Maurice Blondel's fatal definition of truth
The eternal notion of truth, conformity of thought with reality, impels us to say: This displeases me and annoys me, but it is none the less true. Still, human interests are so strong that Pilate's question often reappears: What is truth? One answer which we must here examine is that of pragmatism.
I. Pragmatism and Its Variations
There are two kinds of pragmatism, one historical, the other
theoretical. In England, at the end of the last century, Charles S. Peirce,
aiming at unburdening philosophy of parrotism and logomachy, sought for a
precise criterion whereby to distinguish empty formulas from formulas that have
meaning. He proposed to take as criterion "the practical effects we can
imagine as resulting from opposed views." A starting-point is found in a
remark of Descartes: "We find much more truth in a man's individual
reasoning on his own personal affairs, where loss follows error, than in those
of the literary man in his study, where no practical result is
anticipated." Equivalent remarks were often made by the ancients.
This form of pragmatism, which still grants much objectivity to
knowledge, is also that of Vailati and Calderoni. Subsequently, however, with
William James, pragmatism becomes a form of subjectivism, thus defined in the
work cited: "A doctrine according to which truth is a relation, entirely
immanent to human experience, whereby knowledge is subordinated to activity,
and the truth of a proposition consists in its utility and satisfactoriness."
That is true which succeeds.
Hence arise many variations. We
find a pragmatic skepticism, similar to that of the ancient sophists, where
success means pleasure to him who defends the proposition. Truth and virtue
give way to individual interest. A
profitable lie becomes truth. What is an error for one man is truth for his
neighbour. "Justice limited by a
river," says Pascal. "How convenient! Truth here is error beyond the Pyrenees!".
An opposite extreme understands success to mean spontaneous harmony
among minds engaged in verifying facts held in common. At the end of his life, James approached this
view, which endeavours to uphold the eternal and objective notion of truth.
Between these two extremes we find many nuances, reasons of state, for example,
or of family, where interests, national or private, defy objective truth and
even common sense. Or again, opportunism, for which truth means merely the best
way to profit by the present situation. Seeing
these inferior connotations of pragmatism, as in course of acceptance by public
usage, Maurice Blondel resolved to renounce the word which he had previously
employed.
Edouard Le Roy writes as follows: "When I use the word 'pragmatism,
I give it a meaning quite different from that of the Anglo-Americans who have
made the word fashionable. My employment of the word does not at all mean to
sacrifice truth to utility, nor to allow, in the search for particular truths,
even the least intervention of considerations extraneous to the love of truth
itself. But I do hold that, in the search for truth, both scientific and moral,
one of the signs of a true idea is the fecundity of that idea, its aptitude for
practical results. Verification, I hold, should be a work, not merely a
discourse."
Yet Le Roy proceeded to this pragmatist conception of dogma: In your
relations to God, act as you do in your relations with men. Dogma, accordingly,
is before all else a practical prescription. Dogma, speaking precisely, would not be true
by its conformity with divine reality, but by its relation to the religious act
to be performed, and the practical truth of the act would appear in the
superior success of that religious experience in surmounting life's
difficulties. Hence the following
proposition was condemned by the Church: "The dogmas of faith are to be
retained only in the practical sense, i.e., as preceptive norms of action, but not
as norms of belief." Thus the dogma of the Incarnation would not affirm
that Jesus is God, but that we must act towards Jesus as we do towards God. The dogma of the Eucharist would not affirm,
precisely, His Real Presence, but that practically we ought to act as if that
Presence were objectively certain. Thus we see that the elevated variations of
pragmatism are not without danger, both in maintaining truth in general, and in
particular dogmatic truths, defined by the Church as immutable and as conformed
to the extra-mental reality which they express.
In opposition to all forms of pragmatism, let us recall the traditional
notion of truth, in all its manifestations, from highest to lowest, including
the truth in prudential arguments, which are always practically true, even when
at times they involve a speculative error absolutely involuntary.
II. The Two Notions Compared
Adequation of intellect and object: that is the definition of truth
given by Saint Thomas. He quotes that of Saint Augustine: Truth is that by
which reality is manifested, and that of Saint Hilary: Truth declares and
manifests reality. The first relation of reality to intellect, Saint Thomas
continues, is that reality correspond to intellect. This correspondence is
called adequation of object and intellect, wherein the conception of truth is
formally completed, and this conformity, this adequation, of intellect to
reality, to being, is what the idea of truth adds to the idea of being.
Truth, then, is the intellect's conformity with reality. Change in this universal notion of truth brings with it total change in the domain of knowledge. The modernists, says Pius X, overturn the eternal notion of truth.
Without going to this extreme, Maurice Blondel, in 1906, one year before the encyclical Pascendi, wrote a sentence that would lead to unmeasured consequences in science, in philosophy, and in faith and religion. In place of the abstract and chimerical definition of truth as the adequation of intellect and reality, thus he wrote, we must substitute methodical research, and define truth as follows: the adequation of intellect and life. How well this sentence expressed the opposition between the two definitions, ancient and modern! But what great responsibility does he assume who brands as chimerical a definition maintained in the Church for centuries.
Life, as employed in the new definition, means human life. How, then, does the definition escape the
condemnation inflicted on the following modernist proposition: Truth is not
more unchangeable than is man himself, since it evolves with, in, and through
man.
Change in definition entails immense consequences. He who dares it should be sure beforehand that
he clearly understands the traditional definition, particularly in its
analogous quality, which, without becoming metaphorical, is still proportional.
Ontological truth, for example, is the conformity of creatures with the
intellect of the Creator. Logical truth is the conformity of man's intellect to
the world around him, which he has not made but only discovered. Logical truth is found both in existential
judgments, e.g.: Mont Blanc exists, this horse is blind, I am thinking, and in
essential judgments, e.g.: man is a rational animal, blindness is a privation,
the laws of the syllogism are valid.
Truth, then, like being, unity, the good, and the beautiful, is not a univocal notion, but an analogical notion. Thus truth in God is adequation in the form of identity, God's intellect being identified with God's being eternally known. Truth in possible creatures is their correspondence with God's intellect. Truth in actual creatures is their conformity with the decrees of God's will. Nothing that is not God, not even created free acts, can exist except as causally dependent on God.
Truth, then, is co-extensive with all reality. A change in defining truth, then, brings
corresponding changes, not only in the domain of knowledge, but in that of
willing and acting, since as we know, so do we will.
Comments
Adequation
Ad`e*qua"tion\, n. [L. adaequatio.] The act of equalizing; act or result of making adequate; an equivalent. [Obs.] --Bp. Barlow.
From the 1913 Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/adequation
I also found a specialized sense:
Linguistics a semantic process whereby the meaning of a word or phrase changes under the influence of the type of context in which it typically occurs
http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=adequation&gwp=13
And so, the moral of the comment is that the word "adequation"--though it may be an obscure word, and perhaps even obsolete if we are to believe a 17th century Anglican bishop--does, in fact, mean something in English.