Friday, May 22, 2026

Notes. Russell. Why I Am Not A Christian (R.WNC)

Includes the essay What I Believe

What I Believe was published by Kegan Paul in 1925.

The Warbler Classics edition (2023) contains the following note:

"Why I am not a Christian" was a lecture delivered at Battersea Town Hall on March 6, 1927, under the auspices of the South London Branch of the National Secular Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Atheism, New York.
The code R.WNC denotes the specific book (Why I am not a Christian) to which notes apply. The numbers at the left represent the page numbers for the particular edition. A page number may be followed by a letter, which indicates the paragraph. Even when a paragraph continues from the preceding page, it is marked as a. When a negative sign precedes the letter, the reader is expected to count paragraphs from the bottom of the page. That is, -a and -b mean the first and second paragraphs upward from the bottom.

Occasionally will appear a random three-letter string plus number. This tells me that some note extends over several pages. If necessary I can refer back to the paper trail.

An arrow near a number, as in 32<-- says the note refers back before and including the page number. A double arrow, as in 51<-->, says the note refers to a block of text beginning and ending around the page number.

Exclamation points next to the page number or label indicate my assessment of the note's importance, rated from 1 to 5 bang marks. Question marks indicate the possibility of error on my part.

R.WNC

Note marked MBR1 is missing.

MBR2

Russell's rejection of the existence of spirits also is behind his acceptance of Mills' First Cause dismissal: What caused God? What came before God? We also see that both held a Newtonian-style view of linear time. I daresay Russell, tho a mathematician as well as a logician, was not terribly familiar with topologies that make time effectively non-linear -- tho in the 1920s he wrote a primer on Einstein's special theory of relativity.

It was his collaborator Whitehead who persuaded Russell to turn to a more holistic, monistic view of the universe on account of the revolutionary impact of the general theory of relativity. It is perhaps possible that, when he delievered the lecture, Russell's thinking hadn't quite got there. Tho he accepted Mills' argument some years before Einstein's 1905 breakthru, it is mildly surprising that that argument was not brushed off by 1927 as probably irrelevant. That is, plainly GR doesn't by itself prove God's existence. But Mills' argument falls as soon as one considers a Riemannian universe -- which is exactly what Einstein came up with.

A Spinoza-style pseudo-theist (G.O.D. = Great Out Doors), Einstein once termed linear time an illusion.

In a letter Einstein wrote,
Now he has departed from this strange world a little ahead of me. That means nothing. People like us, who believe in physics, know that the distinction between past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion.
Further, we remark that Russell does not even bother much with Aristotle's prime mover argument, which doesn't actually fit Mills' argument. That is, Aristotle realized that the concept of time and of a sequence of events requires a timeless supervening force that could not be of this world. That's not a trivial argument. Logician Russell however would not admit anything beyond the universe of direct causes and effects, regardless of the logic favoring some sort of framework. How, for example, is general relativity to be viewed other than as asserting an almost metaphysical spacetime block?

Russell did not mention that the Catholic Church's acceptance of the first cause argument (1927) is based on Aristotle's logic, who should be credited as the first writer to make a strong intellectual case for the existence of a monotheistic God, which other Greeks interpreted as the First Principle, or Logos. Perhaps Heraclitus would have appealed more to Russell -- especially in his neutral monism phase -- than Aristotle.

Herewith are Perplexity notes on Aristotle:
Aristotle's metaphysics, often called "first philosophy," seeks to understand the fundamental nature of reality by studying "being qua being"—the essence and principles of existence itself. Key concepts include:

# The Four Causes:
Aristotle explains change and existence through four types of causes:

Material Cause: The substance something is made of.

Formal Cause: The structure or design of a thing.

Efficient Cause: The agent or process that brings something into being.

Final Cause: The purpose or goal for which something exists
# Substance and Being: Central to his metaphysics is the study of "substance" (ousia), which underpins all other categories like quality or quantity. Substance is primary in understanding what it means to exist

# The Unmoved Mover: Aristotle posits a "pure actuality" or "unmoved mover" as the ultimate cause of motion and change in the universe. This entity is the goal toward which all things strive, representing pure thought and eternal existence

# Principle of Non-Contradiction: A foundational axiom in his metaphysics states that contradictory statements cannot both be true simultaneously, ensuring logical coherence in understanding reality

Aristotle's metaphysics integrates causality, purpose, and logic, offering a framework to explore existence beyond the physical world.

+++++

In Aristotle's philosophy, nature (physis) refers to the intrinsic principle of motion, change, and rest within natural beings. It is the essence or form that gives entities their ability to develop and function according to their own inherent tendencies, as opposed to external forces or human artifice. Key aspects of his conception include:

Nature as an Inner Principle: Nature is the internal source of movement and rest in natural substances, distinguishing them from artificial objects, which rely on external causes for change (e.g., a tree grows naturally, while a bed requires human craftsmanship)

Form Over Matter: While matter provides the potential for change, Aristotle emphasizes that nature primarily resides in the form or essence of a thing—its defining characteristics that guide its development and purpose

Contrast with Art and Convention: Natural things act according to their innate principles, whereas artifacts are shaped by external design. Similarly, Aristotle contrasts what is "by nature" with what is "by convention," highlighting universal principles over human customs

Connection to Motion and Change: Nature encompasses processes like generation, growth, and decay, which occur within living beings and natural elements due to their internal principles

Thus, for Aristotle, nature is both the cause and goal of a being's existence and activity, rooted in its essence and realized through its inherent potential.
+++++

PDK1

10. Re the argument for God's existence from design:

Russell now brings up the belief of scientists in the eventual extinction of life on earth as being a depressing scenario. Yet he doesn't -- and admittedly it would have been a difficult subject for a popular lecture, go into the issue of entropy, which is a very subtle subject and introduces many questions into the "consensus" scientific view. The subject certainly draws us back to the extreme mystery of time. The "law" of entropy makes comprehension of "Eistein time" very difficult, and vice versa. And the quantum interpretation puzzle makes time, history and entropy an impossible labyrinth. Now, it may be that Russell was not fully aware of such subtleties, but neither was he wholly ignorant of them. Hence, I must regard the basis of his point as being weak.

Still, Russell was attempting to answer the claim that without God, life is pointless. It appears he is adroitly sidestepping that argument with his one example of "godless" futility. That is, he has used a particular, with the easy rebuttal that no one really cares about the far future, to dismiss a far more general claim, which he has not properly analyzed at all.

PDK2

Russell seems unaware that atheism, in league with Darwinism, implies the destruction of the basis of morality. Yet, in 1948 in a radio debate with Copleston, he asserted that Moore, in Principia Ethica, had answered this objection. (I am reading Moore's book and already question Moore's attempt to relegate the concept of good to that of one of the qualia, such as yellow.) After all, Russell regards himself as highly moral, tho his morality was humanistic rather than Christian, leading him into all sorts of serial marital difficulties. Still, in his History of Western Philosophy (1945), he chastised Nietzsche for his amoral stance and advocated a world flowing with universal love.

Of course, some of Russell's critics charge that he did not properly understand Nietzsche, a brilliant man who did understand that the absence of God leaves a void in the basis of moral values ("nihilism"). Yet, it was Nietzsche's apparent solutions to this problem (never fully explicated), that drew the scorn of Russell and others.

10 -a. Now however we pick up the "moral arguments for the deity." Russell addresses the morality issue by attacking Kant's argument, a form of which is to say that there would be no right or wrong unless God exists (see above). In that case, for God there is no right or wrong. This whole area of thought is of course quite subtle and cannot be dismissed in a paragraph or two (even tho it is clear that the lecture format makes for tight constraints). At the least, Russell ought to have addressed why the knowledge of good and evil was so noxious for humanity.

11. There is much to say for Russell's humorous presentation -- tho he does not say it -- of the Gnostic argument that the devil made the world when God was not looking. Here one might mention that in Christian (prior to Gnosticism), the devil is the god of the fallen world, the ruler of "the air," whose power was taken from him on the cross. Tho the fallen world continues to exist, Christ's power continually works to defeat Satan on behalf of those who follow him or those whom he seeks out.

Such theological matters are important if Russell is to successfully challenge Christianity. The point here is that Russell does not examine very much that is essential to Christian thought. In fact, it appears he is anxious to skewer the cartoon version of Christianity that is so popular among those who profess Christ in name only.

John 3.3 quotes Jesus as telling Nicodemus: "Here is the truth. Unless a person is born from above [or again], he cannot see God's kingdom."

To Russell, God's kingdom is invisible. He could not sense God's presence directly nor detect God in the marvelous natural works about him. Unwittingly, this blind man was leading the blind into the pit, all the while having a compassionate regard for his fellow humans. This problem remains today for advocates and joiners of all stripes. This rather kindly gentleman epitomized the phrase: "The road to hell is paved with good intentions."

12. The argument for the remedying of injustice is Russell's title of the subsection on this page.

Russell's response: "If there is injustice in our area of the universe, why should we think that somewhere somewhen in the universe, there is a region where all is just?"

I do not know that he has fairly represented the argument that divine justice is needed to argue? that overall there is no injustice in God's universe (i.e., from some cosmic vantage point, God sees no injustice, tho from another he may).

Firstly, the nihilism that follows from atheistic Darwinism virtually guarantees that injustice is the lot of living creatures; in that respect injustice is a mere subjective human impression. The fallen world certainly reflects such social Darwinism, and always has, from well before Darwin.

Yet, Christian doctrine teaches that no weapon fashioned against Jesus, or his followers, will prosper (despite temporary setbacks). It can take long periods of discipleship before that point sinks in.

13. The character of Christ is the subsection on this page.

Most professing Christians do not take all Christ's teachings literally -- as in "turn the other cheek," which he says that Buddha and Lao Tzu taught before Christ. There is of course no requirement that every one of Christ's teachings be an original thought, tho Jesus didn't utter his sayings in isolation from his overall theological framework. And, we add, that a Christian would perhaps claim that such teachings came from the pre-incarnate Son of God.

In any case, among many New Testament Christians, the saying is taken very seriously. I would say Russell studiously ignores the difference between a true disciple and a nominal Christian.

Russell cites the teaching "Judge not, lest ye be judged," and contrasts that with the fact that Christians serve as judges in law courts. Jesus was talking about holding another person in disdain for specific behaviors, real or imagined, not about a fact-finding process. Compassion, even for very degraded persons, is Christ's way. You may not like them, but you can extend God's love toward them.

Also, born-again Christians are free to choose whether they should serve in secular courts. Certainly the Bible frowns on Christians suing each other. Why have persons without the Spirit decide what's right among those who have the Spirit? (I Cor. 6. 1-8) But even here, modern society creates technical situations whereby such suits are impossible to avoid.

+++++

It is interesting that Russell contrasts his philosophical value system with that of Nietzsche, who espoused many values at odds with those of Christianity. Contrary to Nietzsche, Russell says in his History of Western Philosophy, Russell advocates universal love among humans. But absent a God, why bother? Even tho some Vedic teachers, such as Buddha, promoted this concept before Christ, one can perhaps discern the notion of a "universal christological principle" at work since the dawn of what Karl Jaspers dubbed "the Axial Age."

Russell in fact did realize that those who promoted holistic systems of the cosmos (monists) usually had a (possibly hidden) theist agenda. Similarly Nietzsche battled such systematizing probably because he saw that such systems pointed to a God, if not a "universal christological principle."

Tho Russell's History, 1945, appeared much later than Why, 1925, his other writings and conduct reflect that such a "Christian" view was ingrained deeply in him. And it is surely correct that he tried hard to do better than lip service on behalf of his personal set of morals, which is more than can be said for many nominal Christians. But again, a nominal Christian is probably not a Christian, in the New Testament sense of that term. The NT uses the term disciple, or student, meaning someone who is a doer of the word, and not a hearer only. The reverse holds for the nominal Christian.

By the time Why appeared, Russell had adopted the metaphysical concept of "neutral monism," by which he meant godless monism. Under that heading, the philosopher posited an all-embracing "stuff" of the cosmos that was both physical and mental, thus resolving Cartesian dualism while conceding that Descartes wasn't altogether wrong.

He could see that the physicalist conception of energy as the universal substance had weak points, remarking that tho a blind man could know all of physics, he would still not know everything, such as what the sighted meant by the color red.

Further, we might note that there seems to be no less ground for perceiving the unseeable love as the universal substance of the universe than to perceive another unseeable, energy, as the universal substance. Why shouldn't the cosmos be the overarching expression of love? Why is it "obvious" that it is all mindless quanta of energy?

And a point here is that if Russell could see that the physical and mental must merge (shades of, egad!, idealism ), it is curious that he didn't argue that, by extension, love really does make the world go around. Well, that isn't so curious. Had he conceded that point, Russell would have been near to conceding the necessity of God's existence. So tho he approached the "universal christological principle," he managed to deftly sidestep it.

+++++

MTK

Monday, May 11, 2026

Notes: Frankl. Man's Search for Meaning (F.MSM)


SCROLL DOWN PAST THE PREFATORY MATTER TO REACH THE NOTES
Man's Search for Meaning, An Introduction to Logotherapy by Viktor E. Frankl. English version copyrights: 1959, 1962, 1984, 1992, 2006.

The first English title was From Death-Camp to Existentialism: A Pyschiatrist's Path to a New Therapy

First version was published in 1946 in German under the title Ein Psycholog erlebt das Konzentrationslager (A Psychologist in the Concentration Camp)

It is of interest that Frankl's book is published by Beacon Press,
which is an arm of the Unitarian Universalist Association.

Other publishers have shared with Beacon in the publishing history, including:

Clarion (imprint of Simon & Schuster), Washington Square Press (paperback imprint of Simon & Schuster), Rider (subsidiary of Penguin Random House) for UK editions, Blackstone Publishing for unabridged audiobook and specialized print versions, Ebury Digital for contemporary digital versions.

Viktor Frankl was not a professional philosopher, but a psychiatrist whose Holocaust experience drove him to examine the will to live. But of course psychology and philosophy, now intimate siblings, were at one time indistinguishable.

Dr. Frankl's most important insight was that those who survive very harsh conditions are those who hang onto a meaningful hope of some kind. Those who give up hope are very unlikely to survive.

As a result, he developed a form of psychiatric treatment he called logotherapy, which was meant to alleviate depression and neurosis by encouraging the patient to see something really meaningful about his or her life and perhaps about life in general. That hope was then to be used as a therapeutic lodestar, making the therapy more likely to succeed.

Frankl sharply contrasted his method with the psychoanalytic method developed by fellow Austrian Sigmund Freud and his followers.

According to Gemini AI,
Logotherapy remains a vital, active branch of existential psychotherapy, often cited as the "Third Viennese School" alongside Freud’s psychoanalysis and Adler’s individual psychology.

Today, it is primarily used as a supplemental or preventative framework rather than a standalone clinical treatment for severe disorders.Current Clinical StatusTarget Areas: It is most frequently applied to existential crises, PTSD, depression, and anxiety, particularly where a "loss of meaning" is a primary factor.

Empirical Support: Modern reviews of over 130 studies show that logotherapy is effective in reducing suicide ideation, job burnout, and depression while increasing resilience.

Specialized Applications: It is widely used in palliative and cancer care to help patients navigate death anxiety and find purpose despite physical suffering. It is also gaining ground in supporting caregivers, immigrants, and those recovering from substance abuse.
Following are my notes on Man's Search for Meaning (2006 edition). They address small and large points important to me for sometimes obscure reasons. They may in future be used for some essay or essays, assuming I get around to writing them. They are for my personal purposes and should not be read as a summary of Frankl's book.

These notes are not necessarily straightforward transcriptions. I have felt at liberty to rewrite and supplement the originals as I go along.

The code F.MSM denotes the specific book (Man's Search for Meaning) to which notes apply. The numbers at the left represent the page numbers for the particular edition. A page number may be followed by a letter, which indicates the paragraph. Even when a paragraph continues from the preceding page, it is marked as a. When a negative sign precedes the letter, the reader is expected to count paragraphs from the bottom of the page. That is, -a and -b mean the first and second paragraphs upward from the bottom.

Occasionally will appear a random three-letter string plus number. This tells me that some note extends over several pages. If necessary I can refer back to the paper trail.

An arrow near a number, as in 32<-- says the note refers back before and including the page number. A double arrow, as in 51<-->, says the note refers to a block of text beginning and ending around the page number.

Exclamation points next to the page number or label indicate my assessment of the note's importance, rated from 1 to 5 bang marks. Question marks indicate the possibility of error on my part.

F.MSM

No page

Ironically, Frankl's decision to honor the fourth commandment by staying in Austria after the Nazi takeover for the sake of his aging parents did not save his parents, and resulted in the loss of his beloved wife, all of whom perished in the death camps.

6-7. Frankl observes that the most vicious and amoral prisoners were the most likely to survive. [I have just finished reading Will Durant's account of the final period of the Thirty Years War, which reduced the population of Europe by half, and note that the cruel barbaric fate of survivors, and what happened to their civilized values, is highly reminiscent of Frankl's account of camp conditions.]

6a. "The best of us did not return."

10b and 11-a. Condemned prisoners may suffer from "a delusion of [last-minute] reprieve." Think of Ambrose Bierce story.

FFN1

20 <--> . What strikes me is the question: How could the Nazis have reached such a level of bestiality? One can give all sorts of correct proximate causes, and even a chain of proximate causes. But how do people become inured to such depravity, whether as witnesses or participants? The atrocities are very similar to what the Stalinists did to political undesirables. [I have yet to read Arendt's Totalitarianism thru. But I wonder about her view of the "banality of evil." Evil can appear bureaucratic and hence banal, but there seems to be something more going on in at least some hearts of darkness than banality. I will have to see how she copes with the concept of evil (and good) in general.]

One thing that is often overlooked about the Nazis is their populist socialism. In the aftermath of the First World War socialism had terrific mass appeal. Recall that in its early period, the Nazi party began life as the National Socialist Workers Party, in competition with the communists, who preached international socialism under worker directorates. The arrival of the Great Depression propelled the average German toward a socialist solution in 1933 just as it hurled America toward socialist methods when FDR took over in that same year.

In other words, the demand of the people for direct economic action in line with the charismatic rhetoric of both Hitler and Roosevelt, gave both regimes enormous, unprecedented popularity and power. But Roosevelt's targets were the industrial and financial magnates whom he blamed for obstructing reform. And tho he was a typical white racist of the period, he was not antisemitic, at least not in his choice of advisers.

So the rage of impoverished America was not channeled against a particular ethnic minority. Plainly, Germany followed the route of antisemitism, which had mass appeal. But Hitler and the Nazi true believers were not mere race baiters. They believed strongly in the "Aryan religion," a form of paganism concocted by people overly influenced by Nietzsche (who would have scoffed at such fantasies). The Nazis veiled this archaic religion from the people, portraying Hitler as a good Catholic.

FFN2

The thing to be noted is that when socialism is on the rise, many among the common people identify with the notion, "Now it's our turn" with the subtext, "You people who have it good will now pay dearly! Out of our way!"

Because true socialism always aims for one-party rule, the coordinating committees become very powerful, and thence the power-hungry gravitate to those committees.

Now since what we have is a cultural-social revolution, the rule of law is viewed as a means of oppression by the elite and by those who are forced to play scapegoat. Hence the committee and its supreme leader (one such almost always emerges) claim that their policies are for the best interests of the worker: ie., the committe's word has now become law. That's the modern road to tyranny. Totalitarianism occurs both from the ideology of tyranny (individual rights are overridden for the "collective good") and the overwhelming surveillance powers of the modern era.

FFN3

But why do such regimes sink to such depths of cruelty?

1. The ideology of collective good blinds many to the rights of minorities and individuals.

2. In politics, it is often the case that the most amoral rise to the higher levels. But in democracies, balances of power tend to check such excesses. In regimes headed toward tyranny, only the most cunning and ruthless excercise true power in the control committees. Because modern tyrannies require a de facto one-party structure, the bureaucratic apparatus falls into the hands of the party, which in turn is controlled by committee. Who controls that "central committee" most effectively is generally the most ruthless.

3. The leaders of such tyrannies spur their peoples to excesses because those leaders truly believe in their blood-spilling causes. Stalin believed in socialism. Hitler believed in his strange Aryan religion (which, in fact, was a spiritual throwback to the beliefs and behavior of the Aryan wild men of ancient Central Asia).

We may also observe that Stalin was a standard-issue atheist who had no moral compass other than the expansion of communism. Hitler was a de facto atheist. That is, he had no known regard for God or man. He did however know about the power of belief. He had found that if he practiced intensive belief before undertaking a major, daring act, he often succeeded against expectations. In a power-mad man, this was a bizarre spectacle for the world to see but it certainly impressed the German citizenry.

In addition, and importantly, the Communist and Nazi ideologies filled the gap left by what Nietzsche and others called nihilism: a world in which Christianity was under siege and Christian verities were dead. These socialist, man-based value systems replaced, to disastrous effect, the traditional value system of Christian Europe, flawed as that was.

Further, we must acknowledge that it is well known that demagoguery can convert civilized group psychology into primitive and violent mob psychology. From my vantage point, mob psychology represents a regression to a lower, herd-like, communal state of consciousness. One sees relatively harmless versions on dance floors, in rock concerts and in sport arenas.

The work of maintaining the defensive individual ego and self is halted for the relief of an alternate form of consciousness dating to an animalistic period of humanity. The individual becomes one with the crowd, and will be caught up in irrational actions much as a single steer will rush along madly with a stampeded herd. Its sense of self is merged into the singular consciousness.

Demagogs prey on this hunger for simple answers to life in a complex world. They use modern media to switch off the rather weak rational mind in many people, who are glad for the relief of submerging into the primitive mass mind.

FFN4

Such leaders are skilled at unleashing the sadistic impulses found in the "lower" mind, which comes to the fore when the cultivated mind is switched off for the sake of the exhilirating effect of mob consciousness.

Those who are able to resist such pressures require a character that goes beyond externalities. They must be able to examine themselves and to seek meaning in life (not only lip service).

+++++++++++++

28b. After recounting the hellish existence of the working prisoners (those not deemed fit to work perished immediately on entry to the camps), Frankl brings up the situation of apathy, which was the main symptom of the second phase as a necessary mechanism of self-defense. We note that this is also a symptom seen among abused children in "normal" society. Sufficient emotional trauma engenders both apathy and the related passive aggressive response. In this light, we observe that Frankl's account shows that he was passive aggressive toward the guards.

77a. !!!! It was necessary to have a goal, a positive vision of the future, in order to have a faith to keep enduring.

"We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of our selves as those who were being questioned by life -- daily and hourly. Our answer must consist, not in talk or meditation, but in right action [italics mine]. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find a right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual."

79-b. !!! Frankl talked two men out of suicide by persuading them to see valid goals they had: one, the desire to see a living child waiting in a foreign land; the other, scientific work that still needed to be completed.

85-a; Footnote. The story of a merciful SS commander.

88. !!!! When liberation came, the joy and restoration of normalcy had to soak in slowly for most prisoners. One can see a similar effect among other groups, such as recovering alcoholics. Relation to the world on relatively normal terms can take a fair degree of time. That is, the word of liberation is often not grasped immediately, and may in fact unfold quite slowly.

99. Frankl terms the survival outlook in desperate and degraded situations as "the will to meaning" which he contrasts with Freud's "will to pleasure" and also with the "will to power" in the Adlerian sense. (Tho his logotherapy also contasts with the Nietzschean sense of will to power, even so the psychiatrist quotes the 19th Century German iconoclast with approval, closely paraphrasing Nietzsche's aphorism in Twilight of the Idols: "One who has a why to live for can bear almost any how. Man does not strive for happiness; only the English do." (Frankl did not include the witticism.)

105a. "I consider it a dangerous misconception of mental hygiene to assume that what man needs in the first place is equilibrium or, as it is called in biology, "homeostasis," i.e. a tensionless state. What man actually needs is not a tensionless state but rather the striving and struggling for a worthwhile goal, a freely chosen task. What he needs is not a discharge of tension at any cost but the call of a potential meaning waiting to be fulfilled by him."

We must agree with Frankl that a source of the plague of mental depression afflicting moderns is rooted in the belief that worthy goals are unattainable or uninteresting.

105a. "If architects want to strengthen a decrepit arch, they increase the load which is laid on it, for thereby the parts are joined more firmly together." We note that it is very important to select the right point for boosting the load, both in architecture and in psychotherapy. A good example of what Frankl means can be found among recovering alcoholics, who gently but firmly encourage each other to face certain critical character traits.

107. By "existential vacuum," Frankl means what is colloquially known as the "hole in the soul."

-b. "Moreover, there are various masks and guises under which the existential vacuum appears. Sometimes the frustrated will to meaning is vicariously compensated for by a will to power, including the most primitive form of the will to power, the will to money..."

Another substitute is the will to pleasure [hedonism].

"We can observe in such cases that the sexual libido becomes rampant in the existential vacuum."

110 a. !!!! Logotherapy says the true meaning of life is to be discovered outside self.

"The more one forgoes himself -- by giving himself to a cause or to another person to love -- the more human he is and the more he actualizes himself."

This may sound like typical self-help book drivel, but it should be understand that Frankl saw many prisoners grotesquely stripped of their human virtues, their essential humanity, as contrasted with the minority who somehow clung to a shred of their humanity. He saw these things in stark relief, which is why his message remains important.

112. "In logotherapy, life is not interpreted as a mere epiphenomenon of sexual drives and instincts in the sense of a so-called sublimation. Life is as primary a phenomenon as sex."

Sex must be a vehicle for life.

124. Frankl relates his mental trick used to help some patients with phobias to break the "vicious circles" of negativity that bring on panic reactions that result in problematic responses. He terms the trick "paradoxical intention" whereby the patient is encouraged to intend to do exactly what she or he fears, keeping a light-hearted attitude.

Frankl tells of a young physician who would, when faced with a new social situation, begin to sweat copiously, much to his extreme embarrassment. Acting on Frankl's instruction, the next time such a situation confronted him, he said to himself: "I only sweated out a quart before. But now I'm going to sweat out 10 quarts!" Within a week the sweat reaction was gone.

Yet I caution that the mental trick used to relieve a person of such an affliction may not always be sufficient. One therapist told of a fellow cured of constant backache by such a method, only to commit suicide once his "cure" disclosed to him his fundamental depression. The backache had been masking that awareness. [I don't have a reference for this paragraph, but many such instances have been reported.]

130 a. Frankl faults psychoanalysis (Freud) as excessively deterministic. "Man is not fully conditioned and determined but rather determines himself whether he gives into conditions or stands up to them. In other words, man is ultimately self-determining. Man does not simply exist but always decides what his existence will be, what he will become in the next moment."

This belief is at the core of his psychotherapy. That is, "Take responsibility for your course of action!" Frankl arrived at this point of view apparently even before he survived four concentration camps, but his observations in those hell holes deepened his conviction.

Even so, as a philosopher he has only personal conviction to go on. No one has yet resolved the mind-body problem, or related problems. And I don't necessarily agree with him. I do agree that urging someone to face himself and seek meaningfulness is a good initial method. Beyond that, there is another factor not directly addressed in this book (tho he speaks of it in another book) and that is the subject of God, which I am not going to discuss in this set of notes.

130 b. Talks about free will from moment to moment.

Paragraphs a and b really reflect his personal creed, the sort of creed that many support but which is difficult if not impossible to prove in the so-called scientific sense. The issue for us is that Frankl is pointing to a greater reality, one based on love as fundamental to the cosmos insofar as humans are concerned.

My take: This fundamental of love, how is it to be viewed, other than as an unfoldment on behalf of man? What is this unfoldment other than an embracing salvation, i.e. a "universal christological principle"?

132 a,b.

"Tho your sins be as scarlet..."

See Perplexity.ai for background on mass murderer Dr. J (sent to the Eastern front for daring to become engaged to Hitler's sister).

This tale of redemption accords with the principle of which Frankl speaks: turning toward a meaningful existence.

(The claim that Dr J had been held at an isolation cell at Steinhof is said to be unlikely. Probably a PoW snared from German army ??)

133. "...a residue of freedom, no matter how limited it might be, is left to man in neurotic and even psychotic cases. Indeed, the innermost core of the patient's personality is not even touched by a psychosis." Here Frankl appears to be suggesting some sort of soul or spirit that is not affected by conditioning.

133. Psychiatric credo:

"An incurable psychotic patient may lose his usefulness but yet retain the dignity of a human being. This is my psychiatric credo. Without it I should not think it worthwhile to be a psychiatrist. For whose sake? Just for the sake of a damaged brain machine which cannot be repaired? If the patient were not definitely more, euthanasia would be justified."

The Nazis did indeed justify euthanasia on such grounds, as do modern liberal nations, with the trend creeping into U.S. states.

Without saying so, Frankl is referring to what is traditionally termed the "divine spark" in the human being.

Advocates a rehumanization of psychiatry and society, while rejecting strict physicalism.

BELOW ARE NOTES FOR F.MSM THAT ARE
NOT ASSOCIATED WITH PAGE NUMBERS

RLL1

One must examine oneself to be sure one is not projecting one's own internal difficulties onto the external world. It is routine to find "the other" to blame rather than looking within and perhaps being forced to concede deficiencies. If people don't examine their lives, how are they to avoid grave mistakes in their advocacies?

RLL2

Re making life meaningful.

It should be noticed that a number of persons come up with incomplete modes of life that ultimately fail if those modes are not backed up by something even more spiritual. A most common modal shortfall occurs when a parent lives her or his life thru the child. Tho it is laudable to want the best for one's child, but so often the result is a parental ego trip that is less about the child and more about parental pride -- which the offspring is eventually forced to repudiate, or suffer debilitating emotional problems.

The problem here is that the parent is unwilling to give way to a higher power, tho the adult may well be blind to that wayward willfulness. The answer is to develop a God-oriented sense of humility, including toward one's children.

Another common life mode is social activism. Again, it is laudable to try to help correct social problems. But one must beware intellectual arrogance. How often, for example, do we see very wealthy people promoting on large scales causes which they are sure are correct, and yet one must wonder whether they really have the competence they think they do. A capacity to pile up riches does not necessarily imply sufficient spirital development to avoid doing more harm than good -- as has been shown many times over by the "law" of unintended consequences.

Now such persons are trying to add meaning to their lives beyond the display of riches. Some want really nothing more than to make a name for themselves outside the business world, to flatter their egos. Others may sincerely desire to make the world a better place. But, do they have sufficient spiritual insight to do so without mucking things up?

Of course one needn't be wealthy to make such a blunder. Activists and joiners who don't look within are liable to choose causes which resonate with some inner conflict or resentment.

The comments in this RLL section are my cautions on Frankl's thesis. I agree that many people lack a sense of meaning for their lives. But it is important to recognize the many vain efforts to gain that meaning on the cheap -- that is, without examining oneself as honestly as possible.

+++++

UNMARKED NOTE

Observe the difference in philosophical intensity between this man, Viktor Frankl, and those who got thru the war with relatively little deep suffering. I am thinking specifically of Martin Heidegger. Heidegger may well have been far more brilliant than Frankl in philosophical matters, but which had the character of the true helper and lover of humanity? It wasn't Heidegger.

And we have Karl Jaspers whom the Nazis oppressed, not only because his wife was Jewish, but because his book Nietzsche challenged the whole Nazi line on that philosopher. (Much has been written on Nietzsche; a good first read is the essay by Bertrand Russell in his History of Western Philosophy [1945].)

UNMARKED NOTE

!?

Much of Jaspers' fighting spirit stems from his lifelong struggle against a disease that struck him in youth that could have taken him out at any time. For him, the purpose of philosophy was to get at the core of human existence (he was an existentialist before existentialism was cool). Jaspers, who began his career as a psychiatrist, surely would have agreed with Frankl's emphasis on finding meaning for life, tho I don't believe the two had any postwar communication. THIS OBSCURE PAPER may be of interest.

Both Frankl and Jaspers were concerned with the intense core of personal existence, as opposed to thinkers like Heidegger who are more interested in metaphysical abstractions. (That remark should not be taken as a putdown of the subject of metaphysics.)

F.MSM/General/Axial

As a non-Christian, Frankl would not be expected to use a term such as universal christological principle (a principle, we may say, that clearly dates at least to Zoroaster or soon after his lifetime). Yet, as Frankl is at least willing to accept use of a personal God or higher power by patients, we see that his thinking tends in that direction, as does his insistence that self-denial for the love of another is of great importance in the healing process. That is, Frankl does not directly support such a notion, but from my vantage point his discussion implies such an aspect of the cosmos.

Notice that the very term "logotherapy" is evocative of the "logos" of John's gospel -- tho John was expanding on Heraclitus, who saw the logos as the eternal, unifying law governing all change and opposition, like a hidden harmony within the flux. "All become one" thru logos; i.e. divine reason implicit in the cosmos. [Heraclitus however does not see love as a fundamental.]

Friday, May 8, 2026

FN ER20 05.2026

FN ER20 05.2026. As quoted in Einstein by Thomas Ryckman (Routledge 2017). Ryckman cites Arthur Fine's translation of Einstein's August 1935 letter to Schroedinger, which appeared in Fine's Einstein, Realism and the Quantum Theory (U Chicago, 2d ed., 1996).

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Russell/Copleston 'God' debate.....K series

Transcript of the Russell/Copleston radio talk
A DEBATE ON THE EXISTENCE OF GOD Broadcast in 1948 on the Third Program of the British Broadcasting Corporation. Published in Humanitas (Manchester) and reprinted in Why I Am Not a Christian by Bertrand Russell (George Allen & Unwin 1957). Bertrand Russell [hereafter R:] and F.C. Copleston [hereafter C:]

C: As we are going to discuss the existence of God, it might perhaps be as well to come to some provisional agreement as to what we understand by the term "God." I presume that we mean a supreme personal being -- distinct from the world and creator of the world. Would you agree -- provisionally at least -- to accept this statement as the meaning of the term "God"?

R: Yes, I accept this definition.

C: Well, my position is the affirmative position that such a being actually exists, and that His existence can be proved philosophically. Perhaps you would tell me if your position is that of agnosticism or of atheism. I mean, would you say that the non-existence of God can be proved?

R: No, I should not say that: my position is agnostic.

C: Would you agree with me that the problem of God is a problem of great importance? For example, would you agree that if God does not exist, human beings and human history can have no other purpose than the purpose they choose to give themselves, which -- in practice -- is likely to mean the purpose which those impose who have the power to impose it?

R: Roughly speaking, yes, though I should have to place some limitation on your last clause.

C: Would you agree that if there is no God -- no absolute Being -- there can be no absolute values? I mean, would you agree that if there is no absolute good that the relativity of values results?

R: No, I think these questions are logically distinct. Take, for instance, G. E. Moore's Principia Ethica, where he maintains that there is a distinction of good and evil, that both of these are definite concepts. But he does not bring in the idea of God to support that contention.

C: Well, suppose we leave the question of good till later, till we come to the moral argument, and I give first a metaphysical argument. I'd like to put the main weight on the metaphysical argument based on Leibniz's argument from "Contingency" and then later we might discuss the moral argument. Suppose I give a brief statement on the metaphysical argument and that then we go on to discuss it?

R: That seems to me to be a very good plan. THE ARGUMENT FROM CONTINGENCY

C: Well, for clarity's sake, I'll divide the argument into distinct stages. First of all, I should say, we know that there are at least some beings in the world which do not contain in themselves the reason for their existence. For example, I depend on my parents, and now on the air, and on food, and so on. Now, secondly, the world is simply the real or imagined totality or aggregate of individual objects, none of which contain in themselves alone the reason for their existence. There isn't any world distinct from the objects which form it, any more than the human race is something apart from the members.

Therefore, I should say, since objects or events exist, and since no object of experience contains within itself reason of its existence, this reason, the totality of objects, must have a reason external to itself. That reason must be an existent being. Well, this being is either itself the reason for its own existence, or it is not. If it is, well and good. If it is not, then we must proceed farther. But if we proceed to infinity in that sense, then there's no explanation of existence at all. So, I should say, in order to explain existence, we must come to a being which contains within itself the reason for its own existence, that is to say, which cannot not exist.

R: This raises a great many points and it is not altogether easy to know where to begin, but I think that, perhaps, in answering your argument, the best point at which to begin is the question of necessary being. The word "necessary" I should maintain, can only be applied significantly to propositions. And, in fact, only to such as are analytic -- that is to say -- such as it is self-contradictory to deny. I could only admit a necessary being if there were a being whose existence it is self-contradictory to deny. I should like to know whether you would accept Leibniz's division of propositions into truths of reason and truths of fact. The former -- the truths of reason -- being necessary.

C: Well, I certainly should not subscribe to what seems to be Leibniz's idea of truths of reason and truths of fact, since it would appear that, for him, there are in the long run only analytic propositions. It would seem that for Leibniz truths of fact are ultimately reducible to truths of reason. That is to say, to analytic propositions, at least for an omniscient mind. Well, I couldn't agree with that. For one thing it would fail to meet the requirements of the experience of freedom. I don't want to uphold the whole philosophy of Leibniz. I have made use of his argument from contingent to necessary being, basing the argument on the principle of sufficient reason, simply because it seems to me a brief and clear formulation of what is, in my opinion, the fundamental metaphysical argument for God's existence.

R: But, to my mind, "a necessary proposition" has got to be analytic. I don't see what else it can mean. And analytic propositions are always complex and logically somewhat late. "Irrational animals are animals" is an analytic proposition; but a proposition such as "This is an animal" can never be analytic. In fact, all the propositions that can be analytic are somewhat late in the build-up of propositions.

C: Take the proposition "if there is a contingent being then there is a necessary being." I consider that that proposition hypothetically expressed is a necessary proposition. If you are going to call every necessary proposition an analytic proposition, then -- in order to avoid a dispute in terminology -- I would agree to call it analytic, though I don't consider it a tautological proposition. But the proposition is a necessary proposition only on the supposition that there is a contingent being. That there is a contingent being actually existing has to be discovered by experience, and the proposition that there is a contingent being is certainly not an analytic proposition, though once you know, I should maintain, that there is a contingent being, it follows of necessity that there is a necessary being.

R: The difficulty of this argument is that I don't admit the idea of a necessary being and I don't admit that there is any particular meaning in calling other beings "contingent." These phrases don't for me have a significance except within a logic that I reject.

C: Do you mean that you reject these terms because they won't fit in with what is called "modern logic"?

R: Well, I can't find anything that they could mean. The word "necessary," it seems to me, is a useless word, except as applied to analytic propositions, not to things.

C: In the first place, what do you mean by "modern logic?" As far as I know, there are somewhat differing systems. In the second place, not all modern logicians surely would admit the meaninglessness of metaphysics. We both know, at any rate, one very eminent modern thinker whose knowledge of modern logic was profound, but who certainly did not think that metaphysics are meaningless or, in particular, that the problem of God is meaningless. Again, even if all modern logicians held that metaphysical terms are meaningless, it would not follow that they were right. The proposition that metaphysical terms are meaningless seems to me to be a proposition based on an assumed philosophy.

The dogmatic position behind it seems to be this: What will not go into my machine is non-existent, or it is meaningless; it is the expression of emotion. I am simply trying to point out that anybody who says that a particular system of modern logic is the sole criterion of meaning is saying something that is over-dogmatic; he is dogmatically insisting that a part of philosophy is the whole of philosophy. After all, a "contingent" being is a being which has not in itself the complete reason for its existence that's what I mean by a contingent being. You know, as well as I do, that the existence of neither of us can be explained without reference to something or somebody outside us, our parents, for example. A "necessary" being, on the other hand means a being that must and cannot not exist. You may say that there is no such being, but you will find it hard to convince me that you do not understand the terms I am using. If you do not understand them, then how can you be entitled to say that such a being does not exist, if that is what you do say?

R: Well, there are points here that I don't propose to go into at length. I don't maintain the meaninglessness of metaphysics in general at all. I maintain the meaninglessness of certain particular terms -- not on any general ground, but simply because I've not been able to see an interpretation of those particular terms. It's not a general dogma -- it's a particular thing. But those points I will leave out for the moment. And I will say that what you have been saying brings us back, it seems to me, to the ontological argument that there is a being whose essence involves existence, so that his existence is analytic. That seems to me to be impossible, and it raises, of course, the question what one means by existence, and as to this, I think a subject named can never be significantly said to exist but only a subject described. And that existence, in fact, quite definitely is not a predicate.

C: Well, you say, I believe, that it is bad grammar, or rather bad syntax to say for example "T. S. Eliot exists"; one ought to say, for example, "He, the author of Murder in the Cathedral, exists." Are you going to say that the proposition, "The cause of the world exists," is without meaning? You may say that the world has no cause; but I fail to see how you can say that the proposition that "the cause of the world exists" is meaningless. Put it in the form of a question: "Has the world a cause?" or "Does a cause of the world exist?" Most people surely would understand the question, even if they don't agree about the answer.

R: Well, certainly the question "Does the cause of the world exist?" is a question that has meaning. But if you say "Yes, God is the cause of the world" you're using God as a proper name; then "God exists" will not be a statement that has meaning; that is the position that I'm maintaining. Because, therefore, it will follow that it cannot be an analytic proposition ever to say that this or that exists. For example, suppose you take as your subject "the existent round-square," it would look like an analytic proposition that "the existent round- square exists," but it doesn't exist.

C: No, it doesn't, then surely you can't say it doesn't exist unless you have a conception of what existence is. As to the phrase "existent round-square," I should say that it has no meaning at all.

R: I quite agree. Then I should say the same thing in another context in reference to a "necessary being."

C: Well, we seem to have arrived at an impasse. To say that a necessary being is a being that must exist and cannot not exist has for me a definite meaning. For you it has no meaning.

R: Well, we can press the point a little, I think. A being that must exist and cannot not exist, would surely, according to you, be a being whose essence involves existence. C: Yes, a being the essence of which is to exist. But I should not be willing to argue the existence of God simply from the idea of His essence because I don't think we have any clear intuition of God's essence as yet. I think we have to argue from the world of experience to God.

R: Yes, I quite see the distinction. But, at the same time, for a being with sufficient knowledge, it would be true to say "Here is this being whose essence involves existence!"

C: Yes, certainly if anybody saw God, he would see that God must exist.

R: So that I mean there is a being whose essence involves existence although we don't know that essence. We only know there is such a being.

C: Yes, I should add we don't know the essence a priori. It is only a posteriori through our experience of the world that we come to a knowledge of the existence of that being. And then one argues, the essence and existence must be identical. Because if God's essence and God's existence was not identical, then some sufficient reason for this existence would have to be found beyond God.

R: So it all turns on this question of sufficient reason, and I must say you haven't defined "sufficient reason" in a way that I can understand -- what do you mean by sufficient reason? You don't mean cause?

C: Not necessarily. Cause is a kind of sufficient reason. Only contingent being can have a cause. God is His own sufficient reason; and He is not cause of Himself. By sufficient reason in the full sense I mean an explanation adequate for the existence of some particular being.

R: But when is an explanation adequate? Suppose I am about to make a flame with a match. You may say that the adequate explanation of that is that I rub it on the box.

C: Well, for practical purposes -- but theoretically, that is only a partial explanation. An adequate explanation must ultimately be a total explanation, to which nothing further can be added.

R: Then I can only say that you're looking for something which can't be got, and which one ought not to expect to get.

C: To say that one has not found it is one thing; to say that one should not look for it seems to me rather dogmatic.

R: Well, I don't know. I mean, the explanation of one thing is another thing which makes the other thing dependent on yet another, and you have to grasp this sorry scheme of things entire to do what you want, and that we can't do.

C: But are you going to say that we can't, or we shouldn't even raise the question of the existence of the whole of this sorry scheme of things -- of the whole universe?

R: Yes, I don't think there's any meaning in it at all. I think the word "universe" is a handy word in some connections, but I don't think it stands for anything that has a meaning.

C: If the word is meaningless, it can't be so very handy. In any case, I don't say that the universe is something different from the objects which compose it (I indicated that in my brief summary of the proof), what I'm doing is to look for the reason, in this case the cause of the objects -- the real or imagined totality of which constitute what we call the universe. You say, I think that the universe -- or my existence if you prefer, or any other existence -- is unintelligible?

R: First may I take up the point that if a word is meaningless it can't be handy. That sounds well but isn't in fact correct. Take, say, such a word as "the" or "than." You can't point to any object that those words mean, but they are very useful words; I should say the same of "universe." But leaving that point, you ask whether I consider that the universe is unintelligible. I shouldn't say unintelligible -- I think it is without explanation. Intelligible, to my mind, is a different thing. Intelligible has to do with the thing itself intrinsically and not with its relations.

C: Well, my point is that what we call the world is intrinsically unintelligible, apart from the existence of God. You see, I don't believe that the infinity of the series of events -- I mean a horizontal series, so to speak -- if such an infinity could be proved, would be in the slightest degree relevant to the situation. If you add up chocolates you get chocolates after all and not a sheep. If you add up chocolates to infinity, you presumably get an infinite number of chocolates. So if you add up contingent beings to infinity, you still get contingent beings, not a necessary being. An infinite series of contingent beings will be, to my way of thinking, as unable to cause itself as one contingent being. However, you say, I think, that it is illegitimate to raise the question of what will explain the existence of any particular object?

R: It's quite all right if you mean by explaining it, simply finding a cause for it.

C: Well, why stop at one particular object? Why shouldn't one raise the question of the cause of the existence of all particular objects?

R: Because I see no reason to think there is any. The whole concept of cause is one we derive from our observation of particular things; I see no reason whatsoever to suppose that the total has any cause whatsoever.

C: Well, to say that there isn't any cause is not the same thing as saying that we shouldn't look for a cause. The statement that there isn't any cause should come, if it comes at all, at the end of the inquiry, not the beginning. In any case, if the total has no cause, then to my way of thinking it must be its own cause, which seems to me impossible. Moreover, the statement that the world is simply there if in answer to a question, presupposes that the question has meaning.

R: No, it doesn't need to be its own cause, what I'm saying is that the concept of cause is not applicable to the total.

C: Then you would agree with Sartre that the universe is what he calls "gratuitous"?

R: Well, the word "gratuitous" suggests that it might be something else; I should say that the universe is just there, and that's all.

C: Well, I can't see how you can rule out the legitimacy of asking the question how the total, or anything at all comes to be there. Why something rather than nothing, that is the question? The fact that we gain our knowledge of causality empirically, from particular causes, does not rule out the possibility of asking what the cause of the series is. If the word "cause" were meaningless or if it could be shown that Kant's view of the matter were correct, the question would be illegitimate I agree; but you don't seem to hold that the word "cause" is meaningless, and I do not suppose you are a Kantian.

R: I can illustrate what seems to me your fallacy. Every man who exists has a mother, and it seems to me your argument is that therefore the human race must have a mother, but obviously the human race hasn't a mother -- that's a different logical sphere.

C: Well, I can't really see any parity. If I were saying "every object has a phenomenal cause, therefore, the whole series has a phenomenal cause," there would be a parity; but I'm not saying that; I'm saying, every object has a phenomenal cause if you insist on the infinity of the series -- but the series of phenomenal causes is an insufficient explanation of the series. Therefore, the series has not a phenomenal cause but a transcendent cause.

R: That's always assuming that not only every particular thing in the world, but the world as a whole must have a cause. For that assumption I see no ground whatever. If you'll give me a ground I'll listen to it.

C: Well, the series of events is either caused or it's not caused. If it is caused, there must obviously be a cause outside the series. If it's not caused then it's sufficient to itself, and if it's sufficient to itself it is what I call necessary. But it can't be necessary since each member is contingent, and we've agreed that the total has no reality apart from its members, therefore, it can't be necessary. Therefore, it can't be -- uncaused -- therefore it must have a cause. And I should like to observe in passing that the statement "the world is simply there and is inexplicable" can't be got out of logical analysis.

R: I don't want to seem arrogant, but it does seem to me that I can conceive things that you say the human mind can't conceive. As for things not having a cause, the physicists assure us that individual quantum transitions in atoms have no cause.

C: Well, I wonder now whether that isn't simply a temporary inference.

R: It may be, but it does show that physicists' minds can conceive it.

C: Yes, I agree, some scientists -- physicists -- are willing to allow for indetermination within a restricted field. But very many scientists are not so willing. I think that Professor Dingle, of London University, maintains that the Heisenberg uncertainty principle tells us something about the success (or the lack of it) of the present atomic theory in correlating observations, but not about nature in itself, and many physicists would accept this view. In any case, I don't see how physicists can fail to accept the theory in practice, even if they don't do so in theory. I cannot see how science could be conducted on any other assumption than that of order and intelligibility in nature.

The physicist presupposes, at least tacitly, that there is some sense in investigating nature and looking for the causes of events, just as the detective presupposes that there is some sense in looking for the cause of a murder. The metaphysician assumes that there is sense in looking for the reason or cause of phenomena, and, not being a Kantian, I consider that the metaphysician is as justified in his assumption as the physicist. When Sartre, for example, says that the world is gratuitous, I think that he has not sufficiently considered what is implied by "gratuitous."

R: I think -- there seems to me a certain unwarrantable extension here; a physicist looks for causes; that does not necessarily imply that there are causes everywhere. A man may look for gold without assuming that there is gold everywhere; if he finds gold, well and good, if he doesn't he's had bad luck. The same is true when the physicists look for causes. As for Sartre, I don't profess to know what he means, and I shouldn't like to be thought to interpret him, but for my part, I do think the notion of the world having an explanation is a mistake. I don't see why one should expect it to have, and I think you say about what the scientist assumes is an over-statement.

C: Well, it seems to me that the scientist does make some such assumption. When he experiments to find out some particular truth, behind that experiment lies the assumption that the universe is not simply discontinuous. There is the possibility of finding out a truth by experiment. The experiment may be a bad one, it may lead to no result, or not to the result that he wants, but that at any rate there is the possibility, through experiment, of finding out the truth that he assumes. And that seems to me to assume an ordered and intelligible universe.

R: I think you're generalizing more than is necessary. Undoubtedly the scientist assumes that this sort of thing is likely to be found and will often be found. He does not assume that it will be found, and that's a very important matter in modem physics.

C: Well, I think he does assume or is bound to assume it tacitly in practice. It may be that, to quote Professor Haldane, "when I Iight the gas under the kettle, some of the water molecules will fly off as vapor, and there is no way of finding out which will do so," but it doesn't follow necessarily that the idea of chance must be introduced except in relation to our knowledge.

R: No it doesn't -- at least if I may believe what he says. He's finding out quite a lot of things -- the scientist is finding out quite a lot of things that are happening in the world, which are, at first, beginnings of causal chains -- first causes which haven't in themselves got causes. He does not assume that everything has a cause.

C: Surely that's a first cause within a certain selected field. It's a relatively first cause.

R: I don't think he'd say so. If there's a world in which most events, but not all, have causes, he will then be able to depict the probabilities and uncertainties by assuming that this particular event you're interested in probably has a cause. And since in any case you won't get more than probability that's good enough.

C: It may be that the scientist doesn't hope to obtain more than probability, but in raising the question he assumes that the question of explanation has a meaning. But your general point then, Lord Russell, is that it's illegitimate even to ask the question of the cause of the world?

R: Yes, that's my position.

C: If it's a question that for you has no meaning, it's of course very difficult to discuss it, isn't it?

R: Yes, it is very difficult. What do you say -- shall we pass on to some other issue?

RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE

C: Let's. Well, perhaps I might say a word about religious experience, and then we can go on to moral experience. I don't regard religious experience as a strict proof of the existence of God, so the character of the discussion changes somewhat, but I think it's true to say that the best explanation of it is the existence of God. By religious experience I don't mean simply feeling good. I mean a loving, but unclear, awareness of some object which irresistibly seems to the experiencer as something transcending the self, something transcending all the normal objects of experience, something which cannot be pictured or conceptualized, but of the reality of which doubt is impossible -- at least during the experience. I should claim that cannot be explained adequately and without residue, simply subjectively. The actual basic experience at any rate is most easily explained on the hypotheses that there is actually some objective cause of that experience.

R: I should reply to that line of argument that the whole argument from our own mental states to something outside us, is a very tricky affair. Even where we all admit its validity, we only feel justified in doing so, I think, because of the consensus of mankind. If there's a crowd in a room and there's a clock in a room, they can all see the clock. The face that they can all see it tends to make them think that it's not an hallucination: whereas these religious experiences do tend to be very private.

C: Yes, they do. I'm speaking strictly of mystical experience proper, and I certainly don't include, by the way, what are called visions. I mean simply the experience, and I quite admit it's indefinable, of the transcendent object or of what seems to be a transcendent object. I remember Julian Huxley in some lecture saying that religious experience, or mystical experience, is as much a real experience as falling in love or appreciating poetry and art. Well, I believe that when we appreciate poetry and art we appreciate definite poems or a definite work of art. If we fall in love, well, we fall in love with somebody and not with nobody.

R: May I interrupt for a moment here. That is by no means always the case. Japanese novelists never consider that they have achieved a success unless large numbers of real people commit suicide for love of the imaginary heroine.

C: Well, I must take your word for these goings on in Japan. I haven't committed suicide, I'm glad to say, but I have been strongly influenced in the taking of two important steps in my life by two biographies. However, I must say I see little resemblance between the real influence of those books on me and the mystic experience proper, so far, that is, as an outsider can obtain an idea of that experience.

R: Well, I mean we wouldn't regard God as being on the same level as the characters in a work of fiction. You'll admit there's a distinction here?

C: I certainly should. But what I'd say is that the best explanation seems to be the not purely subjectivist explanation. Of course, a subjectivist explanation is possible in the case of certain people in whom there is little relation between the experience and life, in the case of deluded people and hallucinated people, and so on. But when you get what one might call the pure type, say St. Francis of Assisi, when you get an experience that results in an overflow of dynamic and creative love, the best explanation of that it seems to me is the actual existence of an objective cause of the experience.

R: Well, I'm not contending in a dogmatic way that there is not a God. What I'm contending is that we don't know that there is. I can only take what is recorded as I should take other records and I do find that a very great many things are reported, and I am sure you would not accept things about demons and devils and what not -- and they're reported in exactly the same tone of voice and with exactly the same conviction. And the mystic, if his vision is veridical, may be said to know that there are devils. But I don't know that there are.

C: But surely in the case of the devils there have been people speaking mainly of visions, appearance, angels or demons and so on. I should rule out the visual appearances, because I think they can be explained apart from the existence of the object which is supposed to be seen.

R: But don't you think there are abundant recorded cases of people who believe that they've heard Satan speaking to them in their hearts, in just the same way as the mystics assert God -- and I'm not talking now of an external vision, I'm talking of a purely mental experience. That seems to be an experience of the same sort as mystics' experience of God, and I don't seek that from what mystics tell us you can get any argument for God which is not equally an argument for Satan.

C: I quite agree, of course, that people have imagined or thought they have heard of seen Satan. And I have no wish in passing to deny the existence of Satan. But I do not think that people have claimed to have experienced Satan in the precise way in which mystics claim to have experienced God. Take the case of a non-Christian, Plotinus. He admits the experience is something inexpressible, the object is an object of love, and therefore, not an object that causes horror and disgust. And the effect of that experience is, I should say, borne out, or I mean the validity of th experience is borne out in the records of the life of Plotinus. At any rate it is more reasonable to suppose that he had that experience if we're willing to accept Porphyry's account of Plontinus' general kindness and benevolence.

R: The fact that a belief has a good moral effect upon a man is no evidence whatsoever in favor of its truth.

C: No, but if it could actually be proved that the belief was actually responsible for a good effect on a man's life, I should consider it a presumption in favor of some truth, at any rate of the positive part of the belief not of its entire validity. But in any case I am using the character of the life as evidence in favor of the mystic's veracity and sanity rather than as a proof of the truth of his beliefs.

R: But even that I don't think is any evidence. I've had experiences myself that have altered my character profoundly. And I thought at the time at any rate that it was altered for the good. Those experiences were important, but they did not involve the existence of something outside me, and I don't think that if I'd thought they did, the fact that they had a wholesome effect would have been any evidence that I was right.

C: No, but I think that the good effect would attest your veracity in describing your experience. Please remember that I'm not saying that a mystic's mediation or interpretation of his experience should be immune from discussion or criticism.

R: Obviously the character of a young man may be -- and often is -- immensely affected for good by reading about some great man in history, and it may happen that the great man is a myth and doesn't exist, but they boy is just as much affected for good as if he did. There have been such people. Plutarch's Lives take Lycurgus as an example, who certainly did not exist, but you might be very much influenced by reading Lycurgus under the impression that he had previously existed. You would then be influenced by an object that you'd loved, but it wouldn't be an existing object.

C: I agree with you on that, of course, that a man may be influenced by a character in fiction. Without going into the question of what it is precisely that influences him (I should say a real value) I think that the situation of that man and of the mystic are different. After all the man who is influenced by Lycurgus hasn't got the irresistible impression that he's experience in some way the ultimate reality.

R: I don't think you've quite got my point about these historical characters -- these unhistorical characters in history. I'm not assuming what you call an effect on the reason. I'm assuming that the young man reading about this person and believing him to be real loves him -- which is quite easy to happen, and yet he's loving a phantom.

C: In one sense he's loving a phantom that's perfectly true, in the sense, I mean, that he's loving X or Y who doesn't exist. But at the same time, it is not, I think, the phantom as such that the young man loves; he perceives a real value, an idea which he recognizes as objectively valid, and that's what excites his love.

R: Well, in the same sense we had before about the characters in fiction.

C: Yes, in one sense the man's loving a phantom -- perfectly true. But in another sense he's loving what he perceives to be a value.

THE MORAL ARGUMENT

R: But aren't you now saying in effect, I mean by God whatever is good or the sum total of what is good -- the system of what is good, and, therefore, when a young man loves anything that is good he is loving God. Is that what you're saying, because if so, it wants a bit of arguing.

C: I don't say, of course, that God is the sum-total or system of what is good in the pantheistic sense; I'm not a pantheist, but I do think that all goodness reflects God in some way and proceeds from him, so that in a sense the man who loves what is truly good, loves God even if he doesn't advert to God. But still I agree that the validity of such an interpretation of a man's conduct depends on the recognition of God's existence, obviously.

R: Yes, but that's a point to be proved.

C: Quite so, but I regard the metaphysical argument as probative, but there we differ.

R: You see, I feel that some things are good and that other things are bad. I love the things that are good, that I think are good, and I hate the things that I think are bad. I don't say that these things are good because they participate in the Divine goodness.

C: Yes, but what's your justification for distinguishing between good and bad or how do you view the distinction between them?

R: I don't have any justification any more than I have when I distinguish between blue and yellow. What is my justification for distinguishing between blue and yellow? I can see they are different.

C: Well, that is an excellent justification, I agree. You distinguish blue and yellow by seeing them, so you distinguish good and bad by what faculty?

R: By my feelings.

C: By your feelings. Well, that's what I was asking. You think that good and evil have reference simply to feeling?

R: Well, why does one type of object look yellow and another look blue? I can more or less give an answer to that thanks to the physicists, and as to why I think one sort of thing good and another evil, probably there is an answer of the same sort, but it hasn't been gone into in the same way and I couldn't give it you.

C: Well, let's take the behavior of the Commandant of Belsen. That appears to you as undesirable and evil and to me too. To Adolf Hitler we suppose it appeared as something good and desirable, I suppose you'd have to admit that for Hitler it was good and for you it is evil.

R: No, I shouldn't quite go so far as that. I mean, I think people can make mistakes in that as they can in other things. If you have jaundice you see things yellow that are not yellow. You're making a mistake.

C: Yes, one can make mistakes, but can you make a mistake if it's simply a question of reference to a feeling or emotion? Surely Hitler would be the only possible judge of what appealed to his emotions.

R: It would be quite right to say that it appealed to his emotions, but you can say various things about that among others, that if that sort of thing makes that sort of appeal to Hitler's emotions, then Hitler makes quite a different appeal to my emotions.

C: Granted. But there's no objective criterion outside feeling then for condemning the conduct of the Commandant of Belsen, in your view?

R: No more than there is for the color-blind person who's in exactly the same state. Why do we intellectually condemn the color-blind man? Isn't it because he's in the minority?

C: I would say because he is lacking in a thing which normally belongs to human nature.

R: Yes, but if he were in the majority, we shouldn't say that.

C: Then you'd say that there's no criterion outside feeling that will enable one to distinguish between the behavior of the commandant of Belsen and the behavior, say, of Sir Stafford Cripps or the archbishop of Canterbury.

R: The feeling is a little too simplified. You've got to take account of the effects of actions and your feelings toward those effects. You see, you can have an argument about it if you can say that certain sorts of occurrences are the sort you like and certain others the sort you don't like. Then you have to take account of the effects of actions. You can very well say that the effects of the actions of the commandant of Belsen were painful and unpleasant.

C: They certainly were, I agree, very painful and unpleasant to all the people in the camp.

R: Yes, but not only to the people in the camp, but to outsiders contemplating them also.

C: Yes, quite true in imagination. But that's my point. I don't approve of them, and I know you don't approve of them, but I don't see what ground you have for not approving of them, because after all, to the commandant of Belsen himself, they're pleasant, those actions.

R: Yes, but you see I don't need any more ground in that case than I do in the case of color perception. There are some people who think everything is yellow, there are people suffering from jaundice, and I don't agree with these people. I can't prove that the things are not yellow, there isn't any proof, but most people agree with him that they're not yellow, and most people agree with me that the commandant of Belsen was making mistakes.

C: Well, do you accept any moral obligation?

R: Well, I should have to answer at considerable length to answer that. Practically speaking -- yes. Theoretically speaking I should have to define moral obligation rather carefully.

C: Well, do you think that the word "ought" simply has an emotional connotation?

R: No, I don't think that, because you see, as I was saying a moment ago, one has to take account of the effects, and I think right conduct is that which would probably produce the greatest possible balance in intrinsic value of all the acts possible in the circumstances, and you've got to take account of the probable effects of your action in considering what is right.

C: Well, I brought in moral obligation because I think that one can approach the question of God's existence in that way. The vast majority of the human race will make, and always have made, some distinction between right and wrong. The vast majority I think has some consciousness of an obligation in the moral sphere. It's my opinion that the perception of values and the consciousness of moral law and obligation are best explained through the hypothesis of a transcendent ground of value and of an author of the moral law. I do mean by "author of the moral law" an arbitrary author of the moral law. I think, in fact, that those modern atheists who have argued in a converse way "there is no God; therefore, there are no absolute values and no absolute law," are quite logical.

R: I don't like the word "absolute." I don't think there is anything absolute whatever. The moral law, for example, is always changing. At one period in the development of the human race, almost everybody thought cannibalism was a duty.

C: Well, I don't see that differences in particular moral judgments are any conclusive argument against the universality of the moral law. Let's assume for the moment that there are absolute moral values, even on that hypothesis it's only to be expected that different individuals and different groups should enjoy varying degrees of insight into those values.

R: I'm inclined to think that "ought," the feeling that one has about "ought" is an echo of what has been told one by one's parents or one's nurses.

C: Well, I wonder if you can explain away the idea of the "ought" merely in terms of nurses and parents. I really don't see how it can be conveyed to anybody in other terms than itself. It seems to be that if there is a moral order bearing upon the human conscience, that that moral order is unintelligible apart from the existence of God.

R: Then you have to say one or other of two things. Either God only speaks to a very small percentage of mankind -- which happens to include yourself -- or He deliberately says things are not true in talking to the consciences of savages.

C: Well, you see, I'm not suggesting that God actually dictates moral precepts to the conscience. The human being's ideas of the content of the moral law depends entirely to a large extent on education and environment, and a man has to use his reason in assessing the validity of the actual moral ideas of his social group. But the possibility of criticizing the accepted moral code presupposes that there is an objective standard, and there is an ideal moral order, which imposes itself (I mean the obligatory character of which can be recognized). I think that the recognition of this ideal moral order is part of the recognition of contingency. It implies the existence of a real foundation of God.

R: But the law-giver has always been, it seems to me, one's parents or someone like. There are plenty of terrestrial law-givers to account for it, and that would explain why people's consciences are so amazingly different in different times and places.

C: It helps to explain differences in the perception of particular moral values, which otherwise are inexplicable. It will help to explain changes in the matter of the moral law in the content of the precepts as accepted by this or that nation, or this or that individual. But the form of it, what Kant calls the categorical imperative, the "ought," I really don't see how that can possibly be conveyed to anybody by nurse or parent because there aren't any possible terms, so far as I can see, with which it can be explained. it can't be defined in other terms than itself, because once you've defined it in other terms than itself you've explained it away. It's no longer a moral "ought." It's something else.

R: Well, I think the sense of "ought" is the effect of somebody's imagined disapproval, it may be God's imagined disapproval, but it's somebody's imagined disapproval. And I think that is what is meant by "ought."

C: It seems to me to be external customs and taboos and things of that sort which can most easily be explained simply through environment and education, but all that seems to me to belong to what I call the matter of the law, the content. The idea of the "ought" as such can never be conveyed to a man by the tribal chief or by anybody else, because there are no other terms in which it could be conveyed. It seems to me entirely....

R: But I don't see any reason to say that -- I mean we all know about conditioned reflexes. We know that an animal, if punished habitually for a certain sort of act, after a time will refrain. I don't think the animal refrains from arguing within himself, "Master will be angry if I do this." He has a feeling that that's not the thing to do. That's what we can do with ourselves and nothing more.

C: I see no reason to suppose that an animal has a consciousness or moral obligation; and we certainly don't regard an animal as morally responsible for his acts of disobedience. But a man has a consciousness of obligation and of moral values. I see no reason to suppose that one could condition all men as one can "condition" an animal, and I don't suppose you'd really want to do so even if one could. If "behaviorism" were true, there would be no objective moral distinction between the emperor Nero and St. Francis of Assisi. I can't help feeling, Lord Russell, you know, that you regard the conduct of the commandant of Belsen as morally reprehensible, and that you yourself would never under any circumstances act in that way, even if you thought, or had reason to think, that possibly the balance of the happiness of the human race might be increased through some people being treated in that abominable manner.

R: No. I wouldn't imitate the conduct of a mad dog. The fact that I wouldn't do it doesn't really bear on this question we're discussing.

C: No, but if you were making a utilitarian explanation of right and wrong in terms of consequences, it might be held, and I suppose some of the Nazis of the better type would have held that although it's lamentable to have to act in this way, yet the balance in the long run leads to greater happiness. I don't think you'd say that, would you? I think you'd say that sort of action is wrong -- and in itself, quite apart from whether the general balance of happiness is increased or not. Then, if you're prepared to say that, then I think you must have some criterion of feeling, at any rate. To me, that admission would ultimately result in the admission of an ultimate ground of value in God.

R: I think we are perhaps getting into confusion. It is not direct feeling about the act by which I should judge, but rather a feeling as to the effects. And I can't admit any circumstances in which certain kinds of behavior, such as you have been discussing, would do good. I can't imagine circumstances in which they would have a beneficial effect. I think the persons who think they do are deceiving themselves. But if there were circumstances in which they would have a beneficial effect, then I might be obliged, however reluctantly, to say -- "Well, I don't like these things, but I will acquiesce in them," just as I acquiesce in the Criminal Law, although I profoundly dislike punishment.

C: Well, perhaps it's time I summed up my position. I've argued two things. First, that the existence of God can be philosophically proved by a metaphysical argument; secondly, that it is only the existence of God that will make sense of man's moral experience and of religious experience. Personally, I think that your way of accounting for man's moral judgments leads inevitably to a contradiction between what your theory demands and your own spontaneous judgments. Moreover, your theory explains moral obligation away, and explaining away is not explanation.

As regards the metaphysical argument, we are apparently in agreement that what we call the world consists simply of contingent beings. That is, of beings no one of which can account for its own existence. You say that the series of events needs no explanation: I say that if there were no necessary being, no being which must exist and cannot not-exist, nothing would exist. The infinity of the series of contingent beings, even if proved, would be irrelevant. Something does exist; therefore, there must be something which accounts for this fact, a being which is outside the series of contingent beings. If you had admitted this, we could then have discussed whether that being is personal, good, and so on. On the actual point discussed, whether there is or is not a necessary being, I find myself, I think in agreement with the great majority of classical philosophers.

You maintain, I think, that existing beings are simply there, and that I have no justification for raising the question of the explanation of their existence. But I would like to point out that this position cannot be substantiated by logical analysis; it expresses a philosophy which itself stands in need of proof. I think we have reached an impasse because our ideas of philosophy are radically different; it seems to me that what I call a part of philosophy, that you call the whole, insofar at least as philosophy is rational.

It seems to me, if you will pardon my saying so, that besides your own logical system -- what you call "modern" in opposition to antiquated logic (a tendentious adjective) -- you maintain a philosophy which cannot be substantiated by logical analysis. After all, the problem of God's existence is an existential problem whereas logical analysis does not deal directly with problems of existence. So it seems to me, to declare that the terms involved in one set of problems are meaningless because they are not required in dealing with another set of problems, is to settle from the beginning the nature and extent of philosophy, and that is itself a philosophical act which stands in need of justification.

R: Well, I should like to say just a few words by way of summary on my side. First, as to the metaphysical argument: I don't admit the connotations of such a term as "contingent" or the possibility of explanation in Father Copleston's sense. I think the word "contingent" inevitably suggests the possibility of something that wouldn't have this what you might call accidental character of just being there, and I don't think is true except in the purely causal sense. You can sometimes give a causal explanation of one thing as being the effect of something else, but that is merely referring one thing to another thing and there's no -- to my mind -- explanation in Father Copleston's sense of anything at all, nor is there any meaning in calling things "contingent" because there isn't anything else they could be.

That's what I should say about that, but I should like to say a few words about Father Copleston's accusation that I regard logic as all philosophy -- that is by no means the case. I don't by any means regard logic as all philosophy. I think logic is an essential part of philosophy and logic has to be used in philosophy, and in that I think he and I are at one. When the logic that he uses was new -- namely, in the time of Aristotle, there had to be a great deal of fuss made about it; Aristotle made a lot of fuss about that logic. Nowadays it's become old and respectable, and you don't have to make so much fuss about it. The logic that I believe in is comparatively new, and therefore I have to imitate Aristotle in making a fuss about it; but it's not that I think it's all philosophy by any means -- I don't think so. I think it's an important part of philosophy, and when I say that, I don't find a meaning for this or that word, that is a position of detail based upon what I've found out about that particular word, from thinking about it. It's not a general position that all words that are used in metaphysics are nonsense, or anything like that which I don't really hold.

As regards the moral argument, I do find that when one studies anthropology or history, there are people who think it their duty to perform acts which I think abominable, and I certainly can't, therefore, attribute Divine origin to the matter of moral obligation, which Father Copleston doesn't ask me to; but I think even the form of moral obligation, when it takes the form of enjoining you to eat your father or what not, doesn't seem to me to be such a very beautiful and noble thing; and, therefore, I cannot attribute a Divine origin to this sense of moral obligation, which I think is quite easily accounted for in quite other ways.

END OF TRANSCRIPT

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Reach Petersens album link here

To reach the Spotify link for the Petersens' new album, click here:
https://open.spotify.com/prerelease/4F24Xo4iEKbkXQG2Ek2qvO?si=L5VrAkoiSqKJ_BtbBApb3Q&nd=1&dlsi=af8ee18ac1704e30
Sorry, for the 2-link process, but I couldn't get Substack to accept the Spotify link.

Notes. Russell. Why I Am Not A Christian (R.WNC)

Includes the essay What I Believe What I Believe was published by Kegan Paul in 1925. The Warbler Classics edition (2023) contains th...