Friday 30 January 2015

Reflecting on Roger Scruton




STOP PRESS: Our full programme for this term is now available here. As you will see, our next session (11 February, 6pm) will be Lord James Drummond Young on the courts' practical application of natural law. (More details will follow.) 

Following up on the meeting 28 January 2015, I've posted above the video of the lecture by Roger Scruton that Dr Elizabeth Drummond Young mentioned where Scruton talks about the concept of oikos (home).

Elizabeth also mentioned two other books that she thought particularly helpful in her understanding of Scruton. These were:

Green Philosophy (details here)

Sexual Desire (details here)

A lot of the discussion afterwards focused on to what extent Scruton is trapped within a particular tradition of values (ie the English cultural tradition), Dr Ian Thompson at one stage describing him as a 'neo-Hegelian'. (An article on Hegel's philosophical views is here.) I'm sympathetic to such a critique although I'd prefer to describe Scruton as a Burkean. (An article on the philosophy of Edmund Burke is here.) In essence, the question is (from the perspective of Catholic social theory) whether Scruton sees God as really existing apart from the tradition carried by a nation, and whether the teachings of the Church can judge that tradition rather than being judged by it. From that Catholic point of view, I think Scruton underestimates the authority of the Church and its understandings over the national tradition, and, moreover, the way that both our supernatural and natural ends are not simply expressions of human history, but realities apart from it. To quote from an interview:

By the time I was 16 or 17, I had lost what faith I had,” he tells me. “I am very much persuaded by Kant’s view that while we yearn towards the transcendental, we can have no positive conception of it,” he continues, outlining the argument he made in the 2010 Gifford Lectures (published as The Face of God). “The problem remains that religion depends on an act of affirmation beyond which reason can warrant.” A philosopher’s way of saying there’s no way to scientifically prove the existence of God.
So what’s the point of religion? “My faith – such as it is – is simply the old Anglican one. We don’t really know, but we trust, and we build a community out of that trust and we recognise as a central feature of that community the ultimate Christian sacrifice.”
His position is summed up by his place at the organ – halfway between the pews and the pulpit. “I can shut myself off and choose whether or not to listen to what’s going on. I don’t have to sing the hymns; I play them instead. My form of religious experience is very much that of an intellectual seeing things from a legacy of doubt.” He sympathises with Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, in whom he sees a similar “metaphysical doubt”.

(Full interview from Telegraph here.)

Scruton is, I think, an important figure for Catholics interested in the Church's teaching on politics and society (as well as many other areas!) to grapple with. Few other contemporary thinkers have investigated the riches of the western cultural tradition and its place in the modern world with such philosophical intelligence and sensitivity. However, his agnostic Anglicanism underestimates both the institutional authority of the Catholic Church and the power of reasonable reflection on human nature to go beyond our cultural inheritance.

Handout from session is available here.

Monday 26 January 2015

This Wednesday: class on Roger Scruton



Just a reminder that there is a class this Wednesday, 28 January, 6pm, at the Dominican Chaplaincy, Edinburgh. All welcome. (Free, but donations encouraged!)

I will be leading the class with a response by Dr Elizabeth Drummond Young. Scruton is a leading conservative philosopher whose writings contain much that Catholics should be engaging with, both in the field of social teaching, but also in the fields of art and religion.

I'll be concentrating on his work on society and politics. Whilst noting many points of agreement between Scruton and Catholic thought in this area, particularly in the importance of the 'little platoons' of civil society and the family, I'll also be noting points of tension. In particular, I'll be digging away at the following three areas:

a) Human nature. Scruton has a sense of human nature as being predominantly accessed through a particular culture and history. Whilst noting the truth in this, I shall argue that Catholic thought preserves a much stronger sense of a universal human nature existing across (and indeed often despite) more local cultures. In particular, our main end is the encounter with God in the Beatific Vision which stands outside culture and our salvation is mediated by a universal institution, the Church, rather than a national one.

b) Fragility. Scruton has a strong sense of the fragility of civilization, reinforced by his reflections on the current state of the West. Again, whilst noting the truths of this viewpoint, it runs counter to an ingrained optimism in Catholicism, perhaps most obviously expressed in the words of Matthew 16:17: Tu es Petrus, et super hanc petram aedificabo Ecclesiam meam; et portae inferi non praevalebunt adversum eam. ('You are Peter, and on this Rock I shall build my Church; and the gates of Hell will not stand against it.')

c) Nostalgia. There's strong sense in Scruton of passing glory. I suspect this is (in part at least) the result of Scruton's methodology which involves a retrospective understanding of tradition and a culture. (As Joni Mitchell put it: “Don't it always seem to go, that you don't know what you've got till it's gone"!) Again, whatever the truth in this, it runs against both the possibility of understanding the human condition apart from a local culture, and also of the prophetic office of the Church.

If you're interested in reading something before Wednesday, I'll be starting my reflections from the following papers by Scruton available online (click on them for the links):

Democracy and Islamic Law
Should countries by more like families?

Hope to see you Wednesday!



Saturday 24 January 2015

Online 'course' from Notre Dame University




This might be of interest from the Catholic political philosopher Patrick Deneen:

...I thought it would be an interesting exercise to invite readers to “take” the course along with my students at Notre Dame. I will post the syllabus here today, and beginning next week I’ll post compressed summaries of my three hours of weekly lectures on the material. I’ll also occasionally post some of the more interesting responses of my students (anonymously, of course), to give you a sense of how the “millennial” generation at the nation’s leading Catholic university thinks about and responds to these topics.

Over the course of the semester, we will be reading about and discussing six varieties of political belief: three liberal, and three conservative. They are:

LIBERAL                                    CONSERVATIVE

1. Classical Liberalism             4. Natural Rights Conservatism

2. Progressive Liberalism       5. Traditional Conservatism

3. Libertarianism                      6. Radical Catholicism


More details can be found here 

Wednesday 21 January 2015

Essays on Catholic social thought

A couple of online essays attracted my attention as the sort of thing those interested in the theoretical underpinnings of Catholic social teaching might find interesting...

First, an essay from Crisis Magazine reflecting on the debate among American Catholics on the nature of Catholic social teaching. (Here.) In essence, the question is whether (or to what extent) such social teaching forms a body of thought that can act as a coherent alternative to (particularly) liberal economics; or whether it is instead a collection of insights that can humanize, but not replace, such economic thinking. (I've previously noted this sort of exchange here.) My initial thoughts on this are that part of the problem is the isolation of Catholic social teaching: if it is seen (as I think it should be) as simply Catholic moral theology applied to human beings living together, then it becomes implausible to see it as (in some sense) optional for Catholics. On the other hand, it is certainly part of Catholic teaching that the application of general principles to concrete circumstances is never a precise matter and is one that requires the exercise of practical wisdom (prudentia). This might suggest that the more concrete proposals found in some Catholic teaching in this area would be applicable only in concrete circumstances of a specific time and place.

Secondly, there is a book review/essay on political Augustianism (ie political thought as influenced by St Augustine). Much to reflect on. (Here.)

Friday 16 January 2015

Reflection on first class 14 January

Good to see a number of old faces as well as some new ones! I look forward to seeing you again as well as others who will drop in on future classes this year. (Our current plans are here. These will be regularly updated as details are finalized so please keep an eye on that page. Although pre-registration (contact elizabethdrummondyoung@gmail.com) is helpful and allows us to keep you up to date with our classes, it's not essential. Please do feel free to turn up on the night. Classes are free but donations very welcome!)

For those of you new to the classes, I hope that the introduction to the principles on Monday will help you as we explore more concrete themes in the following weeks. This blog has a list of online resources (here) of which the Compendium of Social Doctrine (online here but also available as a book (ISBN: 978-1574556926) is probably the best single source.

The next class is on Roger Scruton (28 January). Since I last posted, we can also now confirm that Lord Drummond Young will be speaking on International Law and Natural Law on either 11 or 25 February.

I'll post some more on Scruton before the next class. In the meantime, those of you with online access to academic libraries can find my article on Scruton (from The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophers via Oxford Reference (http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199754694.001.0001/acref-9780199754694-e-1874) or, for those without such access, can browse his website here.

Monday 12 January 2015

Beginning this Wednesday: new term of Albertus Institute classes

The first class of the new Albertus Institute classes will begin this Wednesday, 14 January, 6pm at the Dominican Chaplaincy, George Square, Edinburgh:

14 January 2015: Basic Principles of Catholic social teaching (a brief introduction to the principles of Catholic social teaching. This class will allow those who couldn't attend last term to get up to speed on the principles, and for those who did attend last term to get a refresher!) 6pm-8pm.


28 January 2015: Roger Scruton and Catholic Social Teaching. (Led by Dr Stephen Watt and Dr Elizabeth Drummond Young.) 6pm-7pm.


11 February TBA 6pm-7pm

25 Februray TBA 6pm-7pm

11 March Philippa Bonella (Head of Communications and Education, SCIAF) 6pm-7pm (updated 14/1)




Registration: here 

Further information: elizdrummondyoung@gmail.com


Sunday 4 January 2015

Bishop Moran's letter for Epiphany.





[To be read at each Mass of the Epiphany 3rd/4th January 2015]

A letter from Bishop Peter Moran, President of the Justice & Peace Commission

Were the wise men’s gifts appropriate?
In a royal palace they would have been: precious metal, sweet ointment, rare perfume.
But what that child and his mother needed was cash for basics, medical care, and support from someone powerful.
Jesus was born poor, vulnerable and powerless.
In the Gospel and through the Church he calls us to see him in every poor, vulnerable and powerless person today.

• Helping the poor by giving is a straightforward challenge, and a duty.
In this season of giving, give locally or internationally to any of a hundred charities.
Give according to your means – little or much.
• Justice for the powerless calls for a different commitment, but is also a duty.
We should remember that we ourselves are not powerless.
We can pray – prayer works!
We can raise awareness among friends and workmates.
We can join, or even set up, a local Justice & Peace group.
We can change attitudes – our own and other people’s.
We can write, use social media, contact politicians, and join demonstrations.
• Working for justice promotes peace.
In today’s war-torn world, and at this season of the year, we all want that.
Advice and resources are readily available by googling ‘Justice and Peace Scotland’
Thank you for listening.
Today’s special collection supports both national and local justice and peace activities.
Please think of it as your gift to the Child of Bethlehem, still needy nowadays.
+ Peter A. Moran
Bishop-President, J & P Commission, Scotland


[PDF downloadable here]
-------------------------------
Additional comments by Stephen Watt:

Online donations to SCIAF can be made here.
Online donations to Aid to the Church in Need can be made here

Further reading:

Aquinas' Catena Aurea (a selection of excerpts from previous Gospel commentaries) deals with the gifts of the Wise Men in Lectio 5 of Ch1 of the Commentary on St Matthew here.

Aquinas discusses the proper use of money in (among other places)  Summa Theologiae IIaIIae q.117 a.1-5 here.

[Image sourced from Wikicommons here.]