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Medieval Modal Logic & Science uses modal reasoning in a new
way to fortify the relationships between science, ethics, and
politics. Robert C. Trundle accomplishes this by analyzing the role
of modal logic in the work of St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas,
then applying these themes to contemporary issues. He incorporates
Augustine's ideas involving thought and consciousness, and
Aquinas's reasoning to a First Cause. The author also deals with
Augustine's ties to Aristotelian modalities of thought regarding
science and logic, reassessing the commonly held belief in
Augustine's Platonism to not be a mistake as much as a simplistic
view of his philosophy. Trundle links contemporary issues in
epistemology, morality, theology, and logic, making several useful
connections between ancient and medieval studies in modal logic and
modern concerns. These applications of modal theory illuminate many
puzzles in the works of Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Whitehead, and
Kuhn.
This book reveals a remarkable oddity about the mainstream
philosophy of science. While rejecting a noxious relativism, it is
unable to ascribe "truth" to scientific theories that also are
divorced conceptually from ethics and politics. There is much at
stake since these dilemmas have led to a politicized truth whereby
"truth" in these areas is often decided ideologically. But the
ideology and splintered areas collide head-on with our awareness of
ourselves and the world. By relating a world of which we are
phenomenologically conscious to a common-sense reasoning, a novel
case is made for objective scientific truth, a true causal
principle, and the principle's implication of a First Cause. This
Cause, as a Creator of Nature, begets moral norms intrinsic to
scientific descriptions of our psycho-biological nature since our
nature was created as it ought to be; affording a naturalistic
ethics that can be as true as the science that informs it. Medicine
and its allied sciences are used to illustrate this moral import in
terms of a revitalized support of the traditional family -- a
perennial norm expressed by the dictum "As the family goes, so goes
the state." Thus a state's support of the family exemplifies how
normative political claims can be as true as a scientific ethics
that informs them. The logical link of ethics to science and
politics marks the reasoning implicit in a natural theology common
to the major monotheistic religions. And so despite the faults of
all organizations, this book suggests one reason why those
religions flourished over the ages. Outlasting the Roman Empire and
modern ideologies that boasted vainly of reigning to the end of
history, the religions address a personal spirituality and fulfill
human nature. They render coherent an experienced world where truth
coincides in science, ethics, politics, and religion.
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