#HudHudson's chapter on #omnipresence is really well done and offers a balanced approach, quoting from Thomas Aquinas and Anselm, as well as from Hartshorne, Swinburne, Wierenga and Taliaferro. It also discusses theories of omnipresence that do not think of God as occupying a 1/
space as well as "occupation theories". In discussing the latter, HH refers to Josh Parsons' discussion of relations and location.
He also identifies and discusses six puzzles connected with occupation theories: 2/
—1. The problem of simplicity. How can a simple entity be present in multiple locations? (NB: Easy to answer if you think in terms of #SanskritPhilosophy, think of ātman and ākāśa as being simple and vibhu).
—2. The problem of multilocation. How can sth occupy
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(i.e., be fully present) in two numerically distinct regions? (Again, think of ākāśa for a solution: God would just need to be co-extensive with ākāśa, perhaps?
—3. The problem of containment. Would not God be limited by Their occupying a specific region?
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As for 2, Hudson suggests that this can be solved through the concept of entension (≠extension), as elaborated by Parsons. 'x entends' is defined as follows: "x is an object that is wholly & entirely located at a non-point-sized region r & for each proper subregion of r, r*,
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x is wholly located at r*". (NB: I am yet to read Parsons and I don't know how he justify this possibility).
As for 3., Hudson replies that God's freedom can be safeguarded bc They bear "occupation relations accidentally rather than essentially".
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—4. The problem of timelessness. How can sth occupy a region and be atemporal? (Again, Hudson suggests that this is not too big a problem, bc it could be an accidental rather essential feature of God).
—5. The problem of incorporeality. How can sth occupy a region and fail 7/
to have a body? (Again, Hudson suggests that this might be an accidental and extrinsic characteristic of God, and that also Hartshorne and Swinburne had to compromise even more here, even accepting a form of pantheism)
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—6. The problem of co-location. How can two numerically distinct things each occupy the same regions? (Again, think of ākāśa, ātman etc. for examples of entities that can co-extend over the same region without excluding each other)
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Two more points: At the end, Hudson discusses the individuation principle and wonders whether "necessarily, for any located objects, x and y, x is located at all and only the same regions as y iff x=y". This leads to problems, Hudson says, for Trinitarian Christians. 10/
Within Sanskrit philosophy, no one I know would agree about it, at least not in the case of vibhu entities.
At the beginning, Hudson discusses Anselm's understanding of omnipresence as amounting to "God's sensing or perceiving at each place and time". He also discusses 11/
Thomas's understanding of omnipresence as "a necessary condition of God's causality". In other words, Anselm needs omnipresence to enable omniscience. Thomas needs it to enable omnipotence. However (here EF speaking) they also have passages speaking of the need for God to 12/
"sustain" the world, which seem to speak of something else. 13/
The #Pali Text Society (PTS ) <palitextsociety.org> is seeking to appoint a part-time (25 hs/week) office administrator to take over the management of the PTS office from 1 July 2023.
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The main responsibilities of the position will be the day-to-day management of the PTS office, including the processing of book sales and management of PTS membership. The PTS currently has a small office in Bristol where the officer administrator would be able to work, but 2/
the position would also be suitable for someone wishing to work from home. Please note, however, that the position is only open to those who have the right to live and work in the UK. The salary will be in the range £32,411–£36,333 a year, pro-rata. Letters of application, 3/
A Q concerning eligibility to study a certain philosophy: Let us exclude from the discussion ppl who are doing it for selfish purposes (e.g., ppl engaging w feminist philosophy just to gain "diversity points" on their cv). 1/4
Should only ppl from a certain nation/class (broadly conceived) be eligible to study the texts of said n/c? A practical argument in favour of that would be that this would encourage hires of ppl of such n/c bc a university who wants to offer courses in philosophy X would have 2/4
to hire ppl from n/c X. However, if ppl of n/c X are not hired bc of racism/sexism/…, this is a general problem, and we should encourage more hires of them in whatever field they are specializing, and not just in the philosophy of their own n/c. Should one not want to remove 3/4
I am grateful to Simona Vucu for having recommended to me "The Case of the Animals versus Man Before the King of the Jinn" (10th c.). A few excerpts:
Animals: ``Your vaunted powers of perception & fine discrimination are not unique, for there are animlas with finer senses 1/10
and more precise discrimination. The camel, for example, despite his long legs and neck and the elevation of his head in the air, finds his footing along the most arduous and treacherous pathways in the dark of night, which you could not make out and not one of you could 2/10
see without a lantern, torch, or candle. [\dots] An ass or cow is frequently observed to return to its familiar home when its master has led it away of a path it did not know and left it. Yet there are men who may travel the same road any number of times and still stray from 3/10
Short thread on "Introduction to Philosophy".
My ideal curriculum is the one implemented by Jay Garfield and others and taught by @sutrasandstuff and others, namely a completely non-Eurocentric introductory class.
But, what to do until we get there? 1/
Intro classes are (in the universities I know of) meant both for outsiders who only take 1 class of philosophy & students who will chose philosophy as their major. Thus, the Intro class has at least also the purpose to put students in the position to follow their next classes 2/
Thus, in this sense a completely unconventional Intro class might be risky bc students and professors might resent the fact that by the time they enrolled for, say, "Medieval philosophy" or "Philosophy of language" they did not know about basic names and theories. 3/
Some of my favourite comments from this year's #StudentEvaluations:
—I don't lecture enough: "students talk more than the professor because participation is required"
—I am a good substitute for coffeine: "The professor was always enthusiastic in presenting the material 1/
regardless of the 9am lecture. It helps the student wake up"
—I make them tolerate religion: "As someone who knew nothing abt religion she was able to not only make me understand but to enable me to be able to make good Q on the philosophical aspects of it. The prof was one 2/
of the best I've had in university and she allowed me to thoroughly enjoy a class I thought I would end up hating".
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Ongoing thread on #HansVermeer's 1984 (Skopos Theory explained), on #Translation. Let me start with some of my favourite quotes:
"Language is a system" (p. 19)—>Hence, discussing about how to translate a single word is a misunderstanding of the way language works. 1/
In HV's words: "Simple signs can be combined to form complex signs, e.g. words form sentences, and sentences form texts. A sequence of simple signs is not just a collection of signs but a new sign of higher rank […] The formation of super-signs is language-specific. 2/
A word in one language can correspond to a phrase in another" (p.19).
"Signs delimit, determine, condition and define each other's meanings. Signs form language- and culture-specific fields"(p. 20) 3/