A History of Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy Part 6
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There will be no eating and drinking in the next world, and hence no need of a heaven and an earth like ours, but there will be place and time, since creatures cannot do without it. There will be no succession of day and night, for these are of use only for our present life and occupations, but will be unnecessary there. There will, however, be a special period for wors.h.i.+p.
Reward and punishment in the next world will both be eternal. It stands to reason that G.o.d should _promise_ eternal reward and punishment so as to inspire mankind with the highest possible degree of hope and fear, that they may have no excuse for not heeding the commandments so forcibly impressed upon them. Having made the promise, his justice prompts him to fulfil it, and those who suffer have themselves to blame.
We have now completed in outline Saadia's system of Judaism. There are many details which we necessarily had to leave out, especially in the more dogmatic part of his work, that dealing with specific Jewish doctrines, which he constructs on the basis of Rabbinical literature and Biblical allusions interpreted so as to harmonize with the statements of the Rabbis. Many questions specifically theological and eschatological a.s.sumed importance in his mind by reason of his surroundings. I mean the Mohammedan schools and sects, and the Karaite discussions which were closely modelled after them. The most important part of his system philosophically is that which deals with creation and the attributes of G.o.d. His discussions of the soul and of free will are less thorough, and the details of his doctrines of resurrection, future reward and punishment, the redemption of Israel and the Messiah are almost purely dogmatic. For a scientific ethic there is no room at all in the body of his work. A man's conduct is prescribed for him in the divine commandments, though in a general way the reason sees the right and the wrong of the so-called rational group of laws. Still as an after thought Saadia added a chapter to the "Emunot ve-Deot" in which he attempts to give a psychological basis for human conduct. Noting the various tendencies of individuals and sects in his environment to extremes in human behavior, some to asceticism, some to self-indulgence, be it the l.u.s.t of love or of power, he lays emphasis on the inadequacy of any one pursuit for the demands of man's complex nature, and recommends a harmonious blending of all things for which men strive.[79]
G.o.d alone, he says, is a real unity, everything else is by the very reason of its being a creature essentially not one and simple, but composite and complex. So man has a love and desire for many things, and also aversion for many things. And as in other objects in nature it takes a combination of several elements to const.i.tute a given thing, so in man it is by a proper systematization of his likes and dislikes that he can reach perfection of character and morals. It cannot be that G.o.d intended man to pursue one object all his life to the exclusion of all others, for in that case he would have implanted only one desire in man instead of many. You cannot build a house of stones alone neither can you develop a perfect character by one pursuit and one interest.
Pursuit of one thing is likely to result in harm, for example, over-indulgence in eating brings on disease. Wisdom is therefore needed in regulating one's conduct. The principle here is control of one's likes and dislikes. Of the three faculties of the soul, reason, spirit and desire, reason must be the master of the other two. If any matter occurs to a person's imagination, he must try it with his reason to see whether it is likely to benefit or injure him, and pursue or avoid it accordingly. If, on the other hand, he allows the lower parts of his soul to rule his reason, he is not a moral man.
The reader will recognize Plato in the last statement. The division of the soul into the three faculties of reason, spirit and desire is Platonic, as we have already seen, and the attempt to base an ethic on the proper relation between the powers of the soul also goes back to Plato. But Saadia tries to show that the Bible too favors this conception.
When Ecclesiastes tells us (1, 14), "I have seen all the works that are done under the sun; and, behold, all is vanity and a striving after wind," he does not mean that there is nothing worth striving after, for he would then be condemning the objects of G.o.d's creation. His meaning is that it is vain to pursue any one thing to the exclusion of every other. He then proceeds to name three prominent objects of pursuit, wisdom, pleasure and worldly gain--all is vain when taken by itself. A proper combination of all is to be recommended as is delicately hinted in the same book (2, 3), "I searched in mine heart how to cheer my flesh with wine, mine heart yet guiding me with wisdom, and how to lay hold on folly."
CHAPTER IV
JOSEPH AL-BASIR AND JESHUA BEN JUDAH
I. _Joseph Al-Basir (11th century)_[80]
Joseph ben Abraham, euphemistically surnamed on account of his blindness, al-Basir (the seer), was a Karaite and lived in Babylonia or Persia in the beginning of the eleventh century. His philosophical work is closely modelled on the writings of the Arabian Mutakallimun, the Mu?tazilites. Unlike Saadia, who tacitly accepts some of their methods and views, al-Basir is an avowed follower of the Kalam and treats only of those questions which are common to Jew and Mohammedan, avoiding, for example, so important an issue as whether it is possible that the law of G.o.d may be abrogated--a question which meant so much to Saadia. The division of his investigation into the two parts, Unity and Justice, is a serious matter with him; and he finds it necessary to tell us in several instances why he chose to treat a given topic under the one or the other heading. In spirit and temperament he is a thoroughgoing rationalist. Brief and succinct to the point of obscurity, he betrays neither partiality nor emotion, but fearlessly pushes the argument to its last conclusion and reduces it to its lowest terms.
Saadia (above p. 28) puts revelation as a fourth source of truth parallel to sense, judgment and logical inference. To be sure he, in one instance (p. 35), speaks of the reason as preceding the Bible even as tradition follows it, but this is only a pa.s.sing observation, and is properly corrected by the view expressed elsewhere (p. 28) that while a Jew is not forbidden to speculate, he must not set the Bible aside and adopt opinions as they occur to him. Al-Basir does not leave the matter in this unsettled condition. He definitely gives priority--logical priority, to reason. Knowledge, he says, must precede revelation. The prophet as the messenger of G.o.d cannot be believed on his word, for the opponent may have the same claim. Not only must the prophet authenticate his mission by the performance of a miracle which cannot be explained by natural means, but we must know besides that he who sent him has our good at heart and would not deceive us. A knowledge of the existence, power and wisdom of the creator must therefore precede our belief in the prophet's mission. To take these truths from the words of the prophet and then give him credence because G.o.d sent him would be reasoning in a circle. The minimum of knowledge therefore which is indispensable before we can make any appeal to the words of the prophet is rational proof of the existence, power and wisdom of G.o.d. Having this minimum the person who is not practiced in speculative investigation may rely for the rest of the creed, for example, the unity of G.o.d and his other attributes, upon the words of the Bible. For if we know independently that G.o.d is Omnipotent and Omniscient, and the prophet can substantiate his claim to be a divine messenger by the performance of genuine miracles, his reliability is established and we are safe in accepting all that he has to say without proof; but the fundamental thing to do is to establish the prophet's reliability, and for this an independent source of evidence is necessary. This is the reason.
Our problem therefore is to prove the power and wisdom of G.o.d, which will imply his existence. We cannot do this directly, for we cannot see G.o.d. Hence the only method is to prove the existence of a powerful and wise creator through his creation. We must prove his power in doing things which we cannot do, such as the ability to create our bodies. But for this it is necessary to show that our bodies--and the same will apply to the other bodies of the world, and hence to the world as a whole--were created, _i. e._, that there was a time when they were not.
This leads us to an a.n.a.lysis of the const.i.tuents of body. All bodies consist of atoms and their "accidents," or conditions and qualities. The primary accidents, which are presupposed by all the rest, are the following four, combination, separation, motion and rest. Without these no body can exist, for body is the result of a combination and separation of atoms at rest or in motion. But combination and separation are the acts of a combiner and separater, as we can infer from the a.n.a.logy of our own acts. Our acts have ourselves as their creators, hence the acts visible in the combinations and separations of atoms to form bodies must also have their creator.
The attributes of the creator we infer from the nature of his work. So we call G.o.d "Powerful," meaning that he had the power to create the world. As creation denotes power, so the success and harmony of the product argues wisdom; and this power and wisdom thus established are not disproved by an occasional production or event which is not perfect, a monstrosity for example, or disease and suffering. We say in reference to these that G.o.d must have a deeper object in view, to inspire mankind with the fear of G.o.d, and in order to increase their reward in the next world.
The attribute of Life follows from the other two, for life denotes the possession or capacity of power and knowledge.
Thus al-Basir has the same three essential attributes as Saadia. His proof of the existence of G.o.d is also identical with one of the proofs of Saadia. But he shows himself a more loyal follower of the Kalam by frankly adopting the atomic theory, whereas Saadia opposes it (p. 25).
Other predicates of G.o.d are perception, will, unity, incorporeality and eternity.
Perception is one of the most important expressions of life, but it must not be confused with knowledge or wisdom. The latter embraces the non-existent as well as the existent, the former the existent only. It is in virtue of the former attribute that we speak of G.o.d as "hearing"
and "seeing."
"Willing" is another attribute of G.o.d, and those are wrong who identify G.o.d's will with his knowledge, and define G.o.d's willing to mean that his works take place in accordance with his knowledge. G.o.d's will must be a special attribute since we see in creation traces of free will. To be the will of G.o.d it must not reside in anything different from G.o.d, and yet it cannot inhere in G.o.d as the subject, for only body is capable of being the subject of accidents. The only solution, therefore, is that G.o.d exercises his voluntary activity through a will which he creates, a will not residing in any subject.
This discussion of the nature of G.o.d's will seems a case of hair splitting with a vengeance, and al-Basir is not the author of it. As in his other doctrines so in this also he is a faithful follower of the Mu?tazila, and we shall see more of this method in his discussion of the unity of G.o.d despite the plurality of his attributes.
But we shall first take up the attributes of incorporeality and eternity, which can be dismissed in a few words.
G.o.d is eternal because the only other alternative is that he is created.
But if so there is a creator, and if the latter is again created, he must likewise have a creator, and so we are led to infinity, which cannot be, the infinite regress being in all cases an impossibility according to an axiom of the Kalam. We must, therefore, have an eternal creator somewhere, and he is G.o.d.
From G.o.d's eternity follows his incorporeality, for we have shown before that all body is created, since it presupposes combination and separation, and the latter a combiner and separater.
When we speak of the unity of G.o.d we mean first that there is no second G.o.d, and then that his own essence has no composition or plurality in it. Two G.o.ds is an absurdity, for the one might desire what the other does not, and he whose will predominates is the real G.o.d. It is no objection to say that in their wisdom they would never disagree, because the _possibility_ is there, and this makes the above argument valid.
Again, if there were two G.o.ds they would have to be completely alike in their essential attributes, and as s.p.a.ce cannot hold them apart, since they are not bodies, what is there to const.i.tute them two?
The other problem, of G.o.d's simplicity, is more difficult. Does not the multiplicity of attributes make G.o.d's essence multiple and composite?
The form which this question took was this. Shall we say that G.o.d is omnipotent through Power, omniscient through Knowledge, and so on? If so, this Power, Knowledge, etc., are created or eternal. If the Power, say, is created, then G.o.d must have had power in order to create it, hence was powerful not through Power. If the Power is eternal, we have more than one G.o.d, and "Power" as an eternal would also be Wise and Living, etc.; Wisdom would also be powerful, living, etc., and so on with the other attributes, a doctrine closely bordering on Christianity and reminding one of Augustine. The principle of monotheism could not allow such a conception as this. If Power is neither created nor eternal, it follows that G.o.d is omnipotent not through Power as an external cause or a distinct ent.i.ty, but through his own essence. The attributes Power, Wisdom, Life, are not anything distinguishable from each other and from G.o.d's essence. They are modes or conditions of G.o.d's essence, and are known along with it.
The same considerations which prompted us to conceive G.o.d as one and simple, make impossible the belief in the eternity of G.o.d's word. This was a point much discussed in the Mohammedan schools, and was evidently directed against Christianity, where the Word or Logos was identified with the second person in the Trinity. Eternity, Al-Basir says, is incompatible with the idea and purpose of speech. G.o.d speaks with a word which he creates. This adds no new predicate to G.o.d, but is implied in his Power. The attribute omnipotent implies that when he wills he can make himself understood by us as we do through speech.
We notice that Al-Basir is more elaborate in his discussion of the attributes than Saadia, and like Al-Mukammas he makes use of the formulae of the Kalam, "omnipotent not with Power, omniscient not with Wisdom."
Saadia does not follow the Kalam so closely, but is just as emphatic in his endeavor to show that the three essential attributes are only verbally three; conceptually and really they are one.
The doctrine of the attributes brings to a close the section on unity, and the second division of the investigation is ent.i.tled Justice and Fairness. The main problems here are the nature of good and evil and the relation of G.o.d to them, the question of free will and other subordinate topics, theological and eschatological.
With regard to the first question two extreme positions are possible, which were actually held by Mohammedan schools of Al-Basir's day. One is that nothing is good or bad in itself, our reason not recognizing it as such; that the divine command or prohibition makes the thing good or bad. Hence, the representatives of this opinion say, G.o.d, who stands above his commands and prohibitions, is not bound by them. Good and bad hold for the subject, not for the author. The acts of G.o.d do not come within the cla.s.sification, and hence it is possible that G.o.d may do what we regard as injustice. Some, in their endeavor to be consistent and to carry the argument to its last conclusion, did not even shrink from the _reductio ad absurdum_ that it is possible G.o.d may lie; for, said they, if I promise a boy sweetmeats and fail to keep my promise, it is no worse than if I beat him.
For this school there is no problem of evil, because ethical distinctions do not apply to G.o.d's doings. Whatever G.o.d does is good.
The other school came under the influence of Greek thought and identified the idea of G.o.d with the idea of the Good. They maintained that from the nature of G.o.d's essence it was not only his duty to do the good, but that it was impossible for him to do anything else. Doing good is a necessity of his nature, and our good and evil are also his good and evil. Ethical values are absolute and not relative.
Neither of these radical views can be maintained. The first is refuted by its own consequences which only very few of its advocates were bold enough to adopt. The possibility of G.o.d telling a falsehood, which is implied in the purely human validity of good and evil, is subversive of all religion. G.o.d would then cease to be trustworthy, and there would be no reason for giving him obedience. Besides, if revelation alone determines right and wrong, it would follow that if G.o.d chose to reverse his orders, our moral judgments would be turned the other way around, good would be evil, and evil good. Finally, if good and bad are determined by the will of G.o.d only, those who do not believe in revelation would be without an idea of right and wrong, but this is manifestly not true.
But the other opinion, that G.o.d is compelled by the necessity of his nature to do the good, is also erroneous. In the first place it detracts from G.o.d's omnipotence to say he cannot do wrong. Besides, if he is compelled by an inner necessity to do the good, he must always have done this, and the world would have existed from eternity. It is just as wrong to say that it is the duty of G.o.d to do what is good and useful for man. For this is due to a confusion of the good or generous with the obligatory. Any deed to which no blame attaches may be called good. If no praise attaches to it either, it is indifferent. If it is deserving of praise and its omission does not call forth blame, it is a generous act. A duty is an act the omission of which deserves blame.
Now the truth in the question under discussion is midway between the two extremes. G.o.d is able to do good as well as evil, and is under no necessity. The notions of right and wrong are absolute and not merely relative. G.o.d never does wrong because evil has no attractive power _per se_. Wrong is committed always as a means to an end, namely, to gain an advantage or avoid an injury. G.o.d is not dependent upon anything; he needs no advantages and fears no injuries. Hence there is nothing to prompt him to do wrong. The good on the other hand attracts us by its inherent goodness, not for an ulterior end. If the good were done only for the sake of deriving some benefit external to the good itself, G.o.d, who is self-sufficient, would not do anything either good or evil. G.o.d does the good always and not the bad, because in his wisdom he sees the difference between them. It was a deed of generosity in G.o.d to have created the world and given life to his creatures, but it was not a duty.
This conception of the nature of good and evil leaves on our hands the problem of evil. Why does a good G.o.d permit disease and suffering to exist in the world? In particular, how explain the suffering and death of innocent children and harmless animals?
The answer of Al-Basir is that infliction of pain may under certain circ.u.mstances be a good instead of an evil. In human relations a person is permitted to inflict pain on another in self-defence, or to prevent the pain from becoming worse, as, for example, when a finger is amputated to save the hand. The infliction of pain is not only permitted, it becomes a duty in case of retribution, as in a court of justice; and finally it is permitted to inflict temporary pain if it will result in a greater advantage in the future. The last two cases apply also to G.o.d's treatment of his creatures. Disease and suffering are either punishment for offences committed, or are imposed with a view to later reward. In the case of children the last explanation alone is applicable. They will be rewarded in the next world. At the same time the parents are admonished to repentance and good conduct.
The most difficult question of the section on justice is that of free will and foreknowledge. Is man master of his actions? If so, how can we reconcile this with G.o.d's omniscience, who knows beforehand how the person will act at a given moment? Is man free to decide at the last moment in a manner contrary to G.o.d's knowledge? If so, we defend freedom at the expense of G.o.d's omniscience. If man is bound to act as G.o.d foreknew he would act, divine knowledge is saved, man's freedom lost.
Al-Basir has no doubt man is free. Our own consciousness testifies to this. When we cut off our finger bitten by a snake, we know that we ourselves did it for a purpose, and distinguish it from a case of our finger being cut off by order of an official, before whom we have been accused or maligned. One and the same act can have only one author and not two, and we know that we are the authors of our acts. There is a much closer connection between an agent and his act than between a knower and his knowledge, which may be the common property of many, and no one doubts that a man's knowledge is his own.
The dilemma above mentioned with its two horns, of which one denies G.o.d's knowledge, the other man's freedom, is puzzling enough, to be sure. But we are not bound to answer it since it is purely hypothetical.
We do not know of a real instance in which a man's decision tended to be contrary to G.o.d's foreknowledge of its outcome. Just as we should refuse to answer the question whether an actual case of injustice on the part of G.o.d would prove his ignorance or dependence, because we know through irrefutable proofs that G.o.d is wise and without need; so here we say man has freedom though G.o.d knows he will act thus and so, and refuse to say whether in case the unbeliever turned believer it would prove G.o.d's ignorance or change in his knowledge.
G.o.d's creation was a pure act of grace. But once having done this and communicated to us a knowledge of himself and his will, it is now his duty to guide us in the right path, by sending us his prophets. The commandments and prohibitions must never be contrary to the knowledge of reason. We must see in the commandments means of guidance, in the prohibitions a protection against destructive influences. If they had not this rational basis, we do not see why G.o.d should have imposed them upon us.
Having given us reason to know his being, and having announced his truth through the prophets, it is his duty to reward those who knew him and were obedient, eternally in the next world, and to punish eternally the unbeliever. If one has merits and sins, they are balanced against each other. If the sinner repents of his evil deeds, it is the duty of G.o.d to accept his repentance and remit his punishment.
2. _Jeshua ben Judah_[81]
Jeshua ben Judah or, as he is known by his Arabic name, Abu al-Faraj Furkan ibn Asad, was likewise a Karaite, a pupil of Joseph Al-Basir, and flourished in Palestine in the second half of the eleventh century.
His point of view is essentially the same as that of his teacher, Al-Basir. He is also a follower of the Mu?tazilite Kalam and as strong a rationalist as his master. He agrees with Al-Basir that we cannot get certain knowledge of the creation of the world and the existence of G.o.d from the Bible. This information must come originally from rational speculation. It should then be applied to the miracles of the prophets so as to prove the authenticity of their mission and the truth of their announcements.
He adopts the atomic theory, though he is opposed to the view that atoms are created ever anew by G.o.d from moment to moment, and that there is no natural and necessary sequence or continuity in the phenomena of the world or qualities of bodies, all being due to habit, and custom induced in us by G.o.d's uninterrupted creations. As in his philosophical discussions he is a follower of the Kalam, so in his legalistic works he is indebted to the Mohammedan schools of religious law.
Like Al-Basir, Jeshua ben Judah regards as the corner stone of his religious philosophy the proof that the world was created, _i. e._, that it is not eternal. His arguments are in essence the same, though differently formulated. In their simplest form they are somewhat as follows. The world and its bodies consist of atoms and their accidents.
A History of Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy Part 6
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