The Order of Things
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Philosophers have long inquired about the curious fact that the order of things implies not a mere relationship of one thing to another, but a hint that the universe is created with a certain superabundance. Why is the universe, and the things within it, not only ordered but, ordered with a sense of beauty?
Not only is there an order in things, but also the human mind seems attuned to this order as something it delights in discovering. This relationship implies that there is some correspondence between mind and reality. What is the relationship between the mind and reality? The Order of Things explores this question. Relying on common sense and the experience available to everyone, Schall concludes that it requires more credulity to disbelieve in order than to experience it. Finally, Schall explores the fundamental cause of order, what it is like? Having looked at the order of the created universe, it is not surprising that the revelation of the Godhead is itself ordered in terms of an inner relationship of Persons.
James V. Schall
James V. Schall, S.J., was a Professor of Political Philosophy from 1977 to 2012 at Georgetown University, where he received his Ph.D. in Political Th eory in 1960. Three times he was granted the Award for Faculty Excellence by the senior class at Georgetown’s College of Arts and Sciences. He wrote hundreds of essays and columns and more than thirty books, including On Islam, The Order of Things, and Another Sort of Learning from Ignatius Press.
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The Order of Things - James V. Schall
Preface
I have at last finished my Lives [of the Poets], and have laid up for you a load of copy, all out of order, so that it will amuse you a long time to set it right. Come to me, my dear Bozzy, and let us be as happy as we can. We will go again to the Mitre, and talk old times over.
—Samuel Johnson to James Boswell, March 14, 1781¹
The main theme of this book is found in this brief passage from a letter of Samuel Johnson, the great English lexographer and philosopher, to the Scottish lawyer James Boswell. This same Boswell, of course, wrote what is still the best and most fascinating biography in the English language about this very extraordinary Englishman, Samuel Johnson. Things playful and lightsome are found in this passage. We discover a spirit here that I hope will also be found in the pages to follow. We find also a soberness here, a reminder of our human condition seen in its passingness, yet spoken of in fondness. Much of our lives are spent in setting things out-of-order aright, but only after first understanding that they are in fact out of order.
Johnson had just chided Boswell for being overly pompous and speaking of high-sounding principles like Liberty and Necessity
when Boswell meant only that he is coming to visit Johnson. Boswell regularly returned each year to London from Scotland to spend some time with Johnson. This year, in 1781, they were to meet at the famous tavern the Mitre, where they would talk old times over
. This is the great human freedom, to reflect on the past times of our lives and how they were spent so as not to forget them. Johnson was now an old man. He died three years later, on December 13, 1784.
Johnson tells the younger man that they will seek to be as happy as we can
. We are given some happiness in this life, to be sure. That happiness is not to be denigrated. But Johnson, the great moralist, is aware that such happiness as we find, though real, is limited. When Johnson was forty years old, he wrote his famous The Vanity of Human Wishes, Being the Tenth Satire of Juvenal. He already felt this poignancy of our lot: Year chases year; decay pursues decay, / Still drops some joy from with’ring life away; / New forms arise, and diff’rent views engage, / Superfluous lags the vet’ran on the stage, / And bids afflicted worth retire to peace
(lines 305-10). The order of the years, even decay, follows a path, but hints of joy remain, a time to begin and retire, to live and die.
Johnson gives Boswell copies or galleys of his massive lives of English poets, finally finished. But alas, the pages are out of order
. He hopes that Boswell will find some amusement for a long time to set the pages right
. Johnson is obviously confident that Boswell can in fact set the pages right, that is, that he can see some order in them, some logic that binds one page to the next in a manner to make the whole intelligible to the reader.
I take this scene to be a symbol of our lives, of our attempts to put order into things that seem to be out of order. I have heard parents, to correct their little children in some rant of childhood misbehavior, tell them, You are out of order.
A good part of parenthood is consumed in the effort to put order into the souls of children. Children soon learn what order is and eventually understand that the parents knew what they did not yet know. They also learn that they can choose not to follow the reprimand, hence again evoking the said out of order
command.
We would not be amiss, as we shall see, to notice that this possibility of non serviam, of I shall not serve
, is in Scripture. It is the main disorder of the creature known as Satan. It also describes something about ourselves. Evidently, order in certain areas of reality must itself be freely chosen. But if order is rejected, as it can be, it is always rejected in the name of another order, even if it be one that has no origin except in ourselves. The great Augustine called it pride
when we see no order in the universe except that which we construct for ourselves.
We see signs on elevators and other mechanical devices indicating that they are out of order
. We know what this information means. The dang things don’t work.
We know of people whose lives lack order, something we could not affirm unless we had some prior notion of what order might consist in. We constantly hear that the universe itself, according to some scientists, reveals no order, even though the Greek word cosmos
means that it has an order, a relation of parts to a whole. Some philosophers and theologians even wonder whether order is found in the origin of things, whatever that origin may be. Others deny the possibility of original order
.
We cannot help but be puzzled by all of this order and disorder speculation. Are we perhaps the only beings in the universe without order? Or is everything in chaos? If there is no order, why do we attempt to put some order into things? Why does anything work anyhow? The computer fascinates us because it is a machine that tries to anticipate the moves that we might make that are out of prescribed order, moves that cause it not to work. We can put in a series of ten or twelve letters or numbers, and lo, the computers find what we want to find.
If we miss one letter or number, nothing happens, or some wrong item appears. And we know that what appears is not what we were looking for or intending. It seems strange that we have minds that seem to recognize the difference between order and disorder, between things that work and things that do not. We know that our minds were not made by ourselves, yet they function. We have to be curious about this.
Each of the chapters in this book will ask about some level or aspect of order. The very question of order obviously comes immediately from Aristotle and Aquinas, who pointed out the various orders that the mind is open to knowing or considering. Aristotle remarked that a doctor does not cure us. Nature cures us. The doctor’s function is to remove what prevents the body from doing its own repair work. Or he supplies a substitute for what is not working, something that can take the place of what nature originally provided—a hearing aid or eyeglasses, for example. To do either of these functions—to remove or repair—the doctor must know what the normal functioning of the body in health is. This normalcy he does not himself create but finds already, as it were, working in human beings.
So let us inquire about order and, yes, disorder in the various areas of reality in which they appear. If we are to understand a thing, we need first to know what it is, then invoke or seek its causes—why it is this and not that? What brought it into being? Out of what is it made? For what end does it function? But this book is not content only to ask questions. To ask a question is to expect an answer, even when the answers do not seem sufficient or prove to be wrong. To be content with asking questions without seeking answers, without ever knowing or recognizing any answers to any questions, is a form of scepticism, not intelligible order.
These chapters proceed step by step. We consider the basic questions of order in the Godhead, the cosmos, the soul, the polity, and the mind, as well as in hell, in redemption, and in beauty. Things are related both to one another and to their origins and destinies. The human mind is designed to know the truth, even when we choose not to know it because we suspect that it might interfere with the order we choose to put into our own souls, where the ultimate drama, hence order, in the universe ultimately lies.
But the very fact that we can choose to put a disorder into the highest things about us indicates that an order exists by which we can and do distinguish order and disorder. We are beings, as Aristotle said, for whom praise and blame are constant companions. Praise and blame have to do with order and disorder. If things fit together, if they belong together, we want to know how and why. This seeking is our glory. But we do not seek just to be seeking. We seek to know, to know the answers, to know the truth of things. This too is what order is about.
CHAPTER I
THE ORDERLY AND THE DIVINE
Or do you [Adeimantus] suppose there is any way of keeping someone from imitating that which he admires and therefore keeps company with?
It’s not possible
, he said.
Then it’s the philosopher, keeping company with the divine and the orderly, who becomes orderly and divine, to the extent that is possible for a human being.
—Plato Republic 500c-d
I
While in a hospital waiting for an examination, I found a copy of an old, but elegant, Architectural Digest. On one of the glossy ad pages, I noticed the following New Yorker cartoon by S. Gross. A large cat is depicted determinedly walking on his two hind legs. He is pulling a little toy car on a long string. In the car sits a happy little mouse at the steering wheel. But behind the car, we see another mouse furiously yelling at the contented mouse in the toy car, For God’s sake, think! Why is he being so nice to you?
Notice the second mouse’s commands: Think!
For God’s sake!
It is as if, in our expressions, we realize that we are not just to think but are commanded to think by what is the cause of our being, the kind of being that includes thinking. Thinking means separating this thing from that. It means identifying accurately what each thing is. It means relating this thing to that. It means seeing the order of how this thing stands to that thing.
Much of what this book is about can be found in this amusing cat-and-mouse scene. The cat is being a cat, being what-it-is-to-be a cat. Nothing is different here about the cat. But the little mouse ought to know what cats do. The mouse in the toy car is, however, happy to have a fun ride. The cat, he thinks, is doing him a favor. He is on a joyride. He is delighted with the unaccustomed experience. We, the viewers, however, know the relation of cats and mice.
The rational mouse’s cry to his friend in the car is the voice of intelligence: Why is he being so nice to you?
That is, the cat’s goodness isn’t natural. Cats play with mice only to devour them when they get tired of playing games. If they can, mice flee cats on sight. The little mouse in the toy car doesn’t get it. Here lies the humor of the cartoon. We see it because we have minds. We see relationships. We see order and therefore the unexpected disorder out of which humor arises. We know that at least one mouse is not being mouselike, or, from our viewpoint, rational.
We get the point. To understand what this cartoon is about, we need to understand what mice and cats do when they are being what they are. An implicit order is presupposed in the cartoon. Since only human beings understand cartoons, we respond to this scene with bemused laughter because we know the order and see, at the same time, the disorder. We can only laugh when we see the incongruity in the scene.
If, however, as in the famous painting The Peaceable Kingdom by Edward Hicks, the lion and the lamb, the cat and the mouse do recline together in harmony with no fear of danger, there would be no joke. And if there is no joke, no world as we know it is seen in the painting, even though there may be some other order in the Peaceable Kingdom. The very point in such a Kingdom is that this harmonious scene does not happen in this world, the one we know. Our laughter depends on our seeing the incongruity of things. We see such incongruity only when we simultaneously see the congruity of things.
II
In this same hospital waiting room, I was asked, before the doctor could proceed, to read and sign a waiver, sometimes known, humorously, as signing your life away
. The official document explained that I was a patient. I was to agree that certain procedures were to be performed on me if the doctor judged them necessary. I was told that I might need a transfusion. But what particularly impressed itself on my mind was the statement that the hospital wanted me to know that medicine was not an exact science
, something I confess to having suspected.
Things might go wrong, in other words, in spite of the best efforts of the doctors and the hospital. They wanted me, the patient, to know that possibility. Here was a fleeting intimation of another order over which the hospital as such had no control, or even information about. Neither the doctor nor the hospital, as such, was directly concerned with the ultimate purpose of my life. They were properly concerned only with the present condition of my bodily health. To find out about ultimate purposes
, I would have to go elsewhere—to the philosophers, perhaps, or to wise men, or to the law and the prophets.
Until I consented, however, neither the doctor nor the hospital could legally proceed to do anything to me, even for my own good. This waiver did not mean, of course, that doctors were free to do whatever they wanted with their patients. They could be held for malpractice in glaring cases of not following ordinary medical rules and procedures. But medical science knows things only for the most part
. The human being, indeed any limited being, can vary in individual cases, which are not always covered by general norms. This particular possibility is why the waiver is needed. Not everything can be foreseen, though at times, we wonder about that. We wonder about our finiteness. We wonder if everything should be foreseen, yet not predetermined. These are legitimate questions of theodicy and philosophy, the relation of free will and providence.
So again here, as in the case of the cat and the mouse, we are to understand the nature of a human being and of the medical profession’s relation to him. An order of health exists, however much in some things it may vary in particulars from individual to individual. Sickness presupposes health, which sickness did not invent. Health, if you will, invented sickness, or at least the comparative knowledge of what it is.
The doctor does not constitute the requirements of what it is to be healthy
in the first place. He is a servant of a health he does not himself first make or define. He has to find out what health is by experience, by study of actual human beings. His knowledge does not fall down from the clouds. The doctor who does not seek to make us healthy by standards to which he is obligated is, as Plato already knew, a dangerous man. We do not go to a doctor who is our sworn enemy or to one who refuses to be bound by the standards of what it is to be healthy and how to restore that condition.
We know many things about how to keep healthy and how to restore ourselves when we are sick. Besides modern medicine, working at this same issue of health, are all the health food stores, traditional medicines, prayers for the sick, exercise programs, and, yes, a multitude of quacks. But still the solemn warning of medical science goes out to the patient. We are not an exact science. Do not expect miracles. Miracles are not our business, even if they happen on our watch. We know a lot, but the risk that the patient takes is that we do not know everything. The probability is that we know enough to cure the patient’s immediate problem. So go ahead, take the risk. Chances of success are quite realistic, probably more so than if we do nothing.
Some things are not entirely possible for human beings, even for doctors. This lack of entire
possibility, be it noted in the beginning, is not a bad thing. Life in part consists of lists of what is possible and what is not. The list is variable. We once thought it impossible to walk on the moon, or to use a phone without wires, or to have a tooth pulled without much pain. It is all right that we be the kind of finite beings we are. Yet, as Aristotle told us in a famous passage, we should strive with all our might to know not merely mortal things, but the highest things. We are to be confident that the little we know of the things that cannot be otherwise is worthy of all our effort (Ethics 1177b31-78a2). We seem to be made for more than we are. Indeed, in a phrase from Saint Thomas’ De caritate that E. F. Schumacher was fond of quoting, we read, "Homo non est proprie humanus sed superhumanus est" (Man is not properly human, but superhuman).¹ This is a theme to which the topic of order will often return us. Plato’s Socrates, who did not much like imitations of any sort, notices, in the wonderful passage that introduces this chapter, that we are prone to keep company
with the things that we admire. This ordinary observation means that we should pay particular attention to what are the things that we do in fact admire, as well as to the things we do not. Are the things that accompany us
in fact themselves orderly and divine
? And if so, what would this order entail?
Thus, if we keep company with divine and orderly things
, there is some chance that we should likewise reflect this company in our souls, in our lives, in our families, in our cities. We become what we love. And to love is always to choose, though to choose is not always to love rightly. This ordination to the higher things is not a hopeless endeavor, as Machiavelli, for one, suggested that it was. In his view, we should instead lower our sights to deal only with finite and fallible—indeed, corrupt—things. Our company, in his view, is to be less than divine and less than orderly. By not striving for the higher things, he thought, we could be given the lower things in relative comfort, or at least, in relative efficiency.
By contrast, I have always particularly liked the practical common sense of an Aristotle, a Samuel Johnson, a G. K. Chesterton in these matters. We must not think that the man who is to be happy will need many things or great things, merely because he cannot be supremely happy without external goods
, Aristotle told us. For self-sufficiency and action do not involve excess, and we can do noble acts without ruling earth and sea; for even with moderate advantages one can act virtuously
(Ethics 1179a16). This passage is the great defense of the common man not merely in his daily affairs but in his own personal orientation to what is beyond himself. And if we can act virtuously at all, we already find ourselves subsequently oriented to things of truth that are, as it were, beyond virtue, wherein we begin to wonder about the whole order of things: How is it? Why is it? What is it for? How do I stand within it?
III
At the beginning of this book, on pages 5 and 6, are found five citations: one from Plato, one from Belloc, one from Aquinas, one from Pieper, and one from C. S. Lewis. Plato warns us that we can begin philosophy when we are too young to appreciate what it means to know things and to know that we know them. He recognizes that, properly speaking, knowing includes knowing the arguments by which the truth of things is established. But if we see everything controverted, if learned and famous men hold the opposite views on any given topic, it will naturally seem, especially if we are young, that it is impossible to sort things out. Cicero, in a famous comment cited approvingly by Pascal, Hobbes, and Descartes, remarked: "Nihil tam absurde dici potest quod non dicatur ab aliquo philosophorum" (Nothing can be stated that is so absurd that one of the philosophers will not affirm it). So philosophy is slandered. Relativism reigns supreme. Why make the effort if all we can hope for is an endless series of opinions and controversies with no hope of resolution or judgment at any level?
Socrates’ point here, however, was not a sceptical one. His famous affirmation