
Hello as January turns to February,
As a history major, as a person who studied philosophy at all levels in higher education, as a person with both a background immersed in the liberal arts and theology, I find daily life as simultaneously predictable and no, something fascinating and yet that often creates apprehension. As my trips around the sun multiply, the reality of patterns, of our human limitation, and yes, our frailty becomes more apparent. The adages and cliches generally used seem more like truisms than simplistic sound bites. And yet, from a philosophical perspective, do we have any empirical evidence that we can change? Are we subjected to a sort of rationalism that will appropriately deduce what we should do? As I age, and having spent semesters studying philosophy, I appreciate the thoughts of John Locke (and particularly his Second Treatise on Civil Government) and certainly Descartes’ cogito ergo sum touched my own core the first time I heard it.
So am I (and I am aware of the lack of parallel structure here, so forgive me) a rationalist or empiricist? Do I believe my essence is tangible because I can think of it or is it through the daily events of life? Even as I write this I am unsure, or more accurately, I do not cleanly fall in either camp. I told my students regularly that God (which is also an issue for many philosophical stances) gave them a brain to do more than hold their ears apart. So certainly there is a rational element to who I am. And I believe that experience affects how we understand or believe our reality. David Hume’s argument that we are always prompted by passion (a simplification of Hume’s position) and reason is a slave to passion; additionally Hume argues that any rational sense of causation is impossible because it requires inductive reasoning, and connecting to a pattern of the future is a metaphysical presupposition that cannot be managed. All of this creates a plethora of issues when I ponder both my thoughts and experiences of our present world. As I struggled with my figuring out where I am in that rationalism/empiricism continuum, I reached out to my former brilliant colleague and philosopher. She confirmed what I suspected that I am at the most base level and empiricist, that my experience creates the base foundation of how I interpret what I see, feel, or what is necessary for me to feel comfortable or grounded.
It could be argued, and some will certainly assert, that such an examination is esoteric if they are hoping to be kind. Some might accuse me of something less appreciative. I remember a convocation at Luther Northwestern Seminary when I was a student there. The yearly Winter Convocation was held, primarily as a way for parish pastors to come back and participate in theological renewal, something important if a pastor is to offer strong biblical preaching, thoughtful pastoral leadership to their congregants, and efficacious pastor care to those who are struggling with life and faith. The main speaker for the convocation’s central worship service was a systematics professor, a person from whom I had taken classes, and a brilliant theological mind who was capable of taking profoundly complex concepts and making them understandable. However in their homily, their sermon, to the packed chapel of students and parish pastors, they spoke on such an elevated level that little they said was something anyone might take with them back to their dorm, their refectory conversations, or their home parish. This was unfortunate, and the only reason I could imagine for such an obtuse delivery was their Doctor Father (e.g. the person chairing their dissertation) was in the audience. My New Testament professor, and again a brilliant theological mind in their own right queried me afterwards about my thoughts. He was the person who pushed me harder than anyone in my time in St. Paul. He inquired (and I can still hear his voice), “So Martin, what did you think?” Knowing him as I did, he expected candor, and I responded, “That was some serious intellectual masturbation.” He smiled and replied, “Indeed.”
My struggle with understanding my stance on the question of who I am from a philosophical basic is two fold: what allows me, compels me to respond to what I see around me? From where do those thoughts, those responses begin, originate? And how do those thoughts, responses, affect my understanding both of myself and of others. By extension, it obliges me, if you will, it requires me to examine the society in which we live. How is it we both individually and collectively determine what we value? How is what we believe or say we value illustrated by what we do? As I have written today (and this post, while occurring within a 24 hour period, was not at one sitting, which is something I am sometimes asked). As someone who seems to believe they have an empirical leaning, I would like to believe we have a more likely explanation for some of our individual or collective choices, but at the moment, I am not sure that is what I see or feel. As a person just recently turned 70, I was barely entering high school in 1970 when the confrontation between members of the Ohio National Guard and students at Kent State University occurred. While I watched the aftermath on television as many did, I was not old enough to understand all the issues. Of course, the music of Neil Young would become a rallying call or cry for many, including my older brother. Experiencing the tenor of the country concerning Vietnam and how its reality occupied the evening news at our dinner tables, the consequences were far ranging. President Johnson would choose to not run for President again, and the violence of both those against the war or those struggling for equality on other levels (the dual assassinations of MLK and RFK within the same Spring of 1968) would rock American in a level perhaps not experienced for a century. I often hear that the national response to Vietnam or to the watershed year of 68 happened because people were different then. Is that true? To some degree, of course, because America’s stance and role in the world was still being determined. Now a half century later, it seems the parallels in response to what 1970 Kent State and 2025/26 in South Minneapolis (and across Minnesota or the country) might be instructive. In spite of the many changes in the last half century (e.g. from personal computers to cell phones and now AI, the shift in societal norms, the change in family size, the significant decrease in religious affiliation, the shrinking middle class, or seemingly oxymoronic relationship in political polarization and a more accepting attitude of racial diversity), when the reaction of many toward a federal government, which has arguably overstepped its legal authority is very similar. Likewise, while many are a wee young to remember, there was even then a conservative support of the government’s involvement in SE Asia. It seems the rural/urban divide in this country is part of who we are. It returns me to the question I posed to myself? What is the basis for my decisions and my positions on many of the thorny questions that confront us? As someone from NW Iowa, and albeit a larger city, I do not believe I grew up urban. What cements our foundational decision making? It is location, economics, time in history, religion, or something else? I guess I will continue to ponder. The picture is my graduation picture; I was 16 when it was taken. The video below is Neil Young’s incredible song written in response to Kent State. Thank you for the comments, the likes, and taking time to interact with me.
Thank you for reading,
Michael










