.
. . “Are you playing with me,” I asked, “weaving arguments as a labyrinth out
of which I shall find no way? You may enter a labyrinth by the way by which you
may come forth; come now forth by the way you have gone in. Or are you folding
your reason in some wondrous circle of divine simplicity?
“A
little while ago you started from happiness, and said that happiness was the
highest good; and you showed how that rested in the highest Deity.
“And
you reasoned that God too was the highest good, and the fullest happiness; and
you allowed, as though granting a slight gift, that none could be happy except
such as were similarly divine.
“Again,
you said that the essence of God and of happiness was identical with the very
form of good; and that this alone was good which was sought by all nature.
“And
you argued, too, that God guided this universe by the helm of goodness; and
that all creatures with free will obeyed this guidance, and that there was no
such thing as natural evil; and all these things you developed by no help from
without, but by homely and internal proofs, each gaining its credence from that
which went before it.”
Then
she answered, “I was not mocking you. We have worked out the greatest of all
matters by the grace of God, to whom we prayed. For the form of the divine essence
is such that it is not diffused without, nor receives anything into itself from
without.
“But
as Parmenides says of it, ‘It is a mass well rounded upon all sides.’ But if
you examine it with reasoning, sought for not externally but by lying within
the sphere of the very thing we are handling, you will not wonder at what you
have learnt on Plato's authority, that our language must be akin to the
subjects of which we speak.”
—from
Book 3, Prose 12
It has
surely happened to all of us, that sense that we though we knew exactly where
we were going, but somehow ended up in quite a different place. I have often
found myself pointed in an unexpected direction, whether I am trying to make my
way through a new town, or whether I am trying to find the meaning in something
that baffles me.
Boethius
offers quite a handy summation of Lady Philosophy’s argument, and how it has
proceeded, step by step, appealing not to any fantastical imaginings but to
sound reason. It all started with a deep concern that life was quite unfair, a
desperate question about why good people seem to suffer, and bad people seem to
triumph.
We will
only be able to make some sense of misery if we first understand the true
nature of happiness, and we will only approach happiness if we understand the
greatest good, that which leaves nothing else to be desired.
We turn
to all sorts of incomplete goods, and we then find ourselves quite
dissatisfied, because we have not looked to the Divine source of all things, that
which is itself perfect Being, as that which is the ultimate measure of
happiness.
We then
begin to see that all things move and change by participation with this
Absolute, and that nothing can be beyond its power. If God is complete being,
and therefore complete goodness, then evil is as nothing to it.
And here
is where Boethius must feel that he has been spun around, that he has found
himself somewhere he never expected to be. I feel it myself, because my first
reaction to hearing that nothing in nature is really evil is to do a double
take. You must be joking! What am I now to make of all that pain, all the
suffering, and all that injustice I have faced throughout my life? Are you now
telling me it isn’t even real?
If I am
to fall back only into an emotional response, then I might well just wave my
hand, shake my head, and walk away. After all those careful rational stages,
this now seems absurd.
But no,
it is not a joke, it is not a trick, it is not a dismissal of how our lives so
often feel. Just as before, we must understand precisely how we are using
certain terms, and how we can build connections between seemingly separate
things. The language of philosophy here may confuse us at first, but it begins
to come together when we learn how all things work together, as part of a
seamless and balanced whole, the purpose of one thing becoming clear through
its relationship to the purpose of all things.
After
all, it is much easier to navigate the way though a labyrinth, if one can look
at it from above.
Lady
Philosophy has asked us precisely what we mean by happiness, and precisely what
we mean by good, and precisely what we mean by God. Now she is also asking us
precisely what we mean by evil.
Earlier,
we did not understand why created things were only relative goods, because we
were not looking to the absolute good from which they flow. Earlier, we did not
understand that the Divine was not subject to the limitations and divisions,
because we were only looking at the effects instead of the cause. Now we need
to work on uncovering the relationship between our own feelings of loss and the
problem of evil.
Is evil
ever a “thing” at all, and are we giving to it some sort of positive existence
that it can never possess? What could it possible mean to say that evil is a
“no thing”?
Written in 10/2015
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