Dear Stephen

I hope you are right. But I do not think we have a hundred years. That is also 
why I think Nicolescu's work is important.

           Best
                                  Søren

Fra: Stephen C. Rose [mailto:[email protected]]
Sendt: 16. juni 2014 15:43
Til: Søren Brier
Cc: Catherine Legg; Gary Richmond; [email protected]; [email protected]
Emne: Re: [PEIRCE-L] De Waal seminar chapter 9, section on God, science and 
religion: text 1

This gets at the significance of Peirce for theology and to the problem facing 
all religions as the world becomes increasingly oriented to the Peircean 
perspectives that you mention. It will probably take more than a century for 
the change to sink in but it will happen simply because it corresponds with 
thoughts that are becoming more and more conscious.

@stephencrose<https://twitter.com/stephencrose>

On Mon, Jun 16, 2014 at 9:34 AM, Søren Brier 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear Cathy

Thank you for your appreciation of my work. It is heartwarming coming from such 
a good philosopher ! The references came from the fact that a lot of my writing 
was based on those two article that was not accepted by the referees of the 
Centennial conference, probably because this is a "dangerous area" in Peirce's 
philosophy for many analytically trained philosophers.

There is no doubt that Peirce's evolutionary process view  combined with his 
fallibilism adds something to both Buddhism and Christianity as also Hartshorne 
see it in his development of a process theology. Thus evolution  is  God's way 
of creating the world. The problem with this understanding for most ordinary 
Christians is that it would demand a change in their concept of God  to 
Peirce's: God is real but does not exists and therefore is not conscious and 
cannot have a will based on  a personhood as it is understood by most Theists. 
Therefore the whole creationist concept of a conscious plan in the creation of 
the world would  collapses and only Peirce's synechist and thycistic semiotic 
Agapism remains. As in evolutionary epistemology there is a deep connection 
between the process of human cognition , ecology and evolution in the form of 
semiosis' combination of chance, love and logic. John Archibald Wheeler's "it 
from bit participatory universe" is the closest a modern philosophical 
physicist has come to Peirce's vision. But as most physicist Wheeler is basing 
his view on an information theoretical view and fails on establishing the 
reflective phenomenological basis, which that is so foundational to Peirce's 
pragmaticist semiotics and view of the "natural light of reasoning".

J.A. Wheeler (1990). "Information, physics, Quantum: The search for links", pp. 
3-29 in  W.H. Zurek (Ed.). Complexity, entropy and the physics of information. 
Vol. VIII in Santa Fe Institute, Studies in the Sciences of complexity. Addison 
Wesley publishing Company.

Best

                Søren

Fra: Catherine Legg [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sendt: 16. juni 2014 07:09
Til: Søren Brier; Gary Richmond; [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Emne: RE: [PEIRCE-L] De Waal seminar chapter 9, section on God, science and 
religion: text 1

Hi all,

I'm very behind on this thread, but have been reading and enjoying it. I just 
haven't had the chance to pull my thoughts together enough to post.

First of all, a big thank you to Søren for starting us off with such 
wonderfully erudite postings - even including bibliographies which are a 
resource for all of us to keep and refer to in the future!

I have a bit of background knowledge of world religion and certain spiritual 
traditions, but have certainly learned quite a bit more through this thread - 
about key ideas in Buddhism, Dogen, St John of the Cross, and more.

Totally agree with you Søren about the way the phenomenological tradition has 
done useful ground work for this area of philosophy but is still regarded with 
suspicion by the 'mainstream'.

Thank you to those (Gary R, Gary F and Søren spring to mind) who were willing 
to describe a little of their own mystical (or otherwise spiritual) experiences 
in this public forum. This kind of candour and trust is what makes philosophy a 
truly enriching exercise, and peirce-l a valuable forum.

Gary F I was very interested in the way you highlighted the role of the 
*natural light of reason* in Peirce's philosophy as giving him a distinctive 
take on these questions. I'm very interested in that as I'm still pursuing 
iconic signification as a kind of direct 'seeing' to break the deadlock of 
pointless attempts at discursive explanations in current epistemology.

Eugene I loved what you said about 'naturalistic' philosophy relying on a 
"subnatural conception of nature". Very good.

I wonder if the thread has paid enough attention to what Peirce was saying in 
some of the quotes that were posted about his cosmology being *hyperbolic* 
(i.e. evolutionary), and the mode of evolution being jumping into the fray of 
life and testing hypotheses. This would distinguish Peirce's views from both 
Christianity and Buddhism wouldn't it?

Cheers, Cathy

From: Søren Brier [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: Tuesday, 3 June 2014 5:44 a.m.
To: Stephen C. Rose; Steven Ericsson-Zenith
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: SV: [PEIRCE-L] De Waal seminar chapter 9, section on God, science and 
religion: text 1

Dear Stev(ph)en and list

About the meaning of spirituality. I am presently reading Basarab Nicolescu 
(2014): From modernity to Cosmodernity: Science, Culture and Spirituality

On p. 13 here expressed the transcultural experience of reality in a very 
eloquent way, that I find very close to Peirce pure Zero or Tohu va Bohu and 
Nargajuna's emptiness from which all things co-arise:

"The perception of the transcultural is, first of all, an experience, because 
it concerns the silence of different actualizations. The space between the 
levels of reality is the space of this silence. It is the equivalent, in 
interior space, of what is called the quantum vacuum in exterior space. It is a 
full silence, structured in levels. There are as many levels of silences as 
there are correlations between levels of perception and levels of reality. And 
beyond all these levels of silence, there is another quality of silence, that 
place-without-place that the poet Michel Casmus calls "our luminous ignorance". 
This nucleus of silence appears to us as an unknowable because it is the 
unfathomable well of knowledge, but this unknowable is luminous because it 
illuminates the very structure of knowledge. The levels of silence and the 
levels of our luminous ignorance determine our lucidity."

Best

                     Søren

Fra: Stephen C. Rose [mailto:[email protected]]
Sendt: 1. juni 2014 20:16
Til: Steven Ericsson-Zenith
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Emne: Re: [PEIRCE-L] De Waal seminar chapter 9, section on God, science and 
religion: text 1

Steven - Hope your hospital stay has good results.

It's funny to think of my resonance with Peirce in light of the fact of my 
seminary training and lifelong work as both a representative and critic of the 
church. I see little or no distinction between Peirce's thinking as a whole and 
his thinking that explicitly relates to theology and religion. To make this 
distinction sets him up for the charges you levy. I am not sure on what basis 
your general observations on the relative spiritualities within the Peirce 
family rest, but I tend to take them as less than substantiated by evidence. I 
could be wrong. But I have studies some in the areas of American and English 
universalism and its morphing into the less interesting (to me) and more 
predictable unitarianism. I think CSP may have more affinity with the earliest 
universalists and that these have some odd but not insignificant ties to some 
views of the late Karl Barth and even to Paul. CSP reserves great acidity for 
what he regards as a failing of John, the assumed author of the Fourth Gospel, 
and perhaps also of the Book of Revelation. I think Peirce is foundational in 
any discussion of holism, moving past Snow, and getting to some understanding 
of Christianity past the fundamentalist culture religion that has largely 
supplanted both neo-orthodoxy and liberalism. Best, S

@stephencrose<https://twitter.com/stephencrose>

On Sun, Jun 1, 2014 at 1:56 PM, Steven Ericsson-Zenith 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Dear Soren,

My apologizes for the delayed response (I am hospitalized currently). My 
comment deserves clarification as Soren suggests.

In brief, Charles' really should not be considered seriously with respect to 
social religion and his relationship with formal religion except through his 
Neglected Agument (yet another advocacy of his semiotic).  God certainly is not 
something he  "worships" in any traditional sense and his advocacy of "worship" 
is not at all religious ( but painfully manipulative and social). His father 
and brother are different and more holistic in this regard.  If there is a 
commonreligious thread between  them it is positivism. But Charles, in my view, 
should be dismissed.

At some point Stanford will make my January talk on this subject available.

Steven





On Saturday, May 31, 2014, Søren Brier <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:
Dear Steven

It is obvious not so to me. So, would you care to explain us why you think so? 
That would be an interesting contribution to our discussion. I have long felt 
that although we in many ways were on the same track, there were also some deep 
disagreement on basic interpretations. But I have not been able to put my 
finger on it. Maybe you can?

Cheers

                       Søren

Fra: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] På vegne af Steven Ericsson-Zenith
Sendt: 31. maj 2014 01:19
Til: Søren Brier
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; Kathrine Elizabeth 
Lorena Johansson; Claudia Jacques 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>); Elisabeth Sørup; 
Seth Miller; Leslie Combs
Emne: Re: [PEIRCE-L] De Waal seminar chapter 9, section on God, science and 
religion: text 1

Contradictory and I doubt Peircean.

Steven


On Monday, May 19, 2014, Søren Brier <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:
1. God is real but does not exist: so the best way to worship him is through 
the religion of science



I thought this sums up nicely Section 9.6 in Kees' book and was a good way to 
start the discussion of: God, science and religion. Peirce's theory of the 
relation between science and religion is one of the most controversial aspects 
of his pragmaticist semiotics  only second to his evolutionary objective 
idealism influenced by Schelling (Niemoczynski  and Ejsing) and based on  his 
version of Duns Scotus' extreme scholastic realism, which Kees' did an 
exemplary presentation of as well. Peirce's view of religion and how science is 
deeply connected to it in a way that differs from what any other philosopher 
has suggested except Whitehead's process philosophy, but there are also 
important differences here.



I have no quarrels with Kees' exemplary understandable formulations in the 
short space he has. That leaves opportunity for us to discuss all the 
interesting aspects  he left out like Peirce's Panentheism (Michael Raposa , 
Clayton and Peacock), his almost Neo-Platonist (Kelly Parker 
http://agora.phi.gvsu.edu/kap/Neoplatonism/csp-plot.html )  metaphysics of 
emptiness or Tohu va Bohu  (see also Parker) and ongoing  creation in his 
process view, and from this basic idea of  emptiness ( that is also 
foundational to Nargajuna's Buddhism of the middle way ) a connection to 
Buddhism. This was encouraging Peirce to see Buddhism and Christianity in their 
purest mystical forms integrated into an agapistic Buddhisto-Christian process 
view of God. Brent mentions an unsent letter from Peirce's hand describing a 
mystical revelation in the second edition of the biography. This idea of 
Buddhisto-Christianity was taken up by Charles Hartshorne - one of the most 
important philosophers of religion and metaphysicians of the twentieth century 
- http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hartshorne/  who also wrote about 
Whitehead's process view of the sacred (see references).

I have collected many of the necessary quotes and interpreted them in this 
article 
http://www.transpersonalstudies.org/ImagesRepository/ijts/Downloads/A%20Peircean%20Panentheist%20Scientific%20Mysticism.pdf
 , and in Brier 2012 below.



Even Peirce's evolutionary objective idealism is too much to swallow for most 
scientists who are not fans of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. So even today it is 
considering a violation of rationality to support an evolutionary process 
objective idealism like Peirce's, which include a phenomenological view. Even 
in the biosemiotic group this is dynamite. We have h


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