Critique of Marxist Philosophy
Martyr Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr's
A Critical Summary of His Book Our
Philosophy
By: Ali Quli Qara'i
Part 1
OUR PHILOSOPHY:
By Muhammad Baqir As-Sadr. Translated from the Arabic with an introduction and notes by
Shams C. Inati. Foreword by Sayyed Hossein Nasr. The Muhammadi Trust in association with
KPI: London and New York, 1987. Pp. xvii + 295, ISBN 0-7103 0179-0. Distributed by
Routledge & Kegan Paul, Associated Book Publishers (UK) Ltd., 11 New Fetter Lane,
London EC4P 9 EE.
The present book was intended as
first of a series that remained incomplete due to al-Sadr's martyrdom, which deprived the
Islamic world of one of its most original and able thinkers. This work, with al-'Usus
al-mantiqiyyah li al-'istiqra' (The Logical Foundations of Induction), makes up the
author's main contribution to contemporary Muslim philosophic thought.
It consists of an introduction
and two parts. The first part deals with the theory of knowledge and the second with some
problems of metaphysics.
The Introduction:
The Social Problem:
Here the author spells out his
main aim for writing the book. It is not philosophy for philosophy's sake. The purpose is
to present Islam as an alternative system superior to capitalism and secular democracy on
the one hand and to Marxism and socialism on the other.
Although devoid of an articulate
worldview or ideology, capitalistic democracies are materialistic to the core.
Dissociating themselves from all transcendental principles, they claim to promote the
interests and rights of the individual and safeguard his economic, political liberties and
freedom of expression and thought. The interests of the individual are regarded as primary
and are emphasized at the cost of the interests of society. The assumption is that since
all individuals seek their interests, the provision of individual freedom leads to the
automatic fulfillment of the interests of society, which are regarded as the sum of
individual interests.
However, due to the dominant
materialistic outlook on life in capitalistic societies, the pursuit of individual
self-interest does not transcend the purview of materialism. Nearly all moral values, most
of which do not lie within the purview of materialistic self-seeking of individuals, are
neglected, causing deep harm to society's welfare. The rights of the minority are
neglected. Unlimited economic freedom permits a handful of capitalists to dominate the
majority of people and to usurp their freedoms and rights. With the immense economic
resources at their disposal, the wealthy capitalists take control of the mass media,
government, legislature and judiciary. Even foreign countries and peoples are not secure
from their greed for cheap raw materials, cheap labour, and markets for finished products.
Imperialism, hence, is a direct outcome of capitalistic democracy.
In this dehumanizing hell of
materialism and pursuit of individual self-interest there is no place for love, mercy,
self-denial or any other higher human value.
Dialectical materialism sees all
evils of capitalism to be rooted in the institution of private property. If private
property is abolished and all property becomes public, passing from the possession and
control of the individual into those of the community, individual ambition will die.
All will voluntarily pool the
fruits of their labour for the common benefit. The higher cultural values will be put
within the reach of all alike through community support and the diffusion of education.
Although communism solved some of
the problems of capitalism at the cost of immense human suffering, the remedy was only
partial.
Dictatorship, repression,
deprival of individual freedoms, constant fear of imprisonment, torture and execution for
the dissidents, loss of economic vigour due to absence of individual initiative and
motivation, the debasement of man's dignity these are some of the outcomes of the
socialist solution.
In the view of Martyr al-Sadr,
the evil of capitalism lies not in private property but in the neglect of the spiritual
dimensions of man's being. Moreover, self-seeking is inherent in human nature; it is not a
product of the institution of private property, as alleged by Marx. The failure of secular
democracies lies in their emphasis on individualism and their inability to stimulate and
promote the higher spiritual aspect of man's self-seeking nature, whose activation is
vital for arising man's altruistic potentialities so significant for society's welfare.
Marxism makes the mistake of abolishing private property while keeping intact capitalism's
destructive materialistic world view. As a result, it ends up substituting a handful of
bureaucrats and party officials for a handful of capitalists who wield all power and
control the society's wealth and resources.
Both capitalism and communism
fail to present a correct world outlook and to formulate an ideology capable of solving
the diverse problems of human society. This failure is rooted in their materialist world
view and their inadequate understanding of man's nature.
The Islamic Solution:
There are no more than two
alternatives for modern man to solve the basic problem of society. Either, he should
somehow abandon his self-seeking character and become altruistic while keeping his
materialistic world view; or, he should abandon his materialistic outlook and select a
different metaphysical criterion and goal.
The communists select the first
alternative because they do not believe that man is self-seeking by nature. They
erroneously regard private property as infrastructure and man's self-seeking as its
superstructure. This is putting the cart before the horse.
The second alternative is chosen
by Islam. It does not abolish private property but gives a new meaning to human existence.
It does not consider human nature a mechanical artifact of social and economic conditions,
nor does it put the society at the mercy of the individual.
The Islamic outlook is based in
faith in a transcendent source of life and existence. This world is a prelude to another.
The highest value and criterion of all human activities and pursuits is the attainment of
God's good pleasure and His approval. All human history testifies to the innateness of
man's self-seeking character. Had it not been for this self-seeking and self-love there
would have been no motive for the satisfaction of human needs. No school of thought or
ideology can offer an ultimate solution to man's problems without taking into account his
nature and without establishing a harmony between that which is and that which ought to
be.
Offering a transcendental
interpretation of life, a perspective in which this world is a prelude to the hereafter,
Islam seeks to bring about a harmony between man's self-seeking nature and the good of
society, by putting forward the criterion of the attainment of God's approval and good
pleasure as the ultimate end in itself. As a result it eliminates the conflict between the
good of the individual and that of society, and the individual is promised an everlasting
reward in his struggle for the establishment of a prosperous and just society as a means
for the attainment of God's good pleasure:
Upon that day men shall issue in
scatterings to see their works, and whose has done an atom's weight of good shall see it,
and whose has done an atom's weight of evil shall see it. (99:6-8)
Such a thing is not possible in
the framework of a materialistic world view. The Islamic world view opens up an infinite
vista before man's eye, and compensates his ephemeral losses with lasting benefits.
Apart from transforming human
criteria through a transcendental world view, Islam offers a specific system of training
for nourishing man's various spiritual, moral and emotional potentialities which lie
latent in his being. Islam takes into consideration the welfare of both the individual and
society, based as it is on a spiritual understanding and moral sense of life. Other
systems either sacrifice the individual for society or society for the individual, and as
a result they paralyze man's nature and expose social life to severe complications and
perils.
Here, at the end of his
introduction, the author spells out his objective, which is a comparative study of the
philosophical viewpoints of Islam and other schools which confront it. Since the
capitalist system lacks any philosophical basis, he proposes to examine in detail the
philosophical foundations of dialectical materialism.
Part One: The Theory of Knowledge (Chapter
I):
Concepts:
The first chapter in this section
is devoted to the epistemological problem of the source of concepts and judgements. First
the author examines the Platonic doctrine of Recollection, then the rationalist theory,
and following that the empirical theory.
The Platonic theory is false
because soul does not exist in an abstract form prior to the existence of the body, being
the result of substantial motion in matter. It is by means of this movement that it
acquires an immaterial existence not characterized by material qualities and free from the
laws of matter.
The rationalist theory that some
concepts are innate or a priori is not refutable if interpreted to mean that innate ideas
exist in the soul potentially, becoming actual as the soul develops.
The empirical theory, first
propounded by John Locke, holds that there are no innate ideas; all our ideas without
exception are derived from experience. It was adopted by Marxism. However, the empirical
theory as admitted by Hume fails to explain how we form such concepts as that of
causality; for that which is derived from the senses is succession, not causality. The
rejection of the principle of causality by empiricists does not solve the difficulty,
because the fact remains that we do conceive causality, which is not given in sense
perception.
Al-Sadr then goes on to the
Abstraction theory (nazariyyat al-'intiza') favoured by the Islamic philosophers in
general. According to this theory, concepts are of two kinds: primary and secondary. The
primary ones are products of sense-perception. The secondary ones are produced from the
primary concepts by the mind through the means of 'abstraction.' The secondary concepts
although derived from the primary ones transcend them and are the inventions of the mind.
Judgements:
Moving from concepts to
judgements, al-Sadr selects here the rational and empirical theses about the source of
judgements for discussion.
1. According to the rationalists,
knowledge (in the form of judgements or propositions) consists of two kinds. The first
kind is primary, self-evident, and intuitive. It includes such propositions as the
principle of contradiction, and such statements as 'The whole is greater than the part',
'One is half of two', 'A thing cannot have contradictory attributes at the same time', and
so on. The other kind is what the author calls 'theoretical' knowledge, whose truth cannot
be established except in the light of the first kind. Among the examples given are: 'The
earth is spherical', 'Heat is caused by motion', 'Infinite regress is impossible', 'The
angles of a triangle are equal to two right angles'.
The author does not seem to be
right here in putting two different kinds of statements in one class called 'theoretical
knowledge'. 'The earth is spherical' is not the same kind of judgement as 'The angles of a
triangle are equal to two right angles'. The former requires observation and inference for
its proof, while the latter can be established by pure reasoning. The same distinction
applies to the two statements 'Heat is caused by motion' and 'Infinite regress is
impossible'.
All knowledge is based on
previous knowledge, which in turn depends on knowledge preceding it. The a priori or
primary knowledge is that irreducible remainder which does not arise from any previous
knowledge. A part of primary knowledge, consisting of such general principles as the law
of contradiction, constitutes the basic condition of all knowledge. Without it no general
proposition can be affirmed.
It is this knowledge independent
of experience that makes metaphysics possible.
The progression of thought is
from universal to more particular propositions. This is true even in the experimental
sciences, which cannot dispense with the universal principles of causality and uniformity
of nature. Experimentation also, without the application of necessary rational laws, does
not lead to general scientific truths. The Islamic philosophers, including al-Sadr,
espouse this theory.
2. According to the empiricists
sense experience is the primary source of all knowledge. They do not admit the existence
of any necessary rational knowledge prior to experience. There can be no knowledge of
universal truths prior to experience. Their position makes metaphysics and deduction
impossible.
The empirical doctrine has to be
rejected for the following four reasons.
First, either the empirical doctrine is prior to experience or it is not. If it is, it
refutes itself. If it is derived from experience, the validity of experience as a
criterion of knowledge has not yet been established.
Second, empiricism fails to
affirm the existence of matter and the external world, which cannot be affirmed except by
primary rational knowledge. Thus the metaphysical realities are not the only ones which
depend for their affirmation on the rational method.
Third, experience by itself is
not sufficient to assert the impossibility of anything. All that experience can affirm is
non presence or at the most non-existence. The notion of impossibility can be accepted
only on rational grounds, not on the basis of experience. If the notion of impossibility
is denied, anything, including contradiction, becomes possible. The possibility of
contradiction leads to the collapse of all knowledge and science.
Fourth, the principle of
causality cannot be demonstrated by the means of the empirical doctrine. All that
experience can affirm is succession and contiguity, not causal necessity.
The author then turns to the
effort of Hume to show how the 'feeling' of necessary connection implicit in the concept
of causality arises from experience: the theory of association of ideas. According to
Hume, the habit of leaping forward to and expecting the sequent associated with the
antecedent becomes so ingrained by continual repetition of their conjunction as to make
the mind feel that when the one event occurs the other simply must follow it. Events so
habitually conjoined and associated as to be accompanied by this feeling of must are
called cause and effect, and the relation of simple sequence is turned into one of
causation.
Al-Sadr offers five reasons for
rejecting this explanation. First, if it were true, no scientist would be able to confirm
a causal relation between two things in a single experiment, where there is no repetition
of the conjoined events to produce the feeling of necessity. Similarly, many times, belief
in a causal relationship is not strengthened by further repetition of events involving a
cause and its effect.
Second, when we take the
associated ideas of two events regarded as being in cause-effect relationship, is the
relation between these two ideas that of mere conjunction or necessity? If it is mere
conjunction, the element of necessity implied in their association is not explained.
Third, the necessity of the
principle of causality is not a psychological necessity but an objective one.
Fourthly, the mind distinguishes
between cause and effect even when they are completely conjoined (e.g. the movements of
the pen and the hand while writing).
Fifthly, it often happens that
two events are frequently associated without producing the belief that one of them is the
cause of the other (e.g. day and night). Empiricism cannot provide the basis for the
sciences, which are based on some rational principles that are not subject to
experimentation, viz., the principle of causality, the principle of harmony between cause
and effect, and the principle of non contradiction. The scientist, in framing his
theories, passes from these general principles to particular hypothesis through a process
of syllogistic reasoning.
Of course, experience has a high
value, but it itself stands in need of a rational criterion. This criterion is primary
rational knowledge.
The rational theory of knowledge
also explains the quality of necessity and certainty that distinguishes the propositions
of mathematics from the propositions of the natural sciences. This is because mathematics
is entirely based on primary rational principles. Some empiricists have tried to explain
this difference by stating that mathematical propositions are analytic (tautological). Yet
even mathematical statements would not be certain had it not been for their reliance on
certain rational principles, such as the law of contradiction. Moreover, all mathematical
statements are not analytic, such as, ,The diameter is shorter than the circumference'.
How does primary knowledge emerge
when it is not present at birth and in all men at all times? The answer is that the
primary judgements proceed from the innermost being of the soul after it has formed the
necessary conceptions, directly or indirectly, as a result of experience. As the soul
develops through substantial movement, the primary knowledge, which exists in it
potentially, becomes actual.
The Marxist Theory of Knowledge:
Here, the statement of the
Marxist position by the author is, unfortunately, not based either on the original works
of Marx or Engels or their authoritative interpreters. Perhaps due to the non-availability
of translations, he bases his criticism on the writings of second-rate interpreters, such
as Mao Tse-tung. The result is that the Marxist position stated is weak, weakening in turn
somewhat the author's criticism of Marxist epistemology.
According to Marxism, all
knowledge begins in experience. The next step is that of ordering of information,
inference and application.
It does not accept that some
knowledge is independent of sense experience. Denying that there exists some primary
knowledge which enables the mind to move from the first to the second stage, it fails to
explain how the mind can move from the stage of sense perception to that of theory and
inference.
The conclusion is- drawn that
only the rationalist theory provides an adequate explanation of how the mind is able to
move from the first to the second stage of knowledge. It is only the knowledge of the
general rational laws that affords the scientist to develop theories and to draw
inferences in his endeavour to discover the reality that lies beyond empirical phenomena.
The rejection of primary rational knowledge, which is independent of experience, makes it
impossible to go beyond the stage of sense-perception.
Empiricism and the Possibility
of Metaphysics:
Before the birth of empiricism,
philosophy was considered responsible for discovering the general laws of being. Its tool
was syllogistic reasoning and philosophic thought moved from general to more particular
propositions. Not only metaphysics and ethics but also such sciences as physics and
psychology lay within the sphere of philosophy. However, the experimental method and
induction took the sciences, each of them devoted to a specific class of phenomena, out of
the purview of philosophy, which was left to deal with issues which fell within the
purview of pure reason. The empiricists claimed that there is no field of knowledge beyond
the field of experimentation that the sciences have divided among themselves, leaving
nothing for philosophy. The only scope that was admitted for philosophy by some schools
was that of discovering the relations and links among the sciences and to postulate
general scientific theories based on the outcome of experiments in various scientific
fields. Foremost amongst them were the schools of Marxism and positivism.
The logical positivists were not
satisfied with the empiricist attacks against metaphysics. They did not limit themselves,
for instance, to the assertion that metaphysics was useless since its propositions could
not be demonstrated by the scientific method. The positivists went on to assert that the
propositions of metaphysics were meaningless. The criticism of the positivists against
metaphysics can be summarized as follows:
1. Metaphysical propositions deal
with matters that lie beyond the sphere of experience and experiment. Hence they cannot be
verified.
2. Their being true or false makes no difference so far as the world of experience is
concerned.
3. Metaphysical propositions are meaningless because they do not give any information
about the world.
4. It is inappropriate to ascribe truth or falsity to them.
The author suggests the following
lines for answering this criticism:
1. If we refute the empirical
theory of knowledge and affirm the existence of a primary knowledge prior to experience in
the core of the human mind, we can demonstrate that the mind has the capacity to confirm
the veracity or falsity of metaphysical propositions.
2. Although metaphysical propositions have no direct bearing on the data of experience,
these data are not altogether irrelevant to metaphysical statements. Further clarification
to be given later.
3. The logical positivists describe a proposition as 'meaningful' if its truth or falsity
can be affirmed within the limits of sense experience.
This is equal to saying,
"The content of metaphysical propositions lies beyond sense experience". With
this, the positivists assert an indisputable truth, that the subjects of metaphysics are
not empirical something which the rationalists have stressed all along.
What would the positivist say
about such propositions as relate to nature but cannot be verified by sense experience,
such as a statement about the existence of mountains and valleys on the other side of the
moon? Positivism revises its original position to assert that that which is important here
is logical possibility, not actual possibility. However, the notion of logical possibility
is a metaphysical notion, and thus positivism, in the last analysis, has to adopt a
metaphysical criterion of 'meaning'. Metaphysical propositions are as meaningful as any
other, in that they relate to realities independent of the mind and the logical
possibility of being true or false holds in their case.
Marxism and Metaphysics:
The Marxist position regarding
metaphysics is essentially similar to that of positivism. Marxism rejects a higher
philosophy above and over the sciences and independent of them. Marxist philosophy calls
itself 'scientific', yet soon trespasses into other fields to judge metaphysical issues
affirmatively or negatively. In violating its self-set limits it contradicts itself a
result of the Marxist mistake of basing its theory of knowledge on sense experience alone.
It is in the light of the
rational theory of knowledge that philosophy and metaphysics rest on firm fundamental
principles. The acceptance of primary rational knowledge relieves philosophy of bondage to
the constantly changing theories of experimental science.
The link between philosophy and
science is strong, for science furnishes philosophy with new facts that enable philosophy
to obtain new philosophical conclusions. Yet in spite of this philosophy may at times not
need any sense experience, nor is it necessary for philosophy to accompany the procession
of science in its gradual march.
The Value of Knowledge (Chapter 2):
The Possibility of Knowledge:
In this chapter Martyr al-Sadr is
concerned not with the 'value' of knowledge but rather with the possibility of knowledge
as such. To what extent does 'knowledge' (i.e. that which is considered to be knowledge)
capture the essence of reality and the secrets of the external world?
Marxism believes in the
possibility of knowledge of objective realities and rejects skepticism and sophistry. The
world does not contain anything that cannot be known. But is it appropriate for Marxism to
claim that definite knowledge is possible? Can it escape skepticism in the ultimate
analysis?
In order to understand the
Marxist and Islamic positions on this issue, the author considers it essential to review
important doctrines formulated by philosophers, beginning with the Sophists.
Greek Philosophy: In the fifth
century B.C. a class of teachers emerged in Greece that devoted itself to teaching of
rhetoric and giving professional advice to their clients in matters of law, court
procedure and politics. Protagoras (b.c. 500 B.C.) and Gorgias (fl.c. 427 B.C.), two major
skeptics, were the products of this class. Gorgias, for instance, taught that the Real,
about which the pre-Socratic philosophers had argued, does not exist. If a world-stuff
existed we could never know what it was like; it is not what it appears, since the senses
lie. Even if Reality could be known, knowledge is incommunicable; for, language, being
mere noise, cannot convey the knowledge of reality to other minds.
The Sophists rejected the
possibility of knowledge and made truth a purely subjective and relative affair. Hence
metaphysics is idle speculation and its results are worthless. There is no reality that
reason can know except the ever-changing flux of sensible experience.
Sophistry wished to destroy what
philosophy had built hitherto. They were opposed by Socrates (d.399 B.C.), Plato (428-347
B.C.) and Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), who tried to maintain reason on its throne.
Aristotelian epistemology validated reason and recognized the value of experience, and
posited the possibility of certain knowledge.
The skepticism that reemerged
after Aristotle was a compromise in that it did not deny reality but denied the
possibility of certain knowledge. However, skepticism could not prevail in philosophy, and
reason mounted the throne offered to it by Aristotle, until skepticism emerged again in
the 16th century in an atmosphere of doubt and rebellion against the authority of reason.
Descartes emerged in this atmosphere and he tried to bring back certitude to philosophy.
Descartes: Descartes (1596-1650)
began his philosophy with sweeping doubt. Ideas, he reasoned are susceptible to error and
sense perception is often deceptive. The point of departure for philosophical certitude
was the existence of his thoughts, which leads him to infer his own existence: 'I think,
therefore, I am'. This statement is true because it is clear and distinct. He therefore
adopts as a general rule the principle that all things that we conceive very clearly and
distinctly are true.
Ideas seem to be of three sorts: (1) those that are innate, (2) those that are foreign and
come from without, (3) those that are the mind's constructs. Descartes disposes of
skepticism by first proving the existence of God, whose idea belongs to the first class.
Since we as imperfect beings are not sufficient reason for the idea of perfection we
entertain the idea of God being the idea of an absolutely perfect being the idea of God
must have been caused by Him. God is thus the first objective reality posited by
Descartes. Now since God is good, the innate ideas (which include the ideas of external
bodies) which we have such strong inclination to believe must be true. This is how
Descartes posits external reality and the possibility of science.
Al-Sadr points out that 'I think,
therefore, I am', contains a concealed syllogism: 'I think, every thinker exists,
therefore I exist'.
Moreover as pointed out by Ibn Sina, this argument from thought to existence is invalid;
for the thinking subject admits his existence in the first phrase 'I think'.
Secondly, Descartes confuses
between the idea of a perfect being and the objective reality it represents. It is God,
not the idea of God, which is more sublime than human beings.
Descartes bases the whole edifice
of existence on the proposition:
"It is impossible for God to
deceive". He confuses between 'deception is impossible', and 'deception is
abominable', which is not a metaphysical (judgement of fact) but an ethical (judgement of
value) proposition.
In any case, the author's purpose is not an elaborate criticism of Descartes' philosophy
but to present his view regarding the possibility of knowledge. Descartes accepts the
validity of innate rational knowledge.
John Locke:
Locke (1632-1704) is the founder
of modern empiricism. While he claims that all knowledge is derived from experience there
being no innate ideas or principles he divides knowledge into three types:
(1) by intuition, (2) by rational demonstration, (3) by sensation. Our knowledge of our
own existence is intuitive, our knowledge of God's existence is demonstrative, and our
knowledge of things present to sense is sensitive. This division of knowledge into three
groups is inconsistent with his empirical doctrine.
Locke makes a distinction between
what he calls primary and secondary qualities. The primary ones are in separable from
bodies, such as solidity, extension, figure, motion or rest, and number. The secondary
qualities are only in the percipient, such as colour, sound, smell, etc.
Since there is no way, according to Locke, of knowing the primary qualities except through
the senses, this division is also inconsistent with his empirical doctrine.
The Idealists:
The Platonic theory of Ideas,
generally called 'realism', is referred to as 'idealism' by the author. Whatever we may
call it, it did not involve any denial or doubt about reality. In metaphysics, idealism is
the theory that reality is of the nature of mind or idea. To al-Sadr, it is an attempt to
shake the foundations of objective reality and to exterminate certainty. In order to study
the role of idealism in the theory of knowledge, he proposes to examine three tendencies
in idealism. These he calls 'philosophical', 'physical' and 'physiological'.
Philosophical Idealism: Its
founder was Berkeley, who declared, 'To exist is to know or to be known'. He denies
existence to objective realities existing independent of minds. Mind and its ideas exist.
All we know of 'matter' are the qualities of our sense (the secondary qualities of Locke).
Berkeley's idealism has been interpreted differently and al-Sadr has selected an
interpretation that he considers best-known. He cites Berkeley's proofs in support of his
doctrines.
The first one is intended to
prove that all knowledge is based on and comes from the senses. The main criticism against
Berkeley is that he takes for granted the law of contradiction in his proofs while denying
that there is any knowledge not rooted in sense experience. The author interprets Berkeley
as denying the independent existence of things and offers reasons for rejecting this
alleged denial of Berkeley.
The fact is that Berkeley's
position is not understood clearly by the author. Berkeley does not deny the reality of
external objects. What he denies is that such objects could exist by themselves and
independent of the Divine mind. That is, existence for him is synonymous with being the
object of consciousness. Things cannot exist except as ideas inside minds. Why does
Berkeley deny what Locke calls primary qualities? That is because he is reluctant to
recognize such qualities as extension, number, motion, solidity and figure as being
attributes of the Divine mind, perhaps in accordance with the theological notions of the
scholastics. If external objects are to be conceived as ideas in the Divine mind, there is
no place for matter and materiality in the external world, matter being the main obstacle
in the way of conceiving external objects as Divine ideas. Hence he denies the primary
qualities as representing attributes of material bodies, and thus he annihilates matter.
In some ways Berkeley's thesis that existence is mental is similar to the theory of God's
'knowledge by presence' ('ilm huduri) propounded by some Muslim philosophers. In
both the cases; things are conceived as objects of knowledge, not as things in themselves
independent of a perceiving mind. On the whole, one may say that the reasons behind
Berkeley's denial of matter and corporeality are mainly theological, because he regards
the idea of material substratum as the base on which the concept of thing-in-itself rests.
Since corporeality cannot be a quality of Divine ideas, Berkeley will not have any
things-in-themselves. According to him everything that there is thing- in-consciousness.
The Nature of Judgement:
However, to return to al-Sadr's
criticism of Berkeley, it is obvious that Berkeley's denial of the objectivity of thought
leads to solipsism. Berkeley's proofs involve a misunderstanding of the nature of
knowledge. Knowledge has two main divisions according to al-Sadr: conception and
judgement. The forms of objects exist on three levels in our intellect:
(1) as percepts, on the level of
sense perception, (2) as images, on the level of imagination (and perhaps memory), and (3)
as concepts, on the abstract level of intellection. Mere concepts, in isolation from one
another, do not ensure the mind's movement from the subjective to the objective realm. The
presence of the form of an essence in our intellect is one thing, while the objective
presence of that essence in the outside is something else (it is not clear whether this is
true of sense perception or only of imagination and conception).
Judgement, however, is different
from conception. It is the point of departure for the movement from conception to
objectivity.
1. Judgement does not arise in the mind by way of senses. It is rather an act of the
knowing mind.
2. Most importantly, it is an inherent property of judgement to reveal a reality beyond
the mind. Although the mind has no direct conjunction with anything except its knowledge,
it is inherent in judgement to be essentially disclosive (kashfan dhatiyyan) of
something outside knowledge.
Berkeley's argument is based on a
confusion between conception and judgement. The empirical doctrine that all knowledge
arises from perception relates to the stage of conception. By failing to recognize the
difference between concepts and judgements, it makes it impossible to move in the
direction of objectivity.
Answers to Objections:
(1) It may be said that if it is
inherent in judgement to essentially disclose reality lying beyond knowledge, then all
judgements must be true, which is not the case. To solve this difficulty al-Sadr explains
the meaning of 'essential disclosure'. It is inherent in judgement to point towards a
reality independent of itself. Whether true or false, it discloses judgement is not
detached other than itself. Thus essential disclosure of from judgement itself, even when
there is error and ambiguity (the author uses the word 'knowledge' instead of judgement in
this statement, which does not agree with the conception that knowledge is something
always true).
(2) The second objection is that
if judgement may be erroneous, its property of essential disclosure being unable to
protect it from error, how can we rely upon it? The answer is that if human thought did
not possess a number of judgements of indubitable certainty, no judgement would be free of
doubt and it would be impossible for us to know any reality. It is here that the doctrine
of necessary primary knowledge comes to our rescue. This doctrine asserts that there is a
knowledge whose truth is secure and which is completely free from error. Error occurs in
inferring secondary judgements on the basis of primary knowledge. Even Berkeley
unconsciously believes in a store of certain knowledge, for no one can demonstrate
anything unless he bases his demonstration on the fundamentals contained in primary
knowledge such as the law of contradiction and the principle of causality and necessity.
This discussion of philosophical
idealism enables us to draw two conclusions: (1) the acceptance of the essentially
disclosing nature of judgements, (2) the acceptance of basic principle of human knowledge
whose truth is necessarily secure. Even Berkeley's belief in the existence of other minds
and his proofs in favour of idealism assume the acceptance of these two notions.
Realism (which in metaphysics
means that reality is not reducible to mind and thought, and in epistemology means the
doctrine that objects of knowledge and experience exist independently of their being known
or experienced) bases its arguments on these two principles.
Idealism in Physics and
Psychology:
The nineteenth-century physicist
explained nature in terms of mechanical laws involving material bodies, particles and
waves. The developments in atomic physics abolished the classical conception of matter.
Matter was no more indestructible; mass and matter became convertible to energy. As a
result of this, the materialistic conception of the world became inconsistent with the
findings of empirical science.
The discoveries in subatomic particle physics lead to an idealistic tendency among some
physicists. The concepts and theories of science, they said, were only convenient ways of
discussing reality, whose true nature escaped the categories of thought and knowledge.
This idealism, or absence of faith in the objective value of knowledge was, according to
Martyr al-Sadr, the result of a philosophical error. They perceived the debate between
realists and idealists as revolving about the choice of one of these two alternatives:
Either the world is attributable to mind and consciousness, or to a material reality
existing outside them.
This is a fallacious formulation of the primary issue involved, that is whether the world
has an objective reality independent of mind and consciousness (which in the last analysis
may not be material).
As a result, when they failed to
posit the fundamental reality of matter, they came to doubt the possibility of knowledge.
However, realism and materialism are not synonymous. If science is led to discard the
materialistic view of the world, or if any of its scientific axioms collapse as a result
of experiments, it should not lead us to reject realism and deny the objective value of
knowledge.
The evaporation of matter as a
fundamental reality existing independently of mind was a deadly blow to materialist
philosophies, including Marxism. However, the Marxist ideologues, such as Lenin, tried to
save face by insisting that the philosophical conception of matter is different from the
matter of science. The only necessary quality of 'matter', they pleaded, was its existence
independent of mind, not the corporeal qualities traditionally ascribed to matter.
This is a futile play with words, for it does not conceal the fact that Marxism has to
abandon its philosophical position. If to exist independently of mind is the only
necessary quality of matter, then theological metaphysics, according to this new
definition of matter, is a materialistic philosophy!
The tendency towards idealism and
agnosticism among the physicists was the result of a psychological crisis that came due to
the collapse of certain scientific axioms. Materialism was such an axiom, but realism is
not. Realism is not the result of empirical proof or experiments; its acceptance is
inherent in human nature.
A similar skeptical tendency
arose among the physiologists studying the physiology of perception and the causal
processes related to it.
They suggested that the objects
given in sense perception are symbolic, not representative of the external objects. This
tendency was a complication of the materialistic notion that knowledge was purely a
physiological act conditioned by the nature of the nervous system.
Skepticism:
Modern skepticism has its
progenitor in the post-Aristotelian Greek school of skepticism headed by Pyrrho (b.c. 360
B.C.). It did not confine itself to showing the contradictions of sense perception but
went on to an analysis of knowledge to assert the impossibility of certainty. Hume took
Locke's and Berkeley's empiricism to its logical conclusion by throwing doubt on causality
and induction and abolished the distinction between rational belief and credulity. Not
only God but also the self, other minds and external reality fell prey to a skepticism
based on the denial of the principle of causality, which was again based on the empirical
theory of knowledge. Hume's explanation of causality, as pointed out before, is
unsuccessful.
Relativism:
Relativism, in the context of
metaphysics and epistemology, is, according to al-Sadr, a doctrine which asserts the
existence of independent reality and the possibility of knowledge, but a relative
knowledge that is not free from subjective attachments. Hence the author proposes to
discuss certain main relativistic tendencies, beginning with Kant's philosophy.
Kant's 'Relativism':
Kant believes that propositions
are of two kinds: analytic and synthetic. An analytic proposition is one in which the
predicate is part of the subject; for instance, 'The triangle is three-sided'. The
synthetic propositions are those which are not analytic; they give new information.
Propositions are also
distinguishable into two other kinds: a priori and empirical. A priori judgements, though
they may be elicited by experience, have a basis other than experience, unlike empirical
judgements which are rooted in experience. Some a priori judgements are synthetic. All the
propositions of pure mathematics are a priori in this sense. The propositions of sciences
are synthetic and empirical. Kant believes space and time to be formal attributes of the
perceiving subject which give a special and temporal structure to all experience. He
agrees with Berkeley that matter is not given in knowledge and sense experience, but
disagrees with him in holding that external reality cannot exist independently of mind.
Things independent of mind, the things-in-themselves, do exist. Percepts are caused by
things in themselves and are ordered by our mental apparatus in space and time.
Things-in-them-selves, which are the causes of sensations, are unknowable; they are not in
space or time, nor are they substances.
In addition to the subjectivity
of space and time, Kant believes in the subjectivity of these twelve categories divided
into four sets of three: (1) of quantity. unity, plurality, totality, (2) of quality:
reality, negation, limitation, (3) of relation: substance-and-accident, cause-and-effect,
reciprocity, (4) of modality: possibility, existence, necessity (of these, al-Sadr
mentions only causality). These, like time and space, are subjective. i.e. our mental
constitution is such that they are applicable to whatever we experience, but there is no
reason to suppose them applicable to things-in-themselves.
Mathematical propositions are all
a priori. These are the only synthetic judgements which are a priori, because they rest
not upon the variable and contingent content of experience but upon the unchanging forms
of space and time in which all experience is given.
The statements of natural
science, which are empirical and synthetic, are composed of two elements, one of which is
empirical and the other rational. The empirical aspect relates to the content or stuff of
experience, whereas the rational element relates to mind and its forms and categories. The
natural sciences, according to Kant, do not describe the external order of
things-in-themselves, but are valid and trustworthy within the realm of experience, i.e.
the experienced order of 'things-in-us'.
Here al-Sadr does not appear to
appreciate the depth of Kant's skepticism regarding the knowledge of the external world,
which he interprets as a kind of relativism. Hence these statements of his:
"Knowledge (in Kant's philosophy), therefore, is a mixture of subjectivity and
objectivity", and "That is why relativity is imposed on every truth representing
external things in our knowledge, in the sense that our knowledge indicates to us the
thing's reality in us, and not the thing's reality in itself". He does not seem to
notice that Kant's extreme subjectivism makes not only metaphysics impossible but so also
natural science, which is reduced to some kind of phenomenology. Kant's subjectivism makes
his realism altogether ineffectual. The things-in-themselves are shadows that lurk on the
boundaries of his system, which is idealist and subjective through and through. His
realism is as useless for science as his rationalism is useless for metaphysics and
theology.
Al-Sadr's criticism, however, is
addressed mainly to Kant's denial of the possibility of metaphysics. According to Kant,
there can be no synthetic judgements relating to metaphysics. Empirical synthetic
judgements, like that of the sciences, involve mind's formal modes and categories: space
and time and the categories of quantity, quality, relation and modality. These finite
categories apply to sense-experience and phenomena, not to things-in-themselves, the
noumenal. God, soul, and the noumenal world lie beyond experience, and hence there can be
no empirical synthetic judgements about them. Also, since the noumenal world transcends
mind's a priori concepts, a priori synthetic judgements, like that of logic and
mathematics, which are purely formal and empty of content, cannot pertain to metaphysics.
Accordingly there is no room in metaphysics for anything but analytic judgements, which do
not constitute any real knowledge at all.
Al-Sadr, it seems, does not
notice that Kant has built the realm of the mind and experience into an almost autonomous
and self-contained world by itself (almost, we said, allowing for Kant's inconsequential
belief in the unknowable things-in-themselves, which cause sensations).
This is shown by the 'two basic
errors' in Kant's theory that he points out. Firstly, he points out, Kant considers
mathematical science to 'produce' mathematical truths and principles, which are above
error and contradiction, whereas every realistic philosophy must recognize that science
does not 'produce' or 'create' truths. Science is revelatory of what transcends the limits
of mind. The propositions of mathematics reflect an objective reality and are, in this
sense, similar to the laws of natural science. Secondly, "Kant considers the laws
that have their foundation in the human mind as laws of the mind, and not scientific
reflections of the objective laws that govern and regulate the world as a whole. They are
nothing but relations present in the mind naturally, and used by the mind to organize its
empirical knowledge." Such a position, al-Sadr says, leads to idealism, "for if
the primary knowledge in the mind'.
Is nothing but dependent relations awaiting a subject in which to appear, then how could
we move from conception to objectivity? Further, how could- we prove the objective reality
of our various sense perceptions that is, the natural phenomena whose objectivity Kant
admits?"
The fact is that Kant's position
is already deeply steeped in idealism. In his system extreme rationalism leads to an
inscrutable subjectivism. Kant, in the ultimate analysis, is not a relativist but a
skeptic, if not altogether a sophist. Objectivity for him lies within the inner realm of
experience. Knowledge, he would say in reply to al-Sadr, is indeed revelatory, but
revelatory of that which is within this realm.
Relativism in Philosophy and Sciences:
After discussing Kant, Martyr
al-Sadr directs his attention to other relativistic tendencies in philosophy and sciences.
'Subjective relativism' is such a tendency in philosophy (viz. in James, Schiller,
Vaihinger), which asserts that truth is nothing but what is necessitated by an
individual's specific circumstances and conditions of knowing. It is supported by
physiological idealism which asserts that sense perception is symbolic, not
representative, its quality being determined by the workings of the nervous system, not
external reality. This kind of outlook makes all knowledge relative without exception,
even mathematics, which was excepted by Kant. Also, unlike Kant, it makes truth vary with
individuals.
In the field of science, there
are some theories which lead to skepticism despite the intention of their proponents.
These are behaviourism, Freudianism and historical materialism. Behaviourism, which
regards external stimuli and physiological conditioning as preceding the mind and
consciousness and as determinants of its contents, unavoidably leads to a denial of the
value of knowledge. The author has discussed it elaborately in Chapter 5 of Part 2 of the
present work.
According to Freud, the contents
of the conscious mind are determined by the appetites, urges and instincts hidden in the
unconscious, which rule conduct and the conscious mind and its ideas. The Freudian view of
the mind as an instrument of the unconscious and its instincts leads to skepticism by
denying its function of mirroring and reflecting objective reality. The author, here,
promises to deal with Freud's views touching upon the theory of knowledge in a future
book, Our Society, which he did not succeed in writing.
Historical materialism, which may
be regarded here as a sociological theory, also leads to skepticism by treating knowledge
and ideas as part of social composition. According to this theory, economic condition,
determined by the means of production, is the determining basis of society. Knowledge and
thought are thus linked to social structure and the economic forces. Economic forces
occupy the same position here as unconscious urges in Freud's theory; both lead to loss of
confidence in the possibility of knowledge. The inevitable links between thought and the
economic factor in historical materialism contradicts with the Marxist theory of knowledge
which asserts confidence in the possibility of knowledge.
Here the author makes an
important remark : All theories that argue against the objective value of knowledge
involve a contradiction; by eliminating confidence in knowledge they destroy their own
foundation and condemn themselves. In the light of this, behaviourism becomes a product of
Pavlov's physiology and stimuli; Freud's theory a product of his unconscious urges;
historical materialism also becomes a product of the economic conditions in which Marx
lived.
Knowledge in Islamic Philosophy:
At this point Martyr al-Sadr
again recapitulates the main points in the theory of knowledge of .Islamic philosophers.
These points are as follows.
1. Human knowledge is of two
kinds: Conception and judgement (or assent). Conception, in its various forms, has no
objective value (not in the sense that concepts are not derived from perception of
reality, but in the sense that they by themselves are not sufficient to take hold of
objective reality in the sense that judgements do). Only judgement has the quality of
essentially disclosing reality.
2. All knowledge of judgement
type can be attributed to necessary primary knowledge, whose necessity cannot (and need
not) be proved and whose truth cannot be demonstrated (on account of its self-evidence).
However, the mind is conscious of the necessity of accepting it. Examples of such
knowledge are the law of contradiction and the law of causality. It is on these principles
that all other judgements must be based. The objective value of judgements depends on the
degree to which they rest upon these principles. It is possible in the light of these
principles to acquire knowledge in metaphysics, mathematics and natural sciences. In the
natural sciences knowledge is acquired by applying the primary principles through the
mediation of experiment, which is not needed in mathematics and metaphysics. This is the
reason why the conclusions of metaphysics and mathematics are, for the most part, certain,
in contrast to those of the natural sciences.
Sometimes the drawing of
metaphysical conclusions may depend on experimentation. In that case a philosophical
theory has the same value and rank as a scientific theory.
The concept we form of an
external reality is two sided. One side is the form of the thing it represents. In the
other respect, it is fundamentally different from the objective reality of that thing; it
enjoys none of the effectiveness and activity of the thing represented. This difference
between the idea and reality is the difference between quiddity and existence, as
described in Part 2 of this work.
Knowledge in Dialectical
Materialism:
Dialectical materialism asserts
the possibility of knowledge and rejects idealism and relativism, as well as skepticism
and sophistry. It is here that the author, for the first time in his book, takes up
Marxist epistemology for a critical study. All that which was said hitherto on the theory
of knowledge, about the views of the Sophists, Descartes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume and Kant
was a preparation for examination of the Marxist viewpoint on knowledge. Basing as it does
its theory of knowledge on the empirical doctrine, on dialectical movement of thought and
synthesis of contradictions, can it refute idealism and avoid relativism and skepticism?
The author's purpose is to show that it fails in this venture.
Marxism and Refutation of
Idealism:
Marxism fails to refute idealism
by its stand that all knowledge is derived from experience. It fails to notice that in the
dispute between idealism and realism sense experience cannot be a judge, for the idealist
claims that things exist only in sense experience while the realist asserts that they
exist independently of sense experience. The realist cannot demonstrate the objectivity of
sense experience i.e. of its being representative of another independent reality by sense
experience itself. So also arguments from science can be valid only if the objectivity of
experience and experiment has already been posited.
The efforts of Marxist ideologues
like Engels, Lenin, Roger Garaudy and Georges Politzer are naive in that they try to
refute idealism with arguments from science, which are pointless as long as the
objectivity of science has not been established on philosophical grounds. Yet this is
something that Marxism cannot do, because:
(1) It does not accept necessary
rational principles. According to it, the principle of causality, for example, is an
empirical principle. Therefore, it cannot be considered a basis for the validity and
objectivity of sense experience.
(2) The dialectic explains
external events by contradictions internal to matter: natural events do not require an
external cause. The idealist can assert the same thing about phenomena and claim that
knowledge and experience arise out of their inner contradictions without the need of any
external cause in the form of an independent reality.
The author cites some naive
arguments advanced by Marxists against idealism which are derived from science or
commonsense, but which in fact side step the real issue or beg the question. Once again
al-Sadr concludes that it is not possible to base a sound realism except on the basis of
the rational theory of knowledge which asserts the presence of necessary rational
principles independent of sense experience.
Sense Experience and the
Thing-in-Itself:
Al-Sadr here quotes Marxist texts
that state that there is no basic
difference between the
thing-in-itself and the phenomenon, between outward reality and the manner in which it
appears to consciousness. But there is a duality here, between appearance and reality, for
according to empiricism the senses perceive only the phenomena. Can Marxism eliminate this
duality and prove that external reality appears to us in our percept s and ideas as it is?
The answer is, No, because
knowledge according to materialism is purely a physiological act. Unlike mechanical
materialists, the dialectical materialists claim that the idea of a thing is not its pure
mechanical picture. Since qualitatively different forms of motion can transform from one
to another, the physical motion of a thing changes into a physiological motion in our
senses. Then the physiological motion changes into the psychological motion of the idea.
To begin with such changes are not admissible, and even if they be admitted it means that
Marxism does not succeed in revealing the relation between a thing and its idea except as
a relation between a cause and its effect or at the most that of a reality and its
reflected picture.
But why should we assume that
this effect and cause differ from other effects and causes and are distinguished from them
by a special characteristic, namely that the effect pictures its cause faithfully? Of
course, there are many physiological events that are effects of external causes without
having the capacity of picturing their causes. Even if such a thing were admitted, how do
we know that the idea (percept) fully corresponds to the objective reality?
The Marxists answer this
objection by asserting that thought is a part and product of nature; rather its highest
expression. Our knowledge is nothing other than a superior product of nature; it cannot
but reflect the laws of the motions of matter. The products of thought, being the products
of nature, are not in contradiction but in agreement with the rest of material nature.
Yet this is not sufficient for
proving the possibility of knowledge. Aren't idealist thought and theological and
metaphysical thought as much part of nature and products of it as dialectical materialism?
Truth and Dialectical Movement
of Thought:
Marxism rejected the relativity
theory of truth as a kind of sophistry, but it itself admitted relativity by asserting
that:
(1) there are no absolute truths;
truth grows and develops in a way that reflects the growth and development of external
reality.
(2) truth and falsehood may come together; there is no absolute incompatibility between
truth and falsity as asserted by formal logic;
(3) all judgements, regardless of how truthful they may appear, involve contradiction and
hence an aspect of falsity. It is such a contradiction that makes knowledge and truth
grow. Al-Sadr now proceeds to refute each of these notions.
Truth, according to realism, is
an idea that corresponds to a reality that exists independently of mind and consciousness.
There is a second definition of 'truth' given by subjective relativists, according to
which it is something which is consistent with the mind's formulations. The third
definition of truth, advanced by the pragmatists and instrumentalists, is that it is some
idea whose benefit or utility is demonstrated by practical experience. Bergson described
truth as a creation not discovery.
Schiller and Dewey proposed
nearly similar definitions of truth. Pragmatism involves a clear contusion between the
meaning of truth and the motives behind attempts to attain it. Moreover.
(1) to give truth a pure
practical meaning and to strip it of the quality of disclosing independent reality is an
unrestricted admission of skepticism;
(2) secondly, it is not clear whether the benefit of individual or that of society is to
be the criterion of truth. It the criterion is the former, it would lead to a social
chaos. It the latter, a long social experience is required to affirm the validity of any
statement. This would apply to the pragmatic doctrine itself, whose truth cannot be
determined without the test of experience.
(3) That an idea is beneficial is not sufficient for its acceptance. For instance, a
disbeliever cannot accept religion even it he agrees that it is effective in rectifying
human conduct.
If Marxism is to assert the
possibility of knowledge, it cannot do so without adopting the correspondence theory of
truth on which realism rests. For it is impossible on the basis of this theory to hold
that truth develops and grows. Marxism understands neither motion nor truth when it holds
that truth is subject to movement, and motion and becoming involve contradiction.
In the description of a process
involving motion, change or becoming, a statement describing a certain momentary state is
absolutely true at that moment; it cannot, after that, become contrary to that reality at
that specific stage.
Moreover, Marxism abolishes
itself by applying the law of movement to truth. It movement is a general law governing
truths, then it is impossible to affirm any absolute truth, including the judgements of
logic and mathematics, to say nothing of the doctrine of dialectical materialism itself.
Marxism finds fault with formal
logic for accepting absolute opposition between truth and falsity. The Marxist notion of
the union of truth and falsity is based on two misconceptions. One of them is the notion
of the development and movement of truth and the other is that motion is nothing but a
series of contradictions. The author postpones the study of the second issue to Part 2 of
this work. Nevertheless, it is evident even at this stage of the argument that application
of the laws of the dialectic to the realm of knowledge undermines the foundations of all
rational knowledge.
Science and Absolute Truth:
Al-Sadr cites here an argument of Engels wherein the latter criticizes the principle that
truth is absolutely incompatible with falsehood. Engels cites the example of a general
scientific law (Boyle's law) which is not true in certain cases to assert that if the
metaphysicians were correct in their assertion that truths are absolute and totally
incompatible with falsity, then they would have to reject every scientific law because it
is not true in some cases. Al-Sadr points out that Engels does not understand well the
phrase 'absolute truth'. He explains that propositions are of two types: simple (e.g.
'Plato died before Aristotle') and composite (e.g. 'Bodies expand by heat'). A simple
proposition cannot be true in one respect and false in another. But since a composite
proposition is really a bundle of numerous simple propositions, it is true in some cases
and false in other. But this does not mean that truth and falsity unite. A composite
proposition is completely true in the case that it is true, and completely false in the
case that it is false.
Following conclusions are derived
from this study:
1. Truth is absolute and unprogressive, even though the objective reality develops and
changes.
2. Truth is fully incompatible with falsity. A simple proposition cannot be both true and
false.
3. The application of dialectic to truth leads to complete skepticism.
By regarding truth as in continuous change and development, the dialectic sentences itself
to death.
The Marxist Relapse into
Subjectivism: Despite claiming an objective character for its own relativism, Marxism
relapses into subjective relativism by linking consciousness with class. Although this is
class subjectivity, and not the individual subjectivity of subjective relativists, no one
can secure in its light the truth of any philosophical or scientific judgement in the
sense of its correspondence to objective reality. As long as Marxism upholds the necessity
of class character, it cannot offer a world view of universal validity. (Here Part 1
ends).
Here at the conclusion of the
summary of Part I of Our Philosophy, some relevant remarks may not be out of place. It is
true that Marx, Freud and the Behaviourists are wrong in regarding the economic factor or
the urges of the unconscious or the physiological factors as the exclusive determinant of
thought and consciousness but it would also be wrong to refuse to acknowledge the
influence, no matter how undesirable, of these factors on consciousness and thought. The
history of human thought, more than being a history of intellectual health, is an account
of monstrous perversions and deviations. Correct, clear and healthy thinking has been and
remains an exception rather than the rule.
In this regard, the Holy Quran,
also, refers to the role of tradition and desire (ahwa') in deviating men from the
course of true intellection, and considers ethnic, social, political and economic factors
as the causes behind social conflict, division and diversity. To recognize the causes
which lie behind deviant thought is as important as the necessity of defending the value
of human knowledge. And perhaps it is only after we have fully recognized these deviating
factors that we can fully appreciate the possibility of certain knowledge.
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