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Selected logical aspects of apophatic theology

Piotr Urbańczyk

PhD thesis in philosophy written under the supervision of Adam Olszewski

@phdthesis{urbanczyk2022wybrane,
  title={Wybrane logiczne aspekty teologii apofatycznej},
  author={Urbańczyk, Piotr},
  year={2022},
  school={Uniwersytet Papieski Jana Pawła II w Krakowie}
}

My thesis explores logical aspects of a peculiar theory of ineffable and unknowable objects. To gain a deeper understanding of my research, I invite you to peruse the abstract or delve into the extended abstract provided below.

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Abtract

The thesis is devoted to three logical aspects of apophatic theology—semantic, epistemic, and order-theoretic—which are presented in the light of three most common interpretations of this doctrine: theology of silence, theological skepticism and Neo-Platonically inspired mysticism. The aim of the study is to argue that the self-referential paradox is an inherent and inalienable property of apophatic theology, at least in the sense defined by the above-mentioned interpretations—self-reference has been diagnosed and identified in each of the logical aspects of apophatic doctrine. It has also been shown that the current attempts to save the apophatic theology from paradoxes should generally be regarded as unsatisfactory. The methods of analytic philosophy are applied. There are 225 bibliographical items used.

Extended abstract

The thesis is devoted to logical analyzes of the theory known as negative or apophatic theology. This doctrine tries to describe God by negation, in terms of what may not be said and known about him. According to apophatic theologians God is so utterly transcendent, so much beyond our imperfect concepts and names, that we must in fact reject all of them in order to release him from the constraints of cramped human categories. Consequently, the full-blooded version of this doctrine portrays God as completely ineffable and unknowable.

This leaves us in a paradoxical situation. Accepting apophatic theology, we clearly contradict ourselves: since we claim that God is ineffable/unknowable we must immediately admit that at least we can say/know something about God—namely that he is ineffable/unknowable.

I investigate three different interpretations of apophatic doctrine highlighting the logical aspects that go along with each one: semantic, epistemic and order-theoretic.

The most prevalent interpretation of negative theology emphasizes the transcendence of God in the context of language. Shortly speaking, this theory claims that God is completely unspeakable, inexpressible, and ineffable. In the first part of my thesis, I reveal that the paradox lying underneath this theory has a self-referential structure characteristic to well-known semantic paradoxes. I also analyze several attempts to save the “theology of silence” from being inconsistent. My analysis suggests that these attempts are rather unsuccessful.

Another interpretation of negative theology shifts emphasis from speech to thoughts and from language to knowledge. Its central claim is that God is utterly unknowable, inconceivable, and incomprehensible. At first glance the “theological skepticism” appears to be the same as (or very similar to) the theology of silence. There are some reasons to believe that at least one of them implies the other. In the second part of the thesis, I argue, however, that they cannot be thought as equivalent. I attempt to support my claims with the arguments form philosophy and cognitive science. I use epistemic modal logic to demonstrate self-referential nature of theological skepticism showing that its formal reconstruction takes the form of well-known epistemic paradoxes: Moore’s problem, the Church-Fitch knowability paradox and so-called knower’s paradox.

It is often emphasized that negative theology is a legacy of Platonic and Neo-Platonic philosophy, at least in the western tradition. This idea is the foundation for the third interpretation of negative theology—as a “Neo-Platonically inspired mysticism”. It provides me with an excuse to describe and discuss a formal reconstruction of this doctrine that utilizes the power set algebra. In the third part of the thesis, I investigate the conditions under which such a structure produces paradox in the sense of Russell’s antinomy.

In my thesis I argue that paradoxical self-reference is an intrinsic and inalienable property of apophatic theology, at least in the sense defined by the above-described interpretations. Nevertheless, this does not mean that formal logic cannot be useful in the analyses of this doctrine. Moreover, I believe that reconstruction of negative theology in terms of formal logical systems can be mutually beneficial.

Keywords

apophatic theology, neoplatonism, antinomy, self-reference, the liar paradox, classical theory of truth, Moore's problem, the Church-Fitch knowability paradox, the knower paradox, classical logic, epistemic logic, intuitionist logic, power set algebra, negation, predication, logical reconstruction, analytic philosophy.