"This explains, of course, why philosophical theology has been traditionally understood as one of the subdisciplines of metaphysics. Because 'God' is the metaphysical concept par excellence, the question of how this concept is to be understood and whether it refers to anything real can be answered only as a metaphysical question. The same reason, however, requires us to recognize a definite limitation in the traditional distinctions between metaphysica generalis and metaphysica specialis and between the three subdisciplines of which the second is held to be comprised. Although it may be useful for some purposes to distinguish ontology as the elucidation of strictly general features of reality, or 'transcendentals,' the fact remains that the distinction between the God of radical theism and all other things is itself a transcendental distinction, because God is conceived to be the one individual whose being and function are themselves strictly general. Consequently, if theism is true, God cannot be regarded as a third special object along with the self and the world, and ontology itself must be theology, even as theology must be ontology.
"Furthermore, on a theistic view, neither the self nor the world is a metaphysical individual in the same sense that God is. To be sure, for a neoclassical theism ... I the world definitely is metaphysical, insofar as the reality of some world is no mere contingent fact but is a strictly general, and so necessary, feature of reality as such. But by 'world,' properly speaking, we refer not to an individual but to a collection of individuals, which is more than a mere collection without order or integrity, thanks only to the universal immanence of God as its sole primal source and final end. By 'self,' on the other hand, we do indeed refer to an individual that is unlike the world in being a concrete, integrated whole of reality, and to this extent an image or analogy of God. And yet the self is no more than God's image or analogy because its individuality, unlike God's, is not metaphysical in the sense of being ultimately constitutive of reality itself. Truel the self is
10
constitutive of our understanding of reality, insofar as it is in its basic existential faith alone that reality so presents itself that it can be understood, whether existentially or reflectively. To this extent, therefore, the self is an object of metaphysical reflection; and psychology (or, as we would no doubt say today, anthropology) is an integral metaphysical task along with theology and cosmology-as is evident from the fact that the self's denial of its own existence shares in the inescapable self-contradiction of all denials of
metaphysical truth" Even so, the theistic view of the matter is that it belongs to the self's own essential self-affirmation to distinguish both itself and the world as but fragmentary parts of the one integral whole whose individuality
alone suffices to constitute the very being of reality as such" (79 ff.)
"\[M\]etaphysics ... pursues the question of the.ultimate whole of reality in Itself in abstraction from the question of the mea1rg of this reality for us" (110 f.).
"\[T\]he existential question to which any religion claims to represent the answer is the question of the meaning of ultimate reality for us. This means, first of all, that the reality about which it asks is the ultimate reality of our own existence in relation to others and the whole.... \[W\]hatever else we may or may not find ourselves obliged to take account of, we can never fail to take aoount somehow of ourselves, others, and the whole to which we all belong. In this sense, the threefold reality of our existence simply as such is the ultimate reality that we all have to allow for in leading our own individual lives. But if this reality is what the existential question asks about, the second thing to note is how it does this-namely, by asking about this reality, not in its structure in itself, but in its meaning for us. This implies that in asking about ultimate reality, the existential question asks, at one and the same time, about our authentic self-understanding, about the understanding of ourselves in relation to others and the whole that is appropriate to, or authorized by this ultimate reality itself.
"Thus, by its very nature, the existential question is a single question having two closely related and yet distinguishable aspects. In one of these aspects, it asks about the ultimate reality of our own existence in relation to others and the whole. This \[one may\] distinguish as its metaphysical aspect, because, while it is distinct from metaphysics proper in asking about this
11
ultimate reality in its meaning for us rather than in its structure in itself, it is nonetheless closely related to metaphysics in that any answer to it necessarily has metaphysical implications. Unless ultimate reality in itself has one structure rather than another, it cannot have the meaning for us that a specific religion represents it as having. In its other aspect, which \[one may\] distinguish as ethical, the existential question asks about our authentic selfunderstandinwThus, while it is distinct from ethics proper in asking how we are to understand ourselves rather than how we are to act and what we are to do, it is nonetheless closely related to ethics in that any answer to it necessarily has ethical implications. Unless acting in one way rather than another is how we ought to act in relation to others, ultimate reality cannot authorize the understanding of our existence that a specific religion
represents it as authorizing.
"This means, of course, that, by the very nature of the existential question, there are also two main aspects to the procedures appropriate to determining the truth of specific religious answers to it. ... \[W\]hether, or to what extent, a specific religious answer is \[true\] can be determined only by verifying its necessary implications, ethical as well as metaphysicaL If it is true, its implications also must be true; and unless they can be verified by procedures appropriate to ethical and metaphysical claims respectively, it cannot be verified, either" (TR \[1992\]: 16-19).
n\[T\]here is more than one kind of question about God that human beings may be concerned to ask and answer by what they think, say, and do. Of course, any way of asking about God is a way of asking about something real beyond ourselves and the other persons and things that make up the world around us. In fact, in radically monotheistic religions such as Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, the term 'God' refers to the strictly ultimate reality that is the necessary condition of the possibility not only of ourselves and the world, but of anything whatever that is so much as conceivable. But characteristic of these religions precisely as religions is that they ask about this strictly ultimate reality not merely abstractly, in its structure in itself, but rather concretely, in its meaning for us. In other words, in asserting that God is the strictly ultimate reality, these religions not only answer the question of who God is, but at the same time also address the question of who we
"
ourselves are supposled to be in relation to this strictly ultimate reality. By
\-
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contrast, metaphysics asks about God, insofar as it does so, in pursuit of its rather different, if by no means unrelated, kind of question. While it, too, asks about the strictly ultimate reality that theistic religions understand as God, it does so nonexistentially, by abstracting from the meaning of this reality for us so as to inquire simply into its structure in itself. In this respect, metaphysics is much more like science than religion, although the reality about whose structure it inquires abstractly is the same reality about which religion asks concretely-namely, the ultimate reality of our own existence in relation to others and the strictly ultimate.
"Because their questions are of different kinds, what religion and metaphysics respectively have to think, say, and do about God are also different" (OT \[1996\]: 5 f.).
"\[T\]he existential question \[is\] the question we all ask as human beings about the meaning of our own existence in its ultimate setting. As such, it has two distinct but inseparable aspects: a metaphysical aspect, in which it asks about the reality of our existence as part of the encompassing whole; and a moral aspect, in which it asks about how we are to understand ourselves realistically in accordance with this reality, and, in this sense, authentically. Therefore, while the existential question is neither the properly metaphysical question nor the properly moral question, it is nevertheless logically related to both questions, and any answer to it Implies certain answers to them, even as, conversely, any answer to either of them also implies some answer to if' (49).
"\[U\]ltimate reality includes everything necessary in our experience or self-understanding, as distinct from all the other things that we experience or understand that are merely contingent relative to our own existence simply as such. If we already presuppose, then, that ... theistic religious language ... can be metaphysically justified, we can say ... that ultimate reality includes not only the self and others, but also the encompassing whole of reality that theists refer to when they use the name 'God."
"Significantly, it is this threefold differentiation of ultimate reality into self, others, and the whole-or self, world, and God-that underlies the understanding of metaphysics that has been conventional in the Western tradition since at least the seventeenth century. In this understanding, the
13
scope of metaphysics includes both metaphysica generalis, or ontology,
understood as critical reflection on strictly ultimate reality as such; and
metaphysica specialis, comprising the three disciplines of psychology,
cosmology, and theology, understood as critical reflection respectively on the
three ultimate realities of self, world, and God.
"\[T\]his conventional scheme is still useful provided one avoids certain misunderstandings that an unthinking use of it may perhaps encourage. One such misunderstanding would be to suppose that there can be an adequate distinction between general metaphysics or ontology, on the one hand, and the discipline of special metaphysics called 'theology,' on the other. Given the concept of God necessarily implied ... by any radical theism, God is not merely one reality among others, but is in some sense reality as such. But if this kind of theism is metaphysically true, then ontology itself must be theology, even as theology can only be ontology. Much the same would be true of the distinction between ontology and cosmology as well if, as some forms of radical theism maintain, the concepts of God and the world are correctly understood only as correlative concepts. In that case, the constitutive concept of ontology, namely, 'reality as such/ would be strictly equivalent to the distinction or correlation between the constitutive concepts of theology and cosmology, 'God' and 'the world.'
"But whether the world as well as God is in some respect a strictly ultimate reality and therefore any adequate distinction between ontology and cosmology is also impossible, there is hardly any question that the sel( at least, is in every respect contingent and hence cannot possibly be a strictly ultimate reality. To be sure, the self is ultimate in that it is necessary to our experience or understanding of ultimate reality, including the self; and it is for this reason, presumably, that psychology, understood as critical reflection on the self as thus ultimate, can be represented as the third discipline of special metaphysics. But we would be misled by the scheme that so represents it if we supposed that the self is a topic of special metaphysics in the same way in which God is, and perhaps the world is as well. Because the self, radically unlike God, exists only contingently rather than necessarily, its reality is not strictly ultimate and it therefore falls within the scope of metaphysics only in a broad, rather than in the strict, sense of the word" (115 f.)
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"Obviously, if theological analogies cannot be established, the same is true of metaphysical analogies generally, whether those of ... psychicalism or those of any other categorial metaphysics necessarily involving analogies, such as materialism, or physicalism, and dualism. Consequently, if metaphysics is to be established at all, it is only as a transcendental metaphysics, whose concepts and assertions are all purely formal and literaL rather than analogical, in the sense that they apply to all the different things within any single logical type whose meaning they explicate, not in different senses, but rather in the same sense" (208).
"\[T\]he truth or falsity of faith's assertions about the twofold reality in
which it is essentially founded in no way depends or even can cipnpnci unon the truth or falsity of any empirical-historical or scientific assertion. But this
cannot be said ... about any metaphysical assertion, at any rate, not if
metaphysics is properly understood as fundamentally different logically from
both history and science.
"Provided metaphysics is understood as it should be-as critical reflection on our at least implicit understanding as human beings of ultimate reality, in the sense of the necessary conditions of the possibility of our own existence and all existence-it is clear that any properly existential assertion, including any assertion of Christian faith, both implies and, to an extent, is
implied by the truth of certain properly metaphysical assertions. It implies the truth of some such assertions simply b~ause it is existential and as such has to do with the ultimate reality of our own existence and of all that our existence
necessarily presupposes. Consequently, even though it itself asserts something about the meaning of this reality for us, not about the structure of Uus reality in Itself, it nevertheless implies certain assertions about this structure that have to be true metaphysically if it is to be true existentially.
""rh us wilen faith asserts the possibility of existing here and now in person,"" trusl in God and in loyalty to God's cause, it necessarily presupposes
not only that anyone to whom it asserts this is the kind of being that can understand its assertion and responsibly make the decision for which it calls, but also, and crucially, that the strictly ultimate reality called 'God' is in itself such as to be the foundation for this kind of personal trust and loyalty. Unless God is ultimately real and is the kind of reality that we can both trust and loyally serve, faith's assertion of the meaning of God for us could only be
15
false. On the other hand, if metaphysical assertions to this effect are indeed
true, then faith's existential assertions are also true, or at least can be true"
(254 f.).
"If we ask ... what the vital question orienting theology is, the only adequate answer ... is that it is that most vital of our vital questions that I usually distinguish ... as 'the existential question.' By this I mean the
\-
question that we human beings seem universally engaged in somehow
\-
asking and answering about the meaning of our existence in its ultimate
setting as part of the encompassing whole.
"On my analysis, this existential question is a single question having two closely related and yet clearly distinguishable aspects. In one such aspect, it asks about the ultimate reality of our existence with others as parts of the whole encompassing us. And this I distinguish as its}netaphysical aspect, because, although it is distinct from the proper question of metaphysics in asking about this ultimate reality concretely, in its meaning for us, rather than abstractly, in its structure in itself, the two questions are nonetheless closely related, in that any answer to either of them has definite implications for answering the other. Thus, either ultimate reality in itself has a certain structure rather than some other or else it cannot have the meaning for us that a certain answer to the existential questi~n represents it as having. Conversely, if ultimate reality in itself has a certain structure, the meaning for us that a certain answer represents it as having cannot be inconsistent with its having that structure rather than some other.
"In its other aspect, which I distinguish as moral, the existential question asks about how we are to understand ourselves authentically, or realistically, in accordance with the ultimate reality of our existence. Thus,
\vhile it is distinct from the proper question of morals in asking about our self-understanding, rather than about our life-praxis, how we are to act and what we are to do, the two questions, once again, are nonetheless closely related, because the answer we give to one of them sets definite limits to how we have to answer the other if we are to avoid ·self-contradiction. Either leading our lives in one way rather than another is how we ought to act in relation to others or else ultimate reality cannot implicitly authorize the self-understanding that a certain answer to the existetial question explicitly authorizes. Conversely, if leading our lives in a certain way is the way we ought to lead them, the self-understanding that
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a certain answer explicitly authorizes as authentic cannot be inconsistent with this rather than some other way's being the right way for us to lead our lives.
...., "It is the existential question thus understood that orients theology as a special form of critical reflection" ("Paul in Contemporary Theology and Ethics" \[1996\]: 292 f.).
"\[P\]hilosophy is conceived classically as comprehensive critical reflection oriented by the existential question about the meaning of our existence and as therefore including both metaphysics and ethics.... If philosophy is understood in something like this classical sense, its proper business is to disclose, at the secondary level of critical reflection, the same truth about human existence that is always already disclosed at least implicitly on the primary level of self-understanding and Hfe-praxis and that ... Christian witness ... claim\[s\] to represent not only explicitly but decisively" (305).
"To ask ... about either \[the\] meaning or \[the\] validity \[of some particular way of living religiously\] is to ask questions that, in part at least, are as philosophical as they are theologicaL To be sure, to live religiously in a particular way is to make a certain kind of history, and so any question about what it really means to live in this way can only be, in significant part, a properly historical and hermeneutical question. But insofar as the history one makes in living the religious life is history of a certain kind, and thus has a certain kmd of meaning, to ask what it really means is also to ask a properly philosophical question. This is so, at any rate, if one understands philosophy ... as the comprehensive critical reflection constituted by asking about human existence simply as such. For it belongs to philosophy so understood that it should consist, in one aspect, in an analysis of meaning and thus of the different kinds of meaning involved in understanding ourselves and leading our lives through all the forms of culture, religious as well as secular.
"So, too, with the question about the validity of the claim that the
religious life makes or implies. Although to ask whether such a life is really
appropriate to the source of authority explicitly authorizing it is again to ask a
question that is primarily historical and hermeneuticat even if, in part, also a philosophical question. For insofar as it thereby asks about a certain kind of appropriateness it, too, asks a question that only philosophical reflection is
17
capable of answering. And the same is even more obviously true of the other question of whether a particular way of living religiously is really credible, in the sense of really representing the truth about every woman's and man's exist~nce. This question can be answered affirmatively if, and only if, the necessary presuppositions and implications of this way of living, moral as well as metaphysical, can be somehow verified. But actually to verify such presuppositions and implications once again requires, at some point, properly philosophical reflection" ("Philosophy and the Religious Life" \[1997\]: 29).
"There are two points where professional philosophers can be of particular help. To engage in genuine dialogue about anything requires that one first understand what the dialogue is all about and, as an essential part of doing this, help to discover or devise a common language in which the several positions represented in the dialogue can all be formulated so as to avoid merely verbal differences and to render their real differences adjudicable. So, too, in the case of dialogue between religions, or between alternative ways of living understandingly and addressing the existential question. One needs an analysis of the kind of meaning constituted by asking and answering this question, its relations to and differences from other kinds of meaning, the claims to validity made or implied in answering it, and so on. And, as essential to this analysis, one also needs a purely formal language in which the materially different answers to the existential question can all be critically interpreted and the real issues between them somehow resolved by appropriate evidence and argument.
"But if professional philosophers are well positioned to provide just such a formal analysis, this is not the only point at which they can be of particular help. Philosophy is more than analysis of meaning, and in its other main aspect, it has the task of critically validating all the different answers to the existential question, implicit as well as explicit, so as to formulate its own constructive answer to this question-indirectly at the level of critical reflection and solely on the basis of common human experience and reason. In this aspect of her or his work, however, the professional philosopher does exactly what anyone who lives the religious life today also has to do, either professionally or as a lay person, to make good on the claim that this particular way of living is not only appropriate but credible. For if this way of living is really credible, it can only be because what it represents as the truth
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about human existence is the same truth that the professional philosopher bears particular responsibility for critically validating by verifying its necessary presuppositions and implications, both metaphysical and moral" (30 f.).
"\[A\] third change in my thinking ... was in my understanding of metaphysics.... I have always been concerned with critically validating the metaphysical beliefs necessarily implied by Christian faith. But the only way in which these beliefs can be validated as credible on the basis of common human experience and reason is in terms of an independent secular metaphysics. Having become convinced already as a graduate student that the classical metaphysics presupposed by traditional theology was no longer tenable, I had looked for the metaphysics I needed in certain forms of revisionary, more exactly, neoclassical metaphysics. The more I tried to work with them, however, the clearer it became to me that even these forms of neoclassical metaphysics were open to a decisive objection. Like all other forms of what I eventually came to distinguish as 'categorial metaphysics,' they, too, depended on imaginatively generalizing categories ordinarily used in thinking and speaking about some things into metaphysical analogies supposedly applying to all things. The problem with this supposition, however, is that there is simply no way of distinguishing other than verbally between a so-called metaphysical analogy and a merely symbolic or metaphorical use of the category in question. Consequently, while I am still convinced that an independent secular metaphysics-special as well as general including theology along with cosmology and anthropology-is a necessary condition of theology's critically validating the claim of Christian witness to be theoretically credible, I no longer understand metaphysics in the same way. On the contrary, I now hold that the metaphYSiCS theology has need of is no form of the categorial metaphysics of most philosophical tradition, but only a neoclassical form of what I call 'transcendental metaphysics; by which I mean the kind of metaphysics that, having dispensed with all forms of metaphysical analogy, at last completes the process of demythologizing metaphysics" ("Toward Bearing Witness" \[1997\]:
339). |