The Fourth Heaven

"The Fourth Heaven" is a reference to the Divine Comedy, by Dante Alighieri. In "Paradiso" (Cantos X-XIV), the Fourth Heaven is the sphere of the Theologians and Fathers of the Church. I would not presume to place myself on the same level as those greats, but I am interested in philosophy and theology; so the reference fits. I started this blog back in 2005 and it has basically served as a repository for my thoughts and musings on a wide variety of topics.

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Location: Riverside, California, United States

I am currently a graduate student in philosophy, doing research on theories of moral motivation and moral reasons. I'm also interested in topics in the philosophy of science--especially theories of explanation--and would like to become better acquainted with the writings of Kierkegaard, Husserl, and Heidegger. I am currently a member of the Free Methodist Church, have a broadly Evangelical Christian background, and am learning to better appreciate that tradition and heritage. I have a growing interest in historical and systematic theology (especially the doctrine of the Trinity and soteriology) and church history. I'm always thrilled when I get the chance to teach or preach. I like drawing, painting, and calligraphy. I really enjoy Victorian novels and I think "Middlemarch" is my favorite. I'm working on relearning how to be a really thoughtful and perceptive reader. I enjoy hiking and weight training, the "Marx Brothers", and "Pinky and the Brain".

Saturday, December 31, 2005

2005 - 18: Tea!

Hurray for Christmas and Hurray for Tea!

My relatives, David and Callista, got me a wonderful little teapot for Christmas. And Joan and Dan and little David got me an electric kettle. I was so ecstatic to receive both (a point that may seem peculiar to those who either lack a proper appreciation for the beverage or who are unacquainted with my own eccentricities--ha ha!). Each will be put to good use in the course of the coming semester and will, doubtless, assist in the advancement of what may one day develop into a full-blown 'hobby' or, what some might already call, a 'peculiar obsession'. I am so excited.

I received the letter from APU Housing notifying me that I will be living with Kevin and Carlos in Bowles, West Court, Apartment 01 for Spring 2006. Thank goodness that all went through without complication.

I still have not done as much reading and writing as I would like, but these weeks do continue to be full and enjoyable. I continue to hope that I can both start and finish Virgil's Aeneid before break ends.

On Sunday, I go out to Colorado Blvd. in Pasadena with many of my friends for the Rose Parade (on Monday). I wish you all a very Happy New Year!

God bless,

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Oxford 17: Returned

Well, friends,
My time at Oxford has come to an end.

Unfortunately the jet lag has not.
I returned last Wednesday (14 December 2005) and, a week later, 6:00 PM still finds me barely able to keep my eyes open.

My time in Oxford was altogether phenomenal. And I am looking forward to applying and developing what I’ve already learned in future coursework--specifically, Philosophy of Religion and Worldviews (Senior Seminar) in Spring 2006.

I’ve already been able to visit with friends and relatives and am looking forward to more of that in the coming weeks. Yesterday I visited with many of my uncles and aunts on my mom’s side of the family. For those acquainted with the reference, I can now say that I’ve been to Pink’s of Hollywood. And the rest of our time was great too.

Today’s highlight--I went to the Norton Simon Museum with Melissa. That was an absolute joy and pleasure. My visits to the Ashmolean, in particular, in Oxford have reawakened a desire in me to explore art and the history of art. Everything from the Fifteenth to the Eighteenth Century--I love it and want to learn more about it. Hanging out with Melissa is very cool.

So this ends the Oxford series. It’s been fun. I’ve met new people, made new friends, gained new experiences, learned new things, grown in new ways,...

And it’s just going to get better from here.

Praise God!
Thank you, Lord Jesus!

Merry Christmas to you all!

Monday, December 12, 2005

Oxford 16: Reflection 07, Philosophy: "Taste and See"

What a day! My time at Oxford is rapidly drawing to an end. Today, APU and OSAP hosted a Symposium for all the study-abroad students at the University Church of St. Mary the Virgin. We met in the Old Library on the second story of that church where, in times past, such as John Wesley, John Henry Newman, and C.S. Lewis (The Weight of Glory), preached and spoke. Each student gave a short presentation on the topic of his or her primary tutorial.

I have included the material from my presentation at the end of this entry. The material was drawn, principally, from my eighth and last paper, entitled "Taste and See" for my primary tutorial on Integrating Philosophy and Theology with the Revd. Dr. Harriet Harris of Wadham College. It is a summary work, but, as with all my postings, I welcome questions and critiques.

I also won the 'Patricia S. Anderson Award' - in Recognition of Excellence in Researching and Writing the Oxford Essay for the British History, Culture, and Society Lecture Course. Yay! My award included £75 cash. My paper was entitled: "A Corpuscularian Account of the Seventeenth Century English Church" (subtitle: "the Seventeenth Century English Chuch, John Locke, and the Essay Concerning Human Understanding").

I look forward to seeing my family in two days, seeing my APU friends in three days, and visiting with friends and relatives over Christmas break.
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Presented at the Student Symposium, sponsored by APU and OSAP, at the University Church of St. Mary the Virgin on Monday, 12 December 2005:

The concept and criteria of justified belief furnish a valuable point of intersection between philosophy, particularly epistemology, and Christian theology. When it comes to questions of faith and doctrine, we want to know that our beliefs are justified—correct, or reasonable; that the content of our beliefs are, in fact, True. But the classical system of Foundationalist justification that we have inherited from the Seventeenth Century Enlightenment, with its emphasis on objectivity, in particular, is, I think, problematic.

In this presentation I would like to offer two brief critiques of objectivity and encourage you to consider an alternative approach—an approach both new and old—to Truth and certainty with respect to belief.

In the first place, since the Seventeenth Century, genuine objectivity has proven elusive. As much as we may try to divest ourselves of every bias, every presupposition, every prejudice, we continue to find that even our most raw and primitive sensations and our most basic reasoning involve and are influenced by a host of preexisting mental and psychological categories. When we enter a crowded room or look at a picture, before we even get a chance to think, our mind begins to sort through the torrent of sensory information that we receive so that we focus on one thing rather than another, our attention is directed in particular directions and toward particular things. When we employ our reason, for example, in interpreting Scripture; though we are always, I hope, trying to find the most accurate, correct, and True interpretation, we regularly find that a new piece of information or some life experience can radically alter our understanding of a given passage. More and more, philosophers have come to realize that we cannot escape the web of structures and categories that we bring to our most basic reasoning.

The second problem of ‘objectivity’, for the Christian in particular, has to do with its implicit assumption that there is some ‘objective’ reality beyond God from which one can metaphorically stand and evaluate God, on the one hand, and all the various worldviews, on the other. The problem comes in that as soon as you get past God or beyond God, that’s just when you lose God entirely—that is, the transcendent God of Christianity who is all-encompassing, omnipotent, and omnipresent, who is over all and through all and in all, who is absolutely and inextricably bound up with all of our universe as both its creator and sustainer. As soon as one gets past God to some ideal ‘mind-independent reality’ in an attempt to evaluate the ‘truth’ of Christianity, you lose the very truth that you were trying to reach—it is negated before you even begin.

And this isn’t just a problem for Christianity, but for any worldview. Each operates on its own terms and premises; each lives or dies according to the level of its own internal consistency.

So where does this leave us if the ‘objective’ approach proves impracticable as it seems it has? We want Truth, we want to know whether our beliefs are justified, whether they reflect reality. It seems, that if we cannot effectively evaluate a belief system or worldview from the outside, perhaps we ought to evaluate it from the inside. This approach is, in part reflected in the contemporary movement in virtue epistemology; with respect to Christianity, it also belongs to a much older, pre-Enlightenment tradition, as exemplified by such as St. Anselm and St. Thomas Aquinas. And it is, I think, far more consistent with the teachings of Jesus and the Apostles, who did not call us to think objectively, to divest ourselves of prejudice and bias, presupposition and prior assumption, to become pure and, by implication, void; rather, they called us to follow Jesus, to put on the mind of Christ, to see the world from Christ’s perspective, if you will, to adopt Jesus’ biases, prejudices, and presuppositions.

In this view, Bible study, prayer, church, discipline, and moral living, cease to be about just studying, and petitioning, and singing songs together, and doing the right thing—they become training—preparation for a certain kind of life and growth into a certain kind of person. Some of you will recognize this theme from our discussions of virtue. Part of becoming a certain kind of person involves thinking in a certain kind of way—and what epistemologists are realizing is that thinking either wisely or rightly or correctly doesn’t come naturally. Take the example of the child who is ‘forced’ to take music lessons and doesn’t want to, and would rather play outside, and avoids practice, and dreads lessons, and doesn’t understand why mom and dad are making him or her do this and thinks its stupid, and generally doesn’t see the point of it all—but who discovers in later life, maybe not ten or fifteen years later, that mom and dad were right. And wishes that they had taken more initiative, had applied themselves more diligently, had appreciated and understood how truly valuable those lessons were.

Wisdom and right thinking and the ability to discern and recognize truth don’t belong to us by birthright as those of the Seventeenth-Century Enlightenment thought. Rather they are skills which we must cultivate, train in, exercise, and practice, skills that develop over time and with experience. This is important to realize for philosophy—it raises important questions in epistemology and psychology about the categories that we bring to our observation and reason, about the malleability and changeability of those categories. It is important for us and our Christian faith.

Is your faith justified? Are you believing in something that’s real and true? If you want to find the answers, don’t step back, away from, and out of your faith. There is no ‘objective’ truth to be found, out there. But there is God’s truth in here and that’s the direction to go for—deeper in; toward putting on the mind of Christ, toward being transformed by the renewing of your mind so that you may, in the words of the Psalmist, “taste and see that the Lord is good.”
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Blessings, all,

Thursday, December 08, 2005

Oxford 15: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

Being able to see films before everybody else is only fun if you're unscrupulous about giving away key plot points and spoiling the endings for your friends. Fortunately for you, I am not thusly unscrupulous. But I did see Narnia at 3:00 PM Greenwich Mean Time, which is 7:00 AM Pacific Standard Time--on Thursday, 08 December 2005, no less.

Of course, I am traditionally very critical of cinematizations (that is, I tend to analyze them very critically). It gets on my dad's nerves.

*Sigh. So I will say nothing. Nothing. Nothing.

You'll just have to see the film for yourself and formulate your own opinions.

...which is probably what you wanted to begin with.

...your welcome.

Saturday, December 03, 2005

Oxford 14: Miscellany

Funny thing happened on Thursday (01 December 2005) at my Seminar. Each of the seven students in the seminar has had to give a presentation on one of C.S. Lewis’s major works and I was presenting on Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer. My presentation covered a variety of themes including prayer, liturgiology, worship, God’s nature, and virtue. I intentionally avoided dwelling on the topic of liturgiology because it is a sensitive issue and I didn’t want my presentation to degenerate into an exposition of my personal views on contemporary worship services. So I was very startled when Dr. Harris zeroed in on the issue of liturgiology and began by explaining to the students, “Luis is a traditionalist when it comes to liturgy and the church.”

I couldn’t recall ever having talked with her about the contemporary church; and I had never before used that particular term to describe my position, though it certainly fit. And why was she talking about my views? Could she possibly have gleaned that detail from my other writings? I wondered, Were my beliefs really that transparent?

I was about to interrupt her but, thankfully, caught myself just in time. It’s probably obvious to you, and finally became apparent to me—she hadn’t said, “Luis is a traditionalist.” She had said, “Lewis is a traditionalist.”

Hey, I may not be fast, but I was fast enough to prevent my being made a fool of. That’s why I’m sharing this with everyone now.
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I can handle cold weather and rain and wind and overcast skies—that’s all good. But this business of the sun setting before 4:00 PM; I don’t know about that. When I leave the Bodleian library at 5:00 PM and it looks like its after 10:00 and I feel like I should be going beddy-bye. Goodness gracious!—these higher latitudes are growing intolerable.

Hey—does my astronomy-buff cousin David know why the sun sets earlier in the Northern hemisphere during winter? I’ll bet he does; and if not, he’ll learn it double-quick.
Hi, Uncle Dan! Hi, Aunty Joanie! Hi, David!
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Thanksgiving (24 November 2005) was wonderful. Turkey and stuffing and mashed potatoes and cranberries and casseroles and sweet-breads and pies (and pies and more pies and more pies). Positively delightful. Christy and I coordinated on the decorations; they were a smashing success.

On Sunday (27 November 2005) I went to Bath with Brooke and Joannie and Kate and B.J. Good times!
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On Thursday (01 December 2005) I performed with the New College Wykeham Singers; that was a lot of fun. About a dozen friends were in attendance—yay!

I shared music with an Oxford first-year, named James. He’s a theology major whose working in a program headed by Ravi Zacharias.

But here’s the kicker—his appearance totally reminded me of Kevin (APU-Kevin, that is). The goatee, the hair. And I know that if Kevin sang and was there, he would have been cracking jokes left and right. One of our pieces—“Rejoice in the Lamb” by Benjamin Britten—is an absolutely marvelous piece, fantastic polyphony and so much fun to sing, but it’s got the most bizarre lyrics. In the middle solo section the soprano sings (and keep in mind, this is a sacred piece):

_For I will consider my cat Jeoffry.
_For he is the servant of the living God.
_Duly and daily serving him.

_For I am possessed of a cat,
_Surpassing in beauty,
_From whom I take occasion
_To bless Almighty God.

And the alto follows:

_For the Mouse is a creature
_Of great personal valour.
_For this is a true case—
_Cat takes female mouse,
_Male mouse will not depart,
_But stands threat’ning and daring.

Huh!?! Maybe there is a profound allegory or symbolism attached to these words, but I don’t get it. Anyhow, I knew that Kevin would appreciate that and would help me to appreciate it.
Hi to all my APU friends. I miss you. Thank you to those who sent me e-mails.
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My birthday (02 December 2005) was cool, too. I did spend most of it in the Bodleian (work and responsibilities don’t disappear just because…), but that was alright because I’m really enjoying and interested in my last paper.
In the evening I decided to go down to the New College Christmas Bop. I stayed for about a half-hour. I always forget what insufferable affairs these school dances can be. Actually, I expect if I stayed at one long enough I could get into it. And it’s certainly my loss for failing to appreciate or fully enjoy them. (Some commented that this was an unusually ‘rowdy’ one, too. Not at all exemplary of the majority.)
Anyhow, I did get my first kabab from one of the Oxford street-vendors that night, so that was good. Then I hung out with Joannie and Kate for the rest of the evening. Hurray for birthdays!
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Oh, last entry in my critical The Narnia Chronicles (Film) series. Apparently the fault lies not with the story-writers but with the advertising department. I’ve been told that in Edmund’s first encounter with the White Witch, her sleigh is being pulled, appropriately by reindeer. And that’s all I’ll say on that.
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Most of my socks have gaping holes in the heel. I find this to be amusing. It comes of all the walking I do. Fortunately it is my toes and not my heels that get cold.
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One more paper—due Monday. Then a time of rest. Sort of. I really ought to work out a synthesis of my work in philosophy and theology. I’ve absolutely loved that course. Survey courses are okay, but it is so very illuminating to approach a time period or movement in history from the perspective of a particular discipline. Philosophy, theology, language, politics, science, art, you-name-it. Pick a period in history and examine the movements and impact on that particular discipline; it’s remarkable when things come into focus.
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Oh, and here are pictures of me and my Leibnizian philosophy tutor, Kurt Ballstadt, in John Welsey's room at Lincoln College.