(Thanks, 'value', for posting the links.) In the article I link to a longer article (
Turtles all the way down) where I say something more about the unity of the proposition, according to Richard Gaskin's book,
The Unity of the Proposition (2008). He says that it is the regress itself which is ultimately constitutive of unity. In Plato, the Form of the Good shines its light on the other Forms, activating them. If we apply the trinitarian formula, then the Form of the Good corresponds to the Christian concept of the Trinity:
- The Father loves the Son (John 3:35 and 5:20)
The above proposition is triune (subject, copula, object). It means that God is love, which is the light that shines on the world. In the 'turtles' article I explain that, because there is separation, the persons have the relation of Love. From this follows a relation regress, which constitutes the unity of Love. The reason why God is Love is because the persons have the property of Love. In God there's no contradiction between having the property and being the property.
A Form is always three producing unity. Already Augustine, who had a favourable eye to Platonism, foresaw that stable matter partakes in this triune Form. He rejected the view that matter is continuous and argued that, at the lowest level, there is still form, as a reflection of the Trinity. Today the structure of protons and neutrons is believed to consist of three quarks, always in communication. (This is called 'perichoresis' in theology.) The combination of Plato and Augustine proved very fruitful. Only in the beginning of the 20th century, science concluded that solid matter is discontinuous.
Augustine also foresaw the second law of thermodynamics. He exemplifies with a wave that strikes the shore. It splits up and the drops fly in different directions. If we turn the arrow of time in the other direction, then the wave would come together. This doesn't make sense, he says. And then he concludes that everything falls apart with time. He also explains that the universe was created in an instant, at which moment also time began. Above all, he formulates a conception of human nature and human society which has proved correct. That's why Robert Jastrow (
God and the Astronomers, 1978) says:
- For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries. (p. 116)
Augustine, with the aid of Plato, had already thought it up! But this shouldn't be possible, according to the anti-Platonic empiricist paradigm, according to which all truth is mysteriously contained in the material object. In medieval times, the professors didn't have recourse to Plato's books, except the Timaeus (at least parts of it). So Augustine was interpreted in terms of Aristotle, and even in nominalist terms. The result was a warped Augustinianism. John M. Rist (
Augustine Deformed: Love, Sin and Freedom in the Western Moral Tradition, 2014) argues that we must return to a true Augustinianism informed by Platonism. He argues that it was catastrophic, the way in which philosophy and theology went astray. Accordingly, Richard H. Schlagel claims that modern philosophy has failed miserably. See: 'The Waning of the Light: The Eclipse of Philosophy' (The Review of Metaphysics 57, Sept 2003, 105-133). (It's available on freelibrary..com.)