarini's contribution[1] to the debate on the immortality of the soul. Contarini, a former student of Pietro Pomponazzi, responded immediately to the publication of Pomponazzi's De immortalitate animae (1516); and the teacher included, anonymously but approvingly, Contarini's critique in his Apologia (1518), which was his own response. Contarini's reply to the apology appeared together with the first critique as books I and II of his De immortalitate animae in the posthumous edition of his works.[2] Although we need to be aware that Contarini is closely responding to Pomponazzi's treatise, it would derail our investigation into an infinite regress if we went into the details of this exchange because it is obvious that Pomponazzi and Contarini were enveloped in the medieval and Renaissance debate about the nature of the human soul and intellect.[3] Therefore, it is methodically convenient to look at Contarini's book as a text in and of itself.
Let us begin with Contarini's statements on the principles of philosophizing that open and close his work. He seems to have identified a fundamental problem of philosophy that marks his disagreement with Pomponazzi and gives occasion to his writing.
1.    The Opening
In his dedicatory letter to Pomponazzi, Contarini exposes at length his wavering between mortality and immortality of the soul. He mentions his university experience in Padua, the major schools of Averroes and Alexander of Aphrodisias, but does not name any of the contemporaries. Within his description of the pro and con of mortality, he issues the principle "nullique assentiendum sit viro philosopho, quod neque per se sit notum; neque efficaci ratione comprobatum." (180E) This is, of course, not just an ephemeral autobiographic remark; rather, he is establishing a philosophical principle: a philosopher, cannot accept anything 'as true which I did not clearly recognize to be so,' either through self-evidence or through rational proof. Why is it necessary to state that? Because the student wants to beat his teacher with the weapons he had received from him: reliance on accessibility of truth and the power of rational argument. Furthermore, in the course of the discussion he will address the problem that had troubled Pomponazzi concerning the truth of faith as it is inevitably connected with the question of immortality. Is there a rift between faith and reason, authority and argument? That is the subtext Contarini is establishing.
For he continues observing that the one party denies immortality, the other claims to have clear rational insight about it (inspicere certis rationibus, 180F) and therefore deserves to be trusted (adhibenda sit fides). On the surface he suggests a solution of practical wisdom: when two people disagree whether they see a person at a distance or not, it is more likely that the one has a weak vision than that the other claims to see what is not there, provided that this one has sound eyes and mind (180G). This only appears to be a pragmatic conclusion with some epistemological merit. For, provided there is no ill will and reasoning comes to a standoff, it is epistemologically sound to suspect the source of variance in the beholder, rather than in the issue at hand. But also looking at it logically, one result outweighs the other, for the positive answer outweighs the negative one. To deny what is there is weaker than to affirm it, for it would require the counterfactuality of not seeing what is there. In the case at hand, not to believe in immortality would be easier (true or not) than to believe in immortality if it were false. In the end, it's a wager, and Contarini will come back to it.
Let us assess what Contarini is avoiding: he is not swerving into skepticism, nor into fideism—both strategies used by Pomponazzi in the final part of his treatise. Not even double truth is an option. Rather, towards the end of the second book, Contarini will refer to the truth of reason and that of faith: it is a relation of enhanced perfection to the effect that faith confirms and makes even more plausible what natural reason has found on its own:
If natural light proves that the soul is immortal but wavers with regard to the state of the souls after death and is unable to adduce anything certain, then it is highly consistent that it is perfected by the supernatural light; and what is perfected does not at all disagree with that which has been initiated by natural light.[4]
So he is not defending 'non-verlapping magisteria' as Stephen Jay Gould would have it.[5] Therefore we may term Contarini's programmatic approach an hermeneutics of plausibility. In the long history of fides quaerens intellectum, or intellectus quaerens fidem, it would be worth investigating whether this is an old strategy or a new twist. It seems to be more than establishing reason as elaborating the praeambula fidei, because—in an atmosphere when fideism was a serious alternative to rationalism—Contarini refuses to separate the truth of revelation from natural knowledge and claims a seamless consistence of both. This will be one of the major messages of this text to the detractors of immortality as we can see from the conclusion of the second book.
2.    The Conclusion
Concluding his response to Pomponazzi , Contarini summarizes the commonality and the divergences of their theories. They agree that the intellect is abstract from matter; that the intellect is one, indivisible, and not determined by place or time; and that understanding lies in the intellect (tanquam in subjecto, 231B; i.e., where it actually takes place) rather than in the body.
They disagree first on the series inferences, made by Contarini, namely that the intellect must be a form, which is an autonomous act (actus, qui per se est) that is imperishable. In these terms it appears contradictory that Pomponazzi admits abstraction but denies immortality (231B). The second point of disagreement is the theory that rational argumentation about the process of sensing and thinking proves that the intellect is a pure form, but that the consequences, namely the state of immortality, is beyond rational investigation.
For Contarini this amounts to denying an antecedent of a scientific proof on the basis of the impossibility to verify its factual consequence with the same epistemological instrument (eodem lumine certificari, 231C). Philosophy proves that the soul is immortal but cannot make any statements about the post-mortal life. In modern parlance, it is impossible to tell what it is like to be immortal. Contarini is stretching the scientific imagination because he implies that science can lead to further fields of investigation that are valid in some way and yet require some kind of transition to a different method or to different sources of verification. Reason leaves itself behind.
In a first approximation we may infer that there is a plurality of investigative fields and resources; and such plurality not only defies 'non-overlapping magisteria' in terms of scientific method but also assumes a seamless transition from one realm of reality to another. It is obvious that non-overlapping sciences cannot defeat each other. But the temptation lies in assuming that contiguous disciplines and heir relevant realities interfere with each other. The reality of the soul is such an area of contiguity and distinction: the material form, the lower powers of the soul, and the immaterial form of the human being—this is how the debate about immortality can be represented, as suggested by Contarini. One could either try to show that the physical reality of the embodied soul encompasses the soul entirely, including the mind. This would be physicalism.[6] Or one could try and convince oneself that the ultimate reality is of spiritual nature, as some Neoplatonists tried to argue, taking recourse to emanation and similar metaphysical forms of thought.[7] That would be animism. Here Contarini intervenes by stating: the fact that the study of the human soul leads to a reality (that of spiritual beings), which cannot be researched in terms of animal psychology, does not refute its finding that the human intellect is immortal, and the impossibility to research immortality from within does not make the human intellect mortal.
Those observations lead to his final remark that "this we take to be true philosophizing; and this philosophy is the perfection of the mind, namely, that which acknowledges its deficiency".[8] Contarini lifts his disagreement with Pomponazzi to the level of philosophical principle. If we want to label the two methods, we can certainly use terms like scientism versus critical philosophy. As Contarini presents his former teacher, Pomponazzi seems to follow the logic of Aristotelian natural philosophy, i.e., some sort of physicalism, whereas Contarini aims at philosophical method and uses the immortality problem as a welcome occasion to move forward into meta-theory. It is always wise to overcome a theoretical impasse by leaving the well-known stakes and claims behind and moving to a level that not only solves the problem but also explains why it has become contentious. This is what Contarini is doing in his opening and closing of his contribution to the debate. In order to overcome physicalism, he elevates the problem to a methodical and meta-theoretical level, which allows him, instead of simply denying physical stances, to show the contiguity of mortal and immortal soul in one consistent theory and reality.
Now it is time to see how he achieves that within this book on the immortality.
3.    Some examples
Contarini's aim is to prove that the human intellect is a form, and an immaterial one that is also immortal. In order to convince his readers he reports the notions of substance and accident, form and matter, generation (coming to be) and perishing; from there they moves on to material forms, to organic composites and their mode of activity. Then he explains motion and operation with the distinction between movement that is induced externally and internal movement (what Aristotle called animate substances) and arrives at that kind of motion which is eternal and (here he reaches the goal of his narrative), being infinite cannot be material (184E). The fruit of this reasoning is this second kind of forms, which are qualified as immaterial and as the principle of motion in material things.
If we feel reminded of lectures in history of philosophy, this might be a good guess. It is worth noting that Contarini refers again and again to "the philosophers" as those who established the notion of immaterial form step by step. He does not argue in the direct sense; rather he prefers a narrative that tells us: immortal souls are a plausible story. This is a rhetorical ploy with a number of effects and implications. For one thing, he can withdraw from their teachings any time, and specifically so, in case doubt about the orthodoxy of this philosophy arises. He also appeals to his primary reader, Pomponazzi, to recall the standards of professional philosophy, which are not idiosyncratic inventions but establish and follow certain rules of argument and terminology. But to my mind, the most important effect of this style of presentation is the distanced perspective on the theory. Referring to 'the philosophers' means inserting an argumentative layer between the argument and the matter at hand. Such an additional level not only allows to disown the subject matter (if need be) but also to take a critical look at the way the argument is coherently constructed and at the procedure that made the theory. At the same time, the whole argument acquires a historicist ring: 'that's why and how we arrived over time at the theory as it is now.' My point is to show that Contarini argues on the level of meta-theory.
The other example comes from the context of the activity of the soul that can be described as striving or desire (appetitus) and manifests itself in free will and choice. Contarini expressly states: "You see, from free choice of the will follows that the human soul is of itself without body and consequently absolutely immortal."[9] His philosophical argument is self-movement. And he refers to Plato who had argued the soul is immortal because it moves itself. Now, with respect to the host of traditional arguments regarding the freedom of will and choice, Contarini steps out of his routine and argues: "Whoever observes himself can see that: One should ask oneself 'who am I', and he will see clearly that one is neither brain, nor heart, nor some bodily part, but something standing above all parts of the body."[10] He claims that self-motivation and immateriality are evident to personal experience and that this argument trumps the historical development of Aristotelianism. He is not shy to proclaim that this argument is the strongest possible that less than any other evidence from the philosophy of nature may be objected (193C). Furthermore, it is of interest for modern philosophy of mind that he expressly distinguishes the mind from brain. He establishes a kind of brain/mind dualism in order to defeat it with self-inspection. Contarini declares the observation of the "Who am I?" to be the key to sound philosophy.
These examples from Contarini's complex treatise suggest that he not only enters the debate where it had matured with Pomponazzi, he also tends to transcend the debate by showing the theoretical 'economy' or 'mechanism' of the current discourse. To enter the debate would mean to plainly 'decide' whether or not the soul is immortal; what he achieves is to convince his readers of the foundations, the pruposes, and the philosophical strategies that are at work. This must have been the reason why Pomponazzi cherished his former student's response as the most comprehensive and acute of all.[11] How much he appreciated this critique of his own philosophy transpires from the fact that Pomponazzi used the same word "accutissimus" for it that even adorned the title of his own collection of tretises.
At this point some remarks on Contarini's personality are in order.
4.    Life and Philosophy
Contarini wrote a small number of other works, philosophical, political, and theological. Most importantly after his treatise on immortality he authored a Compendium on Prima Philosophia,[12] in which he established in short chapters and with little discussion a Neoplatonic system of the world, that is, a world of hierarchical ontology. The final part (liber septimus) reiterates the immateriality and immortality of the human soul based on the continuous gradation of beings from God via the intelligences down to material things.[13] He also wrote specialized treatises on logic, physics, and one on the freedom of the will, which might have been known to Descartes.[14] In a commentary on some letters of St. Paul he explains the doctrine of resurrection in the same pattern of hierarchy as we had seen: his terminology of incarnation and resurrection is that of the doctrine of body and soul. [15]
In this last mentioned work, the Cardinal was speaking, and therefore I want to make a few remarks on Contarini's public career.[16] As a member of a noble family in Venice he was born in 1483 and soon appeared to be gifted and prone to philosophy. As anonymous writer said about him:
Munera non sperno. Pien di philosophia la lingua e'l petto. (No task was too hard, for he always had philosophy on his tongue and in his heart.)[17]
Naturally he entered the service of the Venetian Republic after he had studied at Venice's university, that of Padua. His most important teachers were Marcus Musurus, a Byzantine, for Greek, and Pietro Pomponazzi for Philosophy. As I mentioned at the beginning, when Pomponazzi published Contarini's responses to his treatise on the immortality of the soul, he omitted the name, calling him just "The Contradictor", while at the same time praising his as the most complete critique possible. This is why Contarini remained nameless in the debate on immortality and as a philosopher in his own right.
It was also customary at that time that young noble men joined various clubs and circles with cultural and political agendas. One effect was that he entertained to join a religious order, another that he started to ponder the theology of justification and human works, not much different from Martin Luther at the same time. I don't know enough detail about Contarini's doubts; however, this fact makes it interesting how much Contarini emphasizes the activity and operation of the human mind and the experience of free will. An important experience was his visit in Florence in 1511, where he learned to admire Francesco Cattani da Diaccetto (1466-1522), one of Marsilio Ficino's students.
So, while the young Venetian is working as a diplomat and bureaucrat for his home town, he is personally engaged in religious and philosophical troubles. Therefore he wrote at the same time both his treatise on the immortality of the soul and a book on the duties of bishops, which exists in English translation, a book that set standards of morality and applies them to the public office.[18] The most exemplary bishop of his time, Contarini says, was Pietro Barozzi (1441-1507),[19] the same bishop of Venice who in 1489 had decreed that the theory of the one intellect by Averroes should not be discussed anymore. Of course this decree was futile, since among others Pomponazzi and his student kept debating about Averroism. So we see that Contarini kept combining political, moral, and theoretical agendas.
This was in 1517, a year known for the Lutheran reform. Indeed, in 1521 the Venetian was invited by the Emperor Charles V to the Diet (Reichstag) in Worms which among others debated the causa Luther. Shortly after that he is on a mission to Spain, where he wrote in his spare time the book on First Philosophy, as mentioned, followed by his most read book, at least in the past, on the Venetian government, which was most likely inspired by Thomas More, the author of the Utopia, whom he met in Flanders in 1521.  
During the years that followed he continued his political activities for Venice and also for the Church, which included an appeal to religious concord in his treatise on the Confessio Augustana, so that in 1535 he was made Cardinal. Together with Reginald Pole he was member of a group, called spirituali, with strong sympathy for Luther's doctrine of justification and with more or less heretic movements, but also with a strong conviction as to the authority of the Church. For their irenic attitude both became the leading Church politicians who tried to avoid the secession of the Protestants during the preparations of the Council of Trent (1545-63).
His combining spirituality and politics can be captured in the fact that Contarini made himself a copy of the (yet unedited) Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola, having done the exercises personally; he helped writing the foundational document and worked to get the new order approved by Pope Paul III.[20] What he had not achieved with the Germans, he managed with the Basque and Spanish bullheads: he saved them from isolation and heresy and integrated them in the Church.
Therefore, my concluding question of this sketch, which is intended to raise interest in this nameless philosopher, is this: Is any of his attitudes, his spirituality, his politics, his Neoplatonic metaphysics, connected with his specific way of addressing the question of the immortality?

Works cited:
Carnap Rudolf, "Psychologie in physikalischer Sprache", Erkenntnis, 3 (1932/1933), 107-142.
Contarini Gasparo, Opera (Paris: Nivellius, 1571).
Contarini Gasparo, The Office of a Bishop, ed. John Patrick Donnelly (Milwaukee, Marquette, 2002).
Dittrich Fr. (ed.), Regesten und Briefe des Cardinals Gasparo Contarini (1483-1542) (Braunsberg: Huye, 1881).
Fragnito Gigliola, "Gasparo Contarini", in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, vol. 28 (Roma: Treccani, 1983), sub voce: http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/gasparo-contarini_%28Dizionario-Biografico%29/ .
Fragnito Gigliola, "The Expurgatory Policy of the Church and the Works of Gasparo Contarini", in Heresy, Culture, and Religion in Early Modern Italy: Contexts and Contestations, ed. Ronald K. Delph, Fontaine, Michelle M. Fontaine, and John Jeffries Martin (Kirksville, Mo.: Truman State University Press, 2006), pp. 193-210.
Gleason Elisabeth G. Gasparo Contarini: Venice, Rome, and Reform (Berkely:  University of California Press,  1993). http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft429005s2/
Gould Stephen Jay, "Nonoverlapping Magisteria," Natural History 106 (March 1997) 16-22 (quoted from http://www.stephenjaygould.org/library/gould_noma.html).
Ignatius de Loyoa, Exercitia spiritualia, ed. Iosephus Calveras and Candidus de Dalmases (Rome: Institutum historicum Societatis Iesu, 1969) (Monumenta Historica Societatis Iesu, vol. 100).
Janowski Zbigniew, Cartesian Theodicy: Descartes' Quest for Certitude (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 2000).
Pomponazzi Pietro, Tractatus acutissimi, utillimi et mere peripatetici (Venice: Scotus, 1525; reprint ed. Francesco Paolo Raimondi Casarano: Eurocart, 1995).



[1] This chapter is a first attempt at highlighting the importance of Contarini. Therefore no attempt at presenting a full account of Contarini's life and thought has been made. On Gasparo  Contarini (1483-1542) see Fragnito Gigliola, "Gasparo Contarini", in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, vol. 28 (Roma: Treccani, 1983), sub voce: http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/gasparo-contarini_%28Dizionario-Biografico%29/. Gleason Elisabeth G. Gasparo Contarini: Venice, Rome, and Reform (Berkely:  University of California Press,  1993). http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft429005s2/ Fragnito Gigliola, "The Expurgatory Policy of the Church and the Works of Gasparo Contarini", in Heresy, Culture, and Religion in Early Modern Italy: Contexts and Contestations, ed. Ronald K. Delph, Fontaine, Michelle M. Fontaine, and John Jeffries Martin (Kirksville, Mo.: Truman State University Press, 2006), pp. 193-210.
[2] I will refer to the editions in Pomponazzi Pietro, Tractatus acutissimi, utillimi et mere peripatetici (Venice: Scotus, 1525; reprint ed. Francesco Paolo Raimondi Casarano: Eurocart, 1995), fols. 76r-80v; and Contarini Gasparo, Opera (Paris: Nivellius, 1571), pp. 179-231. Plain page references within the ranges of 179-231 will refer to this edition.
[3] For those not familiar with the debate, the question of the immortality of the soul had the following main components:
1.       The soul, according to the Aristotelian tradition, consisted of
a.       the vegetative
b.      the sensitive, and the rational part, whereby
1.       the sensitive and rational parts consisted of sense perception, common sense, imagination and phantasy, reason, and memory
2.       imagination, reason and memory could also be termed intellect
3.       the intellect includes also the will
2.       The intellect is
a.       either eternal before and after birth
b.      or born with a human being and dies with the body
c.       either incorporated in the individual but one and the same for all humans
d.      or created by God with the individual and survives individually after death waiting for reunification at the resurrection
3.       The soul is
a.       one thing together with the intellect – what happens to it at death?
b.      composed of several parts, of which the lower parts (vegetative and sensitive) die away while the upper part of the soul may be immortal
c.       the substantial form of the human being
4.       The human being is an individual thanks to
a.       the body which gives numeric identity
b.      the soul which makes the individual beyond death.
[4] 229C: "Cum ergo lumen naturale probet animam esse immortalem: de statu vero animarum post mortem fluctuet, nihilque certi affere possit, maxime congruum est, ut id lumine naturali perficiatur; neque hoch quod perfectum est, disconvenit ei quod lumine naturali inchoatum est."
[5] Gould Stephen Jay, "Nonoverlapping Magisteria," Natural History 106 (March 1997) 16-22: "whatever my private beliefs about souls, science cannot touch such a subject and therefore cannot be threatened by any theological position on such a legitimately and intrinsically religious issue." (Quoted from http://www.stephenjaygould.org/library/gould_noma.html)
[6] I am using the term 'physicalism in the sense of the programmatic attempt at describing and investigating psychic facts with the methods and patterns of physical science. Cf. Carnap Rudolf, "Psychologie in physikalischer Sprache", Erkenntnis, 3 (1932/1933), 107-142 ("Psychology in the Language of Physics").
[7] From a physicalist point of view, employing these modes of thought indicates defeat from the beginning.  
[8] 231C: "Hocque putamus vere philosophari; hancque philosophiam, quae suum noscit defectum, perfectionem animi esse censemus."
[9] 193C: "Ecce ergo quod ex electione libera voluntatis, sequitur humanum animum per se esse sine corpore: quare et absolute immortalem."
[10] 193C: "Si quis etiam se ipsum consideret, poterit hoc perspicue comprehendere: interroget enim se quisque, quis sum ego? videbit vtique se non esse cerebrum, neque cor, neque aliquam corporis partem, sed superius quoddam partibus omnibus corporis superstans."
[11] Pomponazzi,  Tractatus acutissimi, 76ra: "… hic contradictor, mea sententia nihil reliquit; quod rationabiliter adversus nos adduci possit. Est enim tractatus iste copiosus, doctus, gravis, acutissimus; et divino artificio conflates."
[12] Opera, pp. 9-176.
[13] Opera, pp. 169-176.
[14] Janowski Zbigniew, Cartesian Theodicy: Descartes' Quest for Certitude (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 2000), p. 43-44.
[15] Opera, pp. 433-; Ad Hebraeos, chapter 2, pp. 516-517.
[16] Based on Fragnito and Gleason as cited.
[17] Dittrich Fr. (ed.), Regesten und Briefe des Cardinals Gasparo Contarini (1483-1542) (Braunsberg: Huye, 1881), Regesten no. 1, p. 8.
[18] Contarini Gasparo, The Office of a Bishop, ed. John Patrick Donnelly (Milwaukee, Marquette, 2002).
[19] Ibid. pp. 85, 95, 121.
[20] Ignatius de Loyoa, Exercitia spiritualia, ed. Iosephus Calveras and Candidus de Dalmases (Rome: Institutum historicum Societatis Iesu, 1969) (Monumenta Historica Societatis Iesu, vol. 100), (introduction) p. 86: "Romae, Cardinalis Gasparus Contarini, factis Exercitiis, ea sibi manu popria exscripsit" (footnote: MI, Scripta, II, 872); p. 87 and 91: the scribe of the so-called Autograph of the Exercitia is identical with the one who wrote the Quinque Capita or Formula Instituti Societatis Iesu, which Contarini submitted to Paul III.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Acting versus Knowing

Acting versus Knowing
By Paul Richard Blum
[Now pp. 147-151 in
Das Wagnis, ein Mensch zu sein: Geschichte - Natur - Religion
]

When Jesus was brought to the Calvary and crucified between the two malefactors, he said, according to St. Luke: “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.” Luke continues his account by telling how the soldiers and bystanders “decried him, saying, He saved others; let him save himself.”
[1] These people don’t know what they do, while Jesus knows but does not act. And this knowing without acting (“forgive them”) is expressly referred to the Father.[2] Later, St. Peter comments on this event, saying that the murderers did so “through ignorance,” whereas “those things, which God had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled.”[3]

Beyond all salvational meaning, this story discerns quite clearly that knowing is not acting, and that God acts “through the mouth of the prophets,” i.e., only by dignifying himself to descend to the understanding of humans and, eventually, by becoming human. People don’t know what they are doing, God knows better.

In ordinary English language it is a common criticism or praise to state: “He doesn’t know what he is doing!” or: “He knows what he is doing.” Obviously, this has epistemological and moral implications. On one plane this judgment says that the person applauded has all the necessary information, training, and practice to do his job; his decisions are based on knowledge.[4] Furthermore, this person does not only make decisions – as might depend on a merely cognitive processing of information. Those who “know what they are doing” are also doing something. In a video tape that was meant to warn against driving under influence of alcohol the following wording was used: “These kids [who had crashed a car because of driving drunk] have made the wrong decision.” Maybe, but I should say they have acted wrongly. Those, who know what they are doing, not only judge, they act. However, as it is possible to act without knowing (“They know not what they do,” etc.) knowledge is not a necessary reason for acting, although it may prepare the ground on which acting comes about. And obviously, this entails a moment of spontaneity and volition. The moral implication of knowing what one is doing, hence, is that this praise refers to a virtuous person.

In a virtuous person knowledge, skills, wisdom, experience, etc. all combine to righteous action. Whatever ethical system may be on the market, all virtuousness and righteousness depends on responsibility. The acting person has to answer virtual questionings on the morally relevant act by giving an account of the motives: this is the literal meaning of responsibility and accountability. However, any such answer will refer both to knowledge and to the past that has preceded the act. Responsibility is about knowledge, even though ultimately it was not knowledge itself that drove the deed but rather the virtuosity and righteousness as realized and executed in the act.

Moreover, the action itself can never be reduced to such precedent mental operation as is involved in processing information and making decisions; lest it be an act, rather than the consequence determined by preceding operations of the intellect, the act is – by nature of being an act – a spontaneous happening. Every act that is not acted upon is free. Spontaneity as the original source of free acting is independent of knowledge and deliberation. Of course, thoughts and experience contribute to actions, but not inasmuch as such actions are truly free. Freedom of action does not depend (logically and factually) on intellectual operations. Otherwise it were not true what Forrest Gump said: “Stupid is as stupid does.” Forrest definitely did not know what he was doing, but he did the right thing. And all the movie is an account on his actions – on hindsight.[5] In judging a moral action, we need to refer to the past. Moral action, as a free action, is independent of preceding circumstances and knowledge. Moral judgment is always a posteriori. This entails that every judgment on actions is bound to time, and from this it follows that all human acts are directed – not to the past – but to the future.

Consequently, any attempt at relating acts to knowledge, i.e., any attempt at tying free action to right knowledge, has to overcome the divider of the time line. In order to establish the virtuousness and righteousness objectively, and not a posteriori, one has to reach a plane where knowledge and action are equal. And this level it is traditionally thought of in terms of God’s foreknowledge. As it is clear from the preceding observations, such foreknowledge would question the freedom of such act. And time matters.

This was, indeed, the key discovery of Lorenzo Valla (1405-1457), the humanist who most insistently opposed Boethius’ endeavor to interpret Christian belief by means of philosophical reasoning. As Valla reports in his Dialogue on Free Will, Boethius said that “God, through an intelligence which is beyond reason, both knows all things for eternity and holds things present.”[6] This is to say that such foreknowledge that might not prevent spontaneous action must deprive it of its time-relatedness, namely its unprecedented origin within time, and this would entail that foreknowledge would strip the deed of freedom. Accordingly, Valla objects: “But can I, who am rational and know nothing outside of time, aspire to the knowledge of intelligence and eternity?”[7] He stresses that humans necessarily act in time not knowing what they do, at least in comparison with the timeless knowledge of God. The discussion that ensues can be summarized as follows: First, it is a fallacy to believe that virtuousness and righteousness of human acts must be determined as forms of knowledge. For knowledge, by its own nature, is timeless, while acts are bound to time. But even if we assume an objective point of view from which acts can be judged not only a posteriori but rather regardless of any relation of prior and posterior, this does even less mean that this knowledge produces the acts.

Even on a human level, predicting an act that is coming to be is not based on the temporality of that act but on the knowledge of the nature or essence of that act, a knowledge that is abstract, i.e., independent of the individual instantiation of the performance of the act. If I start to draw a circle and stop at some point, every observer will guess correctly that, once I resume the movement of drawing, I will eventually make the line I was drawing meet the beginning, thus completing a circle. However, it will be no happy guess, nor prediction of a future event, but an application of an abstract notion of the nature of a circle. In the same way, the observer’s knowledge does in no way produce the circle.

The traditional confusion of prediction and production – a topic on which Valla dwells at length – is fairly expressed in the English word “providence”. Even though providence simply ‘fore-sees’ what it going to happen, it also seems to ‘provide’ for things to happen, and to see for that. The foresight of divine providence includes conceptually all possible actions, including those that are actually realized by man. This is Valla’s concluding answer to the problem as staged by Boethius: “It is possible for you to do otherwise than God foreknows, nevertheless you will do not otherwise, nor will you therefore deceive Him.”[8] Again, it is clear: God knows, humans act.

In order to strengthen this point and to push it to the ultimate paradox Valla tells a fable about a man who received from the God Apollo the oracle that he will commit crimes in his future life. Apollo refuses to revise his verdict by stating that he himself only knows of the crimes, without causing them. If there were any appeal possible it were to be directed to Jove, the God who creates men mean or good. The meaning of this fable is, as Valla explains,

“that, although the wisdom of God cannot be separated from His power and will, I may by this device of Apollo and Jupiter separate them. What cannot be achieved with one god may be achieved with two, each having his own proper nature – the one for creating the character of men, the other of knowing – that it may appear that providence is not the cause of necessity but that all this whatever it is must be referred to the will of God.”[9]

Valla eventually concludes that the only means to alter one’s fate, that is: to secure good actions in the future, is to pray humbly for God’s mercy.

With this device Valla makes transparent that the debate about divine foreknowledge and providence is a philosophical tool to analyze the structure of human action. Elevating human affairs philosophically and theoretically to the plane of unrestrained knowledge makes it possible to judge them on a whole as to their end and to their moral status. At the same time this epistemological device deprives human actions of their peculiarity, namely of their being founded in the core of spontaneity and will. Referring human affairs to divine providence makes it evident that human acts are not by nature and not necessarily connected with wisdom or knowledge.

Valla’s treatise was intended to foster piety and to set an end to frivolous, allegedly philosophical speculations on God as though God were endowed with human traits, such as time, error, and temporal action. Martin Luther pushed this argument further towards a total denial of human freedom and total affirmation of the dependence of any act from God’s grace. As a further development, if not as a well meaning remedy, René Descartes laid the emphasis on the purely intellectual nature of man, as though by thought all problems could be solved through rationality. Both developments fell prey to Jacques Maritain’s criticism of the one-sidedness of modern anthropology.[10] Maritain implicitly returned – probably without knowing of Valla – to the humanist’s understanding that knowing and acting in themselves were two different traits of man, but integrated in man. Consciousness of the divine roots of humanity also entails that the gap between intellect and will, and thus between reason and morality, is actually and factually filled in human existence itself, which is, however, no prejudice on the morality of an individual act.

My interpretation of Valla’s dismantlement with regards to God’s knowledge and God’s will gives him credit to have detected that this very unity of knowing and acting not only occurs in God, but is an expression of the factual unity of both functions in man as man. There can be no doubt, then, that this unity is as paradoxical or dialectical in man as in the God of the philosophers. Maritain’s “integral humanism” pays tribute to this paradox.

To conclude, I may hint at one solution of the problem: Karol Wojtyla, in his book The Acting Person introduces consciousness as the unifying property that accompanies both acting and knowing. He states from the outset that knowledge is not the origin of personhood, but rather that action is the fountain of knowledge of the person.[11] Knowledge of the person is not knowledge that drives the person but rather the result of human action. “The essential dynamism of cognition, the very activity of knowing is not part of consciousness.”[12] While knowledge is constantly alienated from the acting person in as much as it objectifies what it knows,[13] the human person in performing acts of knowledge and acts of action builds this specific form of awareness that bridges between knowing and volition, and it is this consciousness that builds person as such. Consciousness, as a reflection and mirroring of performance,[14] then, makes it possible that man can act morally to the extent that we may know what we are doing.



[1] Luke 23, 34-35 (King James version).

[2] Obviously, forgiveness and revelation are acts in God, but a kind of acts different from those expected by the bystanders and from those addressed in this paper.

[3] Acts 3, 17-18: “And now brethren, I wot that through ignorance ye did, as did also your rulers. But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath fulfilled.” (King James version)

[4] Cf. the analysis of skills in Aristotle, Metaphysics, Alpha 1.

[5] I am referring to the film Forrest Gump (1994), directed by Robert Zemeckis, with Tom Hanks.

[6] Lorenzo Valla, Dialogue on Free Will, transl. by Charles E. Trinkaus, in: Ernst Cassirer, Paul Oskar Kristeller, John Herman Randall (ed.), The Renaissance Philosophy of Man (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948), pp. 145-82; here p. 160. For the Latin text I use: Lorenzo Valla, Über den freien Willen/De libero arbitrio, ed. by Eckhard Keßler (München: Fink, 1987), which reprints the ed. by Maria Anfossi (Florence 1934), reference is made to Anfossi’s page numbers; in this quotation: p. 15. Valla refers to Boethius, Philosophiae consolationis libri quinque, V pr. 6. On Valla and other Renaissance philosophers on freedom see: Paul Richard Blum, Philosophieren in der Renaissance, Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2004, chapter 5.

[7] Valla ibid.

[8] Valla p. 169 (p. 30).

[9] Valla p. 174 (p. 38).

[10] It is sufficient to refer to the criticism of the “Protestant ‘Discovery’” and of humanism in Integral Humanism, chapter I, ii: Jacques Maritain, Integral Humanism, Freedom and the Modern World, and A Letter on Independence, ed. Otto Bird (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1996), p. 164-65: “Just as pure Protestant theology of grace is a theology of grace without freedom, the pure humanist theology of metaphysic of freedom [sc. that of Louis de Molina] is a theology or metaphysic of freedom without grace.”

[11] Karol Woytyla, The Acting Person, ed. A.-T. Tymieniecka, Dordrecht 1979. This work originally published in Polish in 1969, was translated into English, when the author had become Pope John Paul II; however, I used the revised edition in Italian translation: Persona e atto, ed. Giuseppe Girgenti and Patrycja Mikulska (Santarcangelo Romagno: Rusconi, 1999); p. 87: “… nell’approccio da noi scelto si vuole più che altro mettere in luce ciò che la concezione actus humanus presuppone: l’atto infatti, è anche fonte della conoscenza della persona. L’atto in sé, come actus humanus, deve contribuire all’attualizzazione conoscitiva della potenzialità, che esso presuppone e che è alla sua radice.”

[12] Ibid. p. 101: “Esprimiamo qui l’opinione che l’essenziale dinamismo conoscitivo, l’attività stessa del conoscere, non appartiene alla coscienza.”

[13] Ibid. p. 99-101.

[14] Ibid.