Some early
reactions to Five
Proofs of the Existence of God: At Catholic
Answers Live, Karlo
Broussard describes it as “a phenomenal book” and “the Bible of natural
theology.” At The B.C. Catholic, Christopher
Morrissey judges it “a significant, original philosophical contribution to
the scholarly discipline of natural theology” and his “favourite book among
[his] summer reading.”
Thursday, August 31, 2017
Friday, August 25, 2017
Hey, kids! Links!
Philosophy Now interviews Raymond Tallis about his major new book on the
philosophy of time. At The Guardian, Tallis on how he writes.
More justice, less crime.
Joseph Bessette on “mass incarceration” as a consequence of mass crime,
at the Claremont Review of Books.
Catholic Herald
reports that
Dominican theologian Fr. Aidan Nichols has proposed that canon law may require
the inclusion of “a procedure for calling to order a pope who teaches
error.” Commentary from canon lawyer Ed Peters.
The Guardian on the triumph of F. A. Hayek.
Friday, August 18, 2017
Five Proofs is out (Updated)
UPDATE 8/22: Some readers will be interested to learn that Ignatius Press is now offering an electronic version of the book.
My new book Five Proofs of the Existence of God is now available. You can order it from Amazon or direct from Ignatius Press. Brandon Vogt, friend of this blog and creator of the Strange Notions website, is kindly hosting a Q and A about the book at the site.
My new book Five Proofs of the Existence of God is now available. You can order it from Amazon or direct from Ignatius Press. Brandon Vogt, friend of this blog and creator of the Strange Notions website, is kindly hosting a Q and A about the book at the site.
Here’s the book’s
back cover copy:
This book provides a detailed, updated exposition and defense of five of the
historically most important (but in recent years largely neglected)
philosophical proofs of God's existence: the Aristotelian, the Neo-Platonic,
the Augustinian, the Thomistic, and the Rationalist.
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Jacobs on By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed
At
Crisis magazine, philosopher James
Jacobs reviews By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment. From the review:
The arguments are offered in a lucid
and systematic manner so that they are accessible to those with no background
in philosophy, theology or law. For
example, the opening chapter has an admirably clear introduction to the natural
law, and the second chapter elucidates the relative authority of various
theological sources. They support their
argument with copious examples, citing a profusion of authorities, ancient and
modern. Conversely, they engage a wide
range of objections to their position with great dialectical subtlety…
Friday, August 11, 2017
Rucker’s Mindscape
In his book Infinity and the Mind (which you can read
online at his website), Rudy Rucker puts forward the
notion of what he calls the “Mindscape.”
He writes:
If three people see the same animal,
we say the animal is real; what if three people see the same idea?
I think of consciousness as a point,
an “eye,” that moves about in a sort of mental space. All thoughts are already there in this
multi-dimensional space, which we might as well call the Mindscape. Our bodies move about in the physical space
called the Universe; our consciousnesses move about in the mental space called
the Mindscape.
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Capital punishment with Patrick Coffin
Recently I
did a long Skype interview about By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment
for The Patrick Coffin Show. You can watch it here. (Boy do I need to master the art of Skype – I
look like I just rolled out of bed.)
Monday, August 7, 2017
Capital punishment with Prager (UPDATED)
UPDATE 8/9: You can now hear the interview online here.
Tomorrow, Tuesday, August 8 at 11 am PT, Joe Bessette and I will be on The Dennis Prager Show to discuss our book By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment.
Tomorrow, Tuesday, August 8 at 11 am PT, Joe Bessette and I will be on The Dennis Prager Show to discuss our book By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment.
Friday, August 4, 2017
Capital punishment on EWTN
Yesterday,
Joe Bessette and I appeared on EWTN’s The
World Over with Raymond Arroyo to discuss our book By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment. The segment can now be
viewed online.
Saturday, July 29, 2017
Cartesian angelism
Angels, as
Aquinas and other Scholastic theologians conceive of them, are purely
intellectual substances, minds separated from matter. An angel thinks and wills but has no
corporeal operations at all. Naturally,
then, popular images of angels – creatures with wings, long flowing robes, and
so forth – have nothing to do with the real McCoy. For a modern philosopher, the easiest way to
understand what an angel is is to conceive of it as a Cartesian res cogitans – though as we will see in
what follows, in a way this actually gets things the wrong way around.
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Capital punishment on radio and TV
Tomorrow,
Thursday, July 27 at 1:40 pm PT, I’ll be on The Ed Morrissey Show
to discuss By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed. On
the same day, my co-author Joe Bessette will be on Meet
the Author with Ken Huck at 12
pm PT. On Thursday, August 3, Joe and I
will appear on The World Over with Raymond Arroyo on EWTN.
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Msgr. Swetland’s confusions
Msgr. Stuart
Swetland is a theologian and the president of Donnelly College. You might recall that, almost a year ago, he
gained some notoriety for his bizarre opinion that having a positive view of Islam
is nothing less than a requirement of Catholic orthodoxy. As that episode indicates, the monsignor is not
the surest of guides to what the Church teaches. If there were any lingering doubt about that,
it was dispelled by his performance during my radio debate with him last week on the subject of capital
punishment.
Friday, July 14, 2017
Essence and existence
Recently,
Mount Saint Mary College in Newburgh, NY hosted a workshop on the
theme Aquinas on Metaphysics. I spoke on the topic of “The Distinction of
Essence and Existence.” Audio of the
talk has
now been posted online at the Thomistic Institute’s Soundcloud page.
McCaffrey and Murray on By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed
At
Catholic Media Apostolate, Roger McCaffrey and Fr. Gerald Murray discuss my
book (co-authored with Joseph Bessette) By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment.
Monday, July 10, 2017
Aquinas watches Glengarry Glen Ross
David
Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross is a thing of beauty.
This assertion is bound to shock some readers who have seen the movie
(originally a stage play). It is
notoriously foul-mouthed. The dialogue
is in other ways idiosyncratic, characterized by unfamiliar slang and incomplete
sentences (a Mamet trademark). None of
the characters is admirable; indeed, most of them are to some degree or other
positively repulsive – ruthless, lying, manipulative, arrogant, weak, cruel, incompetent,
thieving, vindictive, corrupt. The irony
is that the movie is beautiful in part because
of these features, rather than despite them. How can that be?
Friday, July 7, 2017
Briggs on By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed
At
One Peter Five, Matt Briggs, statistician to the stars, kindly reviews By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment. From the review:
[A] book so thorough and so
relentless that it is difficult to imagine anybody reading it and coming away unconvinced by the lawfulness and usefulness of capital punishment…
Experts on this subject may be
assured that Feser and Bessette have covered every facet with the same
assiduity of a lawyer preparing a Supreme Court brief.
Thursday, July 6, 2017
Capital punishment on the radio (UPDATED)
Joe Bessette
and I will be doing a number of radio interviews in connection with our new
book By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment. Yesterday I appeared on Kresta in the Afternoon, and you can find the interview here. Today I appeared on The Mike Janocik
Show to discuss the theological side of the issue. Joe will appear on the show next week to
discuss the social scientific aspects of the issue.
Many further
radio appearances are scheduled for next week and beyond. Stay tuned.
Sunday, July 2, 2017
Taking Aquinas seriously
At First Things, Connor Grubaugh interviews
me on the subject of Thomas Aquinas and Analytical Thomism.
Tuesday, June 27, 2017
It’s the next open thread
Here is your
latest opportunity to converse about topics that have not arisen in the course
of other combox discussions at this here blog.
From neo-Kantianism to neo-conservatism, from mortal sin to imported gin,
from the dubia cardinals to the Doobie Brothers – discuss whatever you like,
within reason. Keep it civil, but for
once you needn’t keep it on topic.
Fr. Z on By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed
The esteemed
Fr. John Zuhlsdorf kindly calls
his readers’ attention to By
Man Shall His Blood Be Shed: A Catholic Defense of Capital Punishment,
my new book co-written with Joseph Bessette.
Fr. Z writes:
Anything written by Edward Feser is
reliable and worth time… This is a good book for the strong reader, student of
Catholic moral and social teaching, seminarians and clerics.
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