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The Philosophical Test of the Revelations of Religious Experience
-It was the philosopher Berkeley who first
undertook to refute the theory of matter as the unknown cause of
our sensations. In our own times Professor Whitehead - an eminent
mathematician and scientist - has conclusively shown that the traditional
theory of materialism is wholly untenable. It is obvious that, on
the theory, colours, sounds, etc., are subjective states only, and
form no part of Nature. What enters the eye and the ear is not colour
or sound, but invisible ether waves and inaudible air waves. Nature
is not what we know her to be; our perceptions are illusions and
cannot be regarded as genuine disclosures of Nature, which, according
to the theory, is bifurcated into mental impressions, on the one
hand, and the unverifiable, imperceptible entities producing these
impressions, on the other. If physics constitutes a really coherent
and genuine knowledge of perceptively known objects, the traditional
theory of matter must be rejected for the obvious reason that it
reduces the evidence of our senses, on which alone the physicist,
as observer and experimenter, must rely, to the mere impressions
of the observers mind. Between Nature and the observer of
Nature, the theory creates a gulf which he is compelled to bridge
over by resorting to the doubtful hypothesis of an imperceptible
something, occupying an absolute space like a thing in a receptacle
and causing our sensation by some kind of impact. In the words of
Professor Whitehead, the theory reduces one-half of Nature to a
dream and the other half to a conjecture.
Thus physics, finding it necessary to criticize its own foundations,
has eventually found reason to break its own idol, and the empirical
attitude which appeared to necessitate scientific materialism has
finally ended in a revolt against matter. Since objects, then, are
not subjective states caused by something imperceptible called matter,
they are genuine phenomena which constitute the very substance of
Nature and which we know as they are in Nature. But the concept
of matter has received the greatest blow from the hand of Einstein
- another eminent physicist, whose discoveries have laid the foundation
of a far-reaching revolution in the entire domain of human thought.
The theory of Relativity by merging time into spacetime,
says Mr. Russell,
has damaged the traditional notion of substance more than
all the arguments of the philosophers. Matter, for common sense,
is something which persists in time and moves in space. But for
modern relativity-physics this view is no longer tenable. A piece
of matter has become not a persistent thing with varying states,
but a system of inter-related events. The old solidity is gone,
and with it the characteristics that to the materialist made matter
seem more real than fleeting thoughts
According to Professor Whitehead, therefore, Nature is not a static
fact situated in an a-dynamic void, but a structure of events possessing
the character of a continuous creative flow which thought cuts up
into isolated immobilities out of whose mutual relations arise the
concepts of space and time. Thus we see how modern science utters
its agreement with Berkeleys criticism which it once regarded
as an attack on its very foundation. The scientific view of Nature
as pure materiality is associated with the Newtonian view of space
as an absolute void in which things are situated. This attitude
of science has, no doubt, ensured its speedy progress; but the bifurcation
of a total experience into two opposite domains of mind and matter
has today forced it, in view of its own domestic difficulties, to
consider the problems which, in the beginning of its career, it
completely ignored. The criticism of the foundations of the mathematical
sciences has fully disclosed that the hypothesis of a pure materiality,
an enduring stuff situated in an absolute space, is unworkable.
Is space an independent void in which things are situated and which
would remain intact if all things were withdrawn? The ancient Greek
philosopher Zeno approached the problem of space through the question
of movement in space. His arguments for the unreality of movement
are well known to the students of philosophy, and ever since his
days the problem has persisted in the history of thought and received
the keenest attention from successive generations of thinkers. Two
of these arguments may be noted here. Zeno, who took space to be
infinitely divisible, argued that movement in space is impossible.
Before the moving body can reach the point of its destination it
must pass through half the space intervening between the point of
start and the point of destination; and before it can pass through
that half it must travel through the half of the half, and so on
to infinity. We cannot move from one point of space to another without
passing through an infinite number of points in the intervening
space. But it is impossible to pass through an infinity of points
in a finite time. He further argued that the flying arrow does not
move, because at any time during the course of its flight it is
at rest in some point of space. Thus Zeno held that movement is
only a deceptive appearance and that Reality is one and immutable.
The unreality of movement means the unreality of an independent
space. Muslim thinkers of the school of al-Asharâdid
not believe in the infinite divisibility of space and time. With
them space, time, and motion are made up of points and instants
which cannot be further subdivided. Thus they proved the possibility
of movement on the assumption that infinitesimals do exist; for
if there is a limit to the divisibility of space and time, movement
from one point of space to another point is possible in a finite
time. Ibn Àazm, however, rejected the Asharite notion
of infinitesimals, and modern mathematics has confirmed his view.
The Asharite argument, therefore, cannot logically resolve
the paradox of Zeno. Of modern thinkers the French philosopher Bergson
and the British mathematician Bertrand Russell have tried to refute
Zenos arguments from their respective standpoints. To Bergson
movement, as true change, is the fundamental Reality. The paradox
of Zeno is due to a wrong apprehension of space and time which are
regarded by Bergson only as intellectual views of movement. It is
not possible to develop here the argument of Bergson without a fuller
treatment of the metaphysical concept of life on which the whole
argument is based. Bertrand Russells argument proceeds on
Cantors theory of mathematical continuity which he looks upon
as one of the most important discoveries of modern mathematics.
Zenos argument is obviously based on the assumption that space
and time consist of infinite number of points and instants. On this
assumption it is easy to argue that since between two points the
moving body will be out of place, motion is impossible, for there
is no place for it to take place. Cantors discovery shows
that space and time are continuous. Between any two points in space
there is an infinite number of points, and in an infinite series
no two points are next to each other. The infinite divisibility
of space and time means the compactness of the points in the series;
it does not mean that points are mutually isolated in the sense
of having a gap between one another. Russells answer to Zeno,
then, is as follows:
Zeno asks how can you go from one position at one moment to
the next position at the next moment without in the transition being
at no position at no moment? The answer is that there is no next
position to any position, no next moment to any moment because between
any two there is always another. If there were infinitesimals movement
would be impossible, but there are none. Zeno therefore is right
in saying that the arrow is at rest at every moment of its flight,
wrong in inferring that therefore it does not move, for there is
a one-one correspondence in a movement between the infinite series
of positions and the infinite series of instants. According to this
doctrine, then it is possible to affirm the reality of space, time,
and movement, and yet avoid the paradox in Zenos arguments.
Thus Bertrand Russell proves the reality of movement on the basis
of Cantors theory of continuity. The reality of movement means
the independent reality of space and the objectivity of Nature.
But the identity of continuity and the infinite divisibility of
space is no solution of the difficulty. Assuming that there is a
one-one correspondence between the infinite multiplicity of instants
in a finite interval of time and an infinite multiplicity of points
in a finite portion of space, the difficulty arising from the divisibility
remains the same. The mathematical conception of continuity as infinite
series applies not to movement regarded as an act, but rather to
the picture of movement as viewed from the outside. The act of movement,
i.e. movement as lived and not as thought, does not admit of any
divisibility. The flight of the arrow observed as a passage in space
is divisible, but its flight regarded as an act, apart from its
realization in space, is one and incapable of partition into a multiplicity.
In partition lies its destruction
continued..
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