Thursday, October 2, 2025

A Stoic thesis

Combine these two rather Stoic theses:

  1. No one can make the fully virtuous person worse off

  2. Doing what is morally wrong always makes you worse off

and you get:

  1. No one can make the fully virtuous person do what is morally wrong.

It is going to be crucial to this post that (3) includes cases of inculpably doing what is morally wrong. I myself think (1) is false, say for the that Aristotle cites, namely that severe pain makes even the virtous worse off. But nonetheless I want to defend (3).

It may be possible to first destroy a virtuous person’s virtue, and then get them to do what is morally wrong. Hitting someone on the head or brainwashing them can severely damage the psyche in a way that can remove the rational habits that constitute virtue. I do not count this a counterexample to (3), because in this case when the victim performs the wrong action, they have previously lost their virtue.

One might try to rule out the case of head injury and brainwashing by restricting (3) to culpable wrongs, but I don’t want to do that. I want to defend (3) in the case of inculpable wrongs, too.

A consequence of (3) is a fairly strong source incompatibilism about our action. Not only is it that neural manipulation cannot make you perform a free action, but it cannot make you perform an action. This fits well with dualism, but does not require it, because it might be that brain states that constitute acts of will have to have functional characteristics incompatible with outside control.

As a final clarification, I understand “making” as reliable, but not necessarily 100% reliable. Someone with significant free will cannot be 100% reliably made to do wrong, even if they are not virtuous. But at the same time, while a fully virtuous person cannot be reliably tempted away from right action, they might still have significant free will and be able to do wrong, so a temptation might unreliably get them to do wrong. Furthermore, I am thinking of “making” on something like a specific occasion. Thus, perhaps, if you tempt a virtuous person a million times, while restoring their brain to the pre-temptation state between temptations, by the law of large numbers you can expect them to fail at least once.

Let’s think about (3) some more.

Threats aren’t going to reliably get the fully virtuous person do the wrong thing. Sometimes, it is reasonable to bow to a threat. If someone holds a gun to your head and tells you to cover the side of your neighbor’s house with a giant smiley face graffiti, it’s reasonable to go along with it. But morality is reasonable, and where it is reasonable to bow to a threat, doing so is not only not culpable but simply not wrong. Indeed, it would typically be a failure of respect for human life to refuse to paint the graffiti when one’s life is threatened. In cases, however, where it is unreasonable to knuckle under, the fully virtuous person will reliably withstand the threat.

Physical control of another’s body or brain isn’t going to produce morally wrong action, because it doesn’t produce action at all. It is not wrong to kill someone by being pushed off a cliff on top of them, because it’s not an action to fall off a cliff. Similarly, if someone implants a remote control for one’s muscles, even if in the brain, then the resulting muscle spasms are not actions, and hence are not morally wrong actions.

Cases of omissions are interesting. It is easy to make someone fail to do what they promised, say by imprisoning them. If one thinks that such a failure counts as an inculpable wrongdoing, and if (3) is supposed to apply to omissions as well, then we have a counterexample. I do want (3) to apply to omissions. But I think that all that’s morally required by a promise is a reasonable amount of effort—where what counts as reasonable depends on the case. If you promise to come to a party but are in the hospital after a serious accident, it’s not morally required—indeed, it’s morally forbidden—that you rip the IV out of your arm and drag yourself on hands knees to the party. Indeed, (3) is a part of my reason for thinking that promises only require reasonable effort, so this is the first example where I have (3) giving us evidence for a substantive moral thesis. I think something similar is true in the case of commands, legislation and the like. You can’t ask for more than reasonable effort! Asking for more adds insult to injury. The parents whose children starve because the parents were unjustly imprisoned have not done wrong in failing to feed them.

Cases of ignorance are also interesting. If Alice is serving wine to her guests and Bob pours poison in the wine whe she isn’t looking, some might say that Alice has done wrong in poisoning her guests. Certainly, actual-result act utilitarianism implies this. But so much the worse for actual-result act utilitarianism. It is much better to say that Alice has done no wrong, as long as it was reasonable for her to have no suspicion of Bob. Cases of ignorance of through-and-through moral facts, on the other hand, are arguably incompatible with full virtue.

Where I think (3) becomes most interesting is in cases where we have a normative power over what is right or wrong for another to do. Using our normative powers, we can make someone who would otherwise have done wrong not be doing wrong. There is a story of a hasid whose house is being robbed, and when the thief is carrying his property away, the hasid yells: “I renounce my property rights.” In doing so, the hasid releases the thief from the duties of restitution, and makes it be the case that the thief is not sinning by continuing to carry the goods away.

Are there cases where we can use our normative powers to reliably make someone do wrong? Definitely. You can know that someone under your authority will very likely refuse to follow a certain command, and you can nonetheless issue the command. But this is obviously a case of someone who is lacking full virtue.

I think the best bet for using our normative powers to reliably make someone perfectly virtuous do wrong is when our exercise of normative powers creates a duty but does so in a way that the perfectly virtuous person does not know about. For instance, one might command the fully virtuous person in circumstances where they will likely not hear the command. Or one might pass legislation that they won’t know about. There are two ways to defend (3) in these cases. The first is to have a communication condition on commands and legislation—they are only morally binding when person subject to them either is informed about them or ought to be informed about them. The second is to say that all that’s morally required is that one make a reasonable effort to obey commands and laws in general, not that one make a reasonable effort to obey each specific command or law (since if one doesn’t know about a command or law, one doesn’t need to make a reasonable effort to obey it). I somewhat prefer the first option of a communication condition—the vicious lawbreaker does wrong in disobeying a specific law, and not just law in general (though according to James 2:10, they are also doing wrong in disobeying law in general).

In any case, I think (3) puts some significant constraints on the shape of moral obligation and the nature of action, but these constraints seem defensible. Though maybe I am failing to notice some better counterexample.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Existing and existing at a time

If we accept growing block or eternalism as our theory of temporal reality, we have to make a distinction between existing simpliciter (i.e., being in the domain of unrestricted quantifiers) and existing-at-a-time (including tensed existence at the present). To exist at time t is not the same as its being the case at t that one exists simpliciter.

Suppose, for instance, closed-future growing block. Then we can say the following about Bucephalus (circa 355 BC–326 BC):

  1. In 330 BC: Bucephalus exists-in-330-BC.

  2. In 330 BC: Bucephalus exists simpliciter.

  3. In 2025: Bucephalus exists simpliciter.

  4. In 2025: It’s not the case that Bucephalus exists-in-2025.

  5. In 3000 BC: Bucephalus does not exist simpliciter.

  6. In 3000 BC: Bucephalus exists-in-330-BC.

Existence-at-a-time is not really existence—it is just spatiotemporal locatedness. (Of course, we have a grounding problem about how on closed-future growing block facts about the future are grounded, but bracket that.)

Now, on both growing block and eternalism, if something exists-now it exists simpliciter. Could one have a theory on which this inference is denied?

Perhaps Platonism denies it. Only timeless and unchanging things really are. Changing things in time become rather than really are. Similarly, it is said that God said to St Catherine of Siena: “I am he who is and you are she who is not.”

But is there a theory of time on which the inference is denied? I once explored a version of B-theory like that. Now I want to consider a version of A-theory like that.

Consider pastism, on which to exist simpliciter is to exist pastly, and take a version of pastism on which there are moments of time (probably the best version of pastism on offer is one where there are no moments). Suppose t1 is the first moment of Bucephalus’ life. Then on pastism, at t1 Bucephalus doesn’t exist, but Bucephalus exists-at-t1. Is this coherent? It does have this odd consequence. Suppose t1 is also the last moment of time (so Bucephalus exists at exactly one moment). Then Bucephalus exists-at-t1, but it is never the case that Bucephalus exists simpliciter. Still, it’s not clear that a logical contradiction has occurred.

Nonetheless, it does seem absurd to suppose that something exists-now but doesn’t exist, even if it’s not strictly contradictory.

Presentism and B-theory

It’s common to say that presentism entails the A-theory. But that’s not so clear. Suppose that time can pass in the absence of change. Now imagine a world of with a beginning or an end of time, objects, but no change, no temporal parts, and no events except ones that last for all time. In that world, we automatically have a kind of presentism: all the objects and events that exist always exist presently. Yet a B-theorist could accept the possibility of such a world, too: the world need not have a distinguished present moment of time. Thus, a B-theorist could say that A-theory is impossible (say, because of McTaggart’s dubious arguments) but presentism is possible—though contingently false.

We obviously don’t live in such a world. Though Parmenides may have thought he did.

Theism, pantheism, panentheism and cosmopsychism

If God didn’t create anything, pantheism (everything is God), panetheism (everything is in God or is God) and cosmopsychism (the whole of reality is conscious) would be true. And it’s possible for God not to create anything.

Some odd theories of temporal reality, with eschatological applications

The three major theories of temporal reality are presentism (reality includes only the present), growing block (reality includes the present and past) and eternalism (reality includes past, present and future).

A recent option that has been considered is thick presentism on which reality includes a short segment of time including the present. This lets one have some of the intuitive advantages of presentism (dinosaurs and Martian settlements don’t exist) while at the same time neatly solving the problem of diachronic causation. Moreover, it raises an interesting explanatory problem: why does our world have the kind of temporal reality it does.

I think that if thick presentism is metaphysically possible, likely so are a number of other views:

  1. Very thick presentism

  2. Time-variable thickness thick presentism

  3. Growing block

  4. Space-variable thickness thick presentism

  5. Swiss-cheese temporal reality.

On very thick presentism, the band of reality in thick presentism becomes extremely thick, say a million years. For there seems to be no compelling reason why the band of reality posited by thick presentists would have to be thin.

On the time-variable thick presentism, we have a thick presentism where the thickness varies with time. This is likely something that the thick presentist has to countenance. For, plausibly, some moment within the thick present has to be distinguished as “very present” to avoid violating the law of non-contradictions (since objects will have contradictory properties within the thick present). Suppose that that moment happens to be at the middle of the thick present. Then when the very present gets closer and closer to the beginning or end of time, the band of reality must get thinner and thinner. Or suppose the moment happens to be at the end of the thick present (I think that may be the better theory). Then when the very present gets closer to the beginning of time, the band of reality gets thinner and thinner. We also get time-variable thick presentism by applying patchwork principles to recombine worlds with thick presentisms of different thicknesses.

Growing-block with a finite past is just a time-variable thickness thick presentism where the very present is at the end of the thick present and the thickness of the thick present at t is equal to the duration from the beginning of time to t. And if we allow it with a finite past, why not with an infinite one—assuming an infinite past is possible?

Applying patchwork principles to thick presentisms with different thicknesses, we can get a space-variable thick presentism—here, the present may be ten minutes thick, but there it may be ten years thick.

Once we allow that, why not go all the way and allow a swiss-cheese temporal reality, where at any given time various chunks of the four-dimensional manifold are included or left out in a pretty arbitrary fashion (perhaps subject to some restrictions to make causation work)?

Now, here’s a fun theological speculation. Some thinkers are worried about eternalism and growing block on theological grounds: they worry that these theories imply that horrendously evil events like the Holocaust will eternally be a part of reality, and that this is inappropriate. But once we have expanded the range of options as we have, we can have some interesting theological theories.

For instance, perhaps, growing block is true between now and the Second Coming. Then at the Second Coming the band of reality gets very thin, so that after the Second Coming, the band of reality includes only the times from the Second Coming to the then-present. We can think of this as giving a surprising reading of the “Behond, I make all things new” of Revelation 21:5—the past events and object suddenly get wiped out of reality. Or, as a variant, perhaps partial eternalism becomes true after the Second Coming: reality now includes all times from the Second Coming on.

But one may worry that that wipes out too much—for instance, it wipes out the glory of the Cross (I am grateful to a graduate student for this worry). Very well. Then we go for a swiss cheese version where we have selective removal from reality—the Holocaust goes but the Cross stays, say.

All this has a certain resemblance to Hud Hudson’s hypertime story. But it’s different in two ways. First, it doesn’t need hypertime. Second, I am assuming here a variant of a standard presentist picture on which there are tensed truths, and the tensed truths function according to standard temporal logics. Thus, if it is true that p, it will always be true that it was true that p. What changes is what events and substances fall within the domain of restricted quantifiers—quantifiers do not commute with “at t” and other temporal operators.

For instance, on the “I make all things new” theories, right now all three of these are true:

  1. There exists an x such that at 327 BC: x is a horse named “Bucephalus”

  2. At 327 BC: there exists an x such that x is a horse named “Bucephalus”.

  3. At 2000 AD: there exists an x such that at 327 BC: x is a horse named “Bucephalus”.

After the second coming, when the past objects and events are wiped out, we still have (b) and (c) holding, but (a) does not hold.

On a hypertime variant of “I make all things new”, once the past was wiped out, we would have none of (a)–(c).

I do not endorse any of these odd possibilities, because I am a die-hard B-theorist.

Presentism and the intrinsicness of past tensed properties

Many presentists think that objects have past-tensed properties. Thus an object that is now straight but was bent has the property of having been bent. (Some such presentists use these properties to ground facts about the past.)

But assuming for simplicity that being bent is an intrinsic property, we can argue that having been bent is an intrinsic property as well. Here’s why. If being bent doesn’t describe an object in relation to the existence, non-existence or features of any other object (assuming being bent is intrinsic), neither does having been bent. Nor is having been bent “temporally impure”—it does not describe the object in terms of anything happening at other times, since nothing can happen at other times on presentism. It does not describe the object in relation its past or future temporal slices or past or future events involving the object, since on presentism there are no past or future objects, and there are no past or future events.

But if having been bent is an intrinsic property of an object, it seems that, by a plausible patchwork principle or by intuitions about the omnipotence of God, an object could come into existence just for one instant and yet have been bent at that instant. Which is absurd.

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

More on promulgation of laws

Laws need to be promulgated to be valid. Why? A Thomistic story is that valid laws create genuine reasons to act, and reasons are the sort of thing that’s available to a reasonable person. So, the laws need to be practically available to reasonable governed persons. In particular, if everyone has forgot about a law, and the books it was written in have burned down, the law is gone—promulgation is an ongoing affair. And the “practically” rules out such things as: “If you go to room 19235 in the Library of Congress, and enter a certain seven digit combination in the lock that only Congress knows, the doors will open and you will have books of all the laws in front of you.”

All this does not mean that the laws have to be made known to the reasonable persons. For it is encumbent on reasonable persons to educate themselves on laws that are relevant to them. However, since in a modern state the body of laws is too large for a typical reasonable person to study them all, availability also requires more than, say, that the laws be in public libraries, on the Internet, and to hired lawyers.

For it is not reasonable to expect that every reasonable person before they perform some ordinary action will go and search the laws. Rather, as participants in a society we rightly get a sense of what actions are ordinary, intrinsically moral, and done by people without any consciousness that some law might constrain them. And in the case of such actions, it’s not reasonable to be expect someone to look further. If there is a law prohibiting such an action, then I am inclined to think it is invalid—it is failing the promulgation condition, at least in this context.

An interesting thing about this view is that it gives some of the same results as the idea that unenforced laws are not valid. When a law has not been generally enforced, eventually ordinary people will forget (if they ever knew) that the law was there, and will go about their ordinary actions without any consciousness that they might be constrained by a law here. And then it’s not reasonable to expect people to know about the law, and the promulgation condition fails. However, not all cases of unenforced laws are like that. In some cases, people generally do know that there is a law, but they also know it is unenforced and generally ignored, and in such cases there is no promulgation failure.

Here is a somewhat hypothetical example. Ordinary people buy coffee filter cones without any worry that there might be some law requiring them to report the number of cones they purchased to the state and to keep track of destroyed cones in a log. If there is such a law, certainly no one enforces it. Thus, the ordinary reasonable person has no duty to look up whether there is such a law the first time they buy a coffee filter cone in any given state, and if it turns out that there is such a putative law, it has failed to be promulgated to them, and it’s not valid (i.e., it’s not a law) at least in the case of ordinary consumers. (I said this is somewhat hypothetical. Texas has a law governing “precursor chemical laboratory apparatus”. One of the controlled items on their report form is filter funnels, which is precisely what a coffee filter cone is. One assumes that that’s not what they mean, but I am not a lawyer. Transformers are also listed so maybe phone chargers would need to be reported to the state?)

On the other hand, there are non-ordinary actions where a reasonable participant in society knows that it’s not unlikely there are relevant laws, and it is reasonably expected that one find out what the laws are—hiring a lawyer if necessary. If I were to set up shop selling explosives, for instance, I would know that there are likely to be local, state and federal regulations I need to educate myself on.

I should note that my intuitions are driven by my conviction that valid laws are morally binding. So genuine laws aren’t like mere rules in a game or something like that. One could have a hybrid view on which we distinguish between laws and laws*, where a law is morally binding on the governed while a law* is something the state merely has moral permission to enforce in principle. If this distinction were to work, one could have a stronger promulgation condition for laws and a weaker one for laws*.

Monday, September 29, 2025

The command version of divine command theory

Suppose that morality is grounded in God’s commands. What are God’s commands?

The most obvious idea would be that God’s commands are speech acts of command or legislation like: “Thou shalt not steal.”

But this is implausible. For such speech acts to be binding, they must be promulgated. But where? If we take seriously that these are genuinely speech acts, we have three main options:

  1. A text from God

  2. One or more human individuals speaking for God

  3. A voice in people’s heads, from God or a representative of God.

I don’t think any of these are plausible once we take into account that morality applies to all, but no text has been accessible to all, no human individuals seemingly speaking for God have been audible to all, and lots of people have never heard such a voice in their heads.

So, I think, the divine command theorist needs to understand “command” in some less literal sense. I think the most plausible story would connect with Biblical descriptions of God’s law written in people’s minds or hearts. There will then be a substantive question of what kind of a feature of the mind or heart the commands are, with the two main options being:

  1. Emotions (sentimentalist divine command)

  2. Intuitions (cognitivist divine command).

(Combinations are also possible.)

But both cases face the following problem: How do we distinguish the attitudes, emotional or cognitive, that constitute divine commands from attitudes of the same sort that do not. Some people have moral attitudes that are screwed up—this might reduce or remove culpability, but nonetheless the screwed up attitudes are not divine commands.

I see three main options for making the distinction:

  1. The properly functioning moral attitudes define morality.

  2. Morality is defined by the moral attitudes that God has directly instilled either in each individual or in the ancestors of all individuals from whom they are passed on genetically and/or culturally.

  3. God’s mental attitudes of approval or disapproval for moral attitudes distinguishes whether the attitudes define morality.

Option (a) pushes divine command theory very close to theistic natural law. Some people will like that (C. Stephen Evans likes to say that natural law is compatible with divine command theory).

Option (b) is interesting and promising.

Option (c) pushes the command version of divine command, which is what I have been exploring, closer to the divine will version. And it has problems with divine simplicity on which God doesn’t have intrinsic contingent features, and the approval/disapproval sounds to me like it would likely need to be an intrinsic contingent feature of God.

Lying and epistemic utility

Epistemic utility is the value of one’s beliefs or credences matching the truth.

Suppose your and my credences differ. Then I am going to think that my credences better match the truth. This is automatic if I am measuring epistemic utilities using a proper scoring rule. But that means that benevolence with respect to epistemic utilities gives me a reason to shift your credences to be closer to mine.

At this point, there are honest and dishonest ways to proceed. The honest way is to share all my relevant evidence with you. Suppose I have done that. And you’ve reciprocated. And we still differ in credences. If we’re rational Bayesian agents, that’s presumably due to a difference in prior probabilities. What can I do, then, if the honest ways are exhausted?

I can lie! Suppose your credence that there was once life on Mars is 0.4 and mine is 0.5. So I tell you that I read that a recent experiment provided a little bit of evidence in favor of there once having been life on Mars, even though I read no such thing. That boosts your credence that there was once life on Mars. (Granted, it also boosts your credence in the falsehood that there was such a recent experiment. But, plausibly, getting right whether there was once life on Mars gets much more weight in a reasonable person’s epistemic utilities than getting right what recent experiments have found.)

We often think of lying as an offense against truth. But in these kinds of cases, the lies are aimed precisely at moving the other towards truth. And they’re still wrong.

Thus, it seems that striving to maximize others’ epistemic utility is the wrong way to think of our shared epistemic life.

Maximizing others’ epistemic utility seems to lead to a really bad picture of our shared epistemic life. Should we, then, think of striving to maximize our own epistemic utility as the right approach to one’s individual epistemic life? Perhaps. For maybe what is apt to go wrong in maximizing others’ epistemic utility is paternalism, and paternalism is rarely a problem in one’s own case.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Divine speech acts

Suppose random quantum processes result in deep marks on a stone that spell out:

  • Thou shalt not eat goat. – God

What would need to be true for it to be the case that God said (or wrote) that, thereby forbidding us to eat goat?

I assume that God always cooperates with creaturely causation, so divine causation is involved in the above production. However, such divine cooperation with the production of something that looks like an inscription or sounds like an utterance does not suffice to make it be the case that God said the thing. Imagine that a cult leader makes the above inscription. God is still cooperating with the cult leader’s causality, but we don’t want to attribute the inscription to God’s authorship.

One obvious answer is by analogy to our language. A part of what makes a performance a speech act of a particular sort is a certain kind of intention, e.g., that the performance be taken to be that sort of speech act. So maybe it just depends on God’s intentions. If God merely intends cooperation with quantum processes, there is no inscription, just random marks on stone that happen to look like an inscription. But if God intends the marks to be taken to be an inscription, they are an inscription.

This solution, however, is unhelpful given divine simplicity. The intention is a contingent feature of God, and on divine simplicity the contingency of contingent divine features is always grounded in some contingent arrangement of creatures. There cannot be two worlds that are exactly alike in their created aspects but where God has different intentions in the two worlds. So given divine simplicity, there has to be a characterization of what makes the marks a divine command in terms of what creation is like. (My view of divine intentions is, roughly, that God intends F in doing A iff intending F would be a good reason for God to do A. This presupposes divine omnirationality.)

Here is one possibility.

  1. Something that looks or sounds like a speech act is a divine speech act if and only if it was directly produced by God without secondary causes.

But this seems mistaken. Imagine that in the sight of a tribe, God created a stone and a stylus ex nihilo, and then miraculously moved the stylus in such a way as to inscribe the prohibition on eating goat. Then, surely, the members of the tribe upon seeing the stylus moving through the air and gouging clear text in the stone would be right to attribute the message to God. But the inscription was not directly produced by God: it was produced by means of a stylus.

Perhaps:

  1. Something that looks or sounds like a speech act is a divine speech act if and only if it was a deterministic result of something done by God without secondary causes.

This still seems a bit too restrictive. Imagine that while God used the stylus to inscribe the stone in our previous story, he nonetheless allowed for ordinary quantum randomness in the interaction between the hard stylus and the softer stone, which randomness ensured that there was a tiny probability that no inscription would result—that, say, stylus atoms would quantum tunnel through the stone atoms.

One might replace “deterministic” with “extremely probable”. But just how probable would it have to be?

Here is a different suggestion that seems to me more promising.

  1. Something that looks or sounds like a speech act is a divine speech act to humans if and only if a normal human who knew all the metaphysical and physical facts about the production of this act, as well as the human social context of the production, would reasonably take it to be a divine speech act.

This suggestion allows for the possibility that a normal human would be mistaken about whether something is a divine speech act—but the mistake would then be traced back to a mistake about the relevant metaphysical, physical and social facts.

The applicability of (3) is still difficult. Take the initial example where the apparent divine prohibition on eating goat appears from quantum randomness. Would a reasonable and normal human who knew it to have appeared from quantum randomness with ordinary divine cooperation of the sort found in all creaturely causation think it to be a divine speech act? I don’t know. I don’t know that I am a reasonable and normal human, and I don’t actually know what to think about this.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Causation and the grounding problem for presentism

The past-grounding problem for presentism is of explaining what grounds facts about the past. The tensed-property solution is that presently existing objects have past-tensed properties like “Existing a hundred million years after a dinosaur” which ground the facts about the past.

Here is a problem. The presently existing objects exist at least partly because of how the world was a hundred million years ago. If how the world was a hundred million years ago is grounded in the properties of presently existing things, then we have a circularity in the order of explanation: the present objects’ existence is partly-explained by how the world was, and how the world was is grounding-explained by the objects’ possession of the properties, while the objects’ possession of the properties is partly ontologically explained by the objects’ existence.

Objection 1: This won’t bother one if one thinks one can have explanatory circularity as long as the explanations are of different sorts. But I think explanations of different sorts are still explanations, and circularity is still bad.

Objection 2: It seems that B’s being caused by A is explanatorily prior to B’s existing, so sometimes an instance of property possession is prior to existence. But I think this is mistaken. What’s prior to B is A’s exercise of causality, not B’s being caused by A.

Objection 3: If we solve the past-grounding problem by making use of past-tensed properties of God, then the problem disappears. For God doesn’t exist now because of how the world was a hundred million years ago. God exists now because God is a necessary being. I think this is a good response if one doesn’t believe in divine simplicity, but I am convinced of divine simplicity, which prohibits God from having contingent properties.

Nomically possible branches and open future views

Some open future views rely on the concept of a nomically possible branch—a complete sequence of how things might go given the laws of nature.

The problem with the concept is this. A nomically possible branch seems to be something like an exhaustive collection of propositions about all times, specifying precisely what happens at all times, with the collection as a whole compatible with the laws of nature. But now consider a world where indeterminism never gives out on any branch: no matter how things go, at every time there will still be more branching. (Our world may well be like that.) Then on an open future view, the propositions making up a branch cannot be all true together—for at no time t can the exhaustive propositions about t’s future be true, as that would violate open futurism given that branching never gives out.

For a while I thought that a decent solution to this is to say that a branch only needs to satisfy the weaker condition that for every time t, all the propositions in the branch about times up to t can be true together with the laws of nature.

But my recent example of random transtemporal causation is problematic for this solution. Suppose that today an indeterministic event E causes a green flash of light to happen on a random future day, and that the laws guarantee that no green flashes happen for any other reason. Then a branch that contains E but no green flashes of light satisfies the weaker possibility condition: for at every time t, all the propositions in the branch about times up to t can be true together with the laws of nature, since E does not causally guarantee that a green flash will happen at or before t, but only that a green flash will happen at some time or other.

Probably the best move for the open futurist is to deny causation across temporal gaps or any other mechanism that nomically guarantees that some event will happen without guaranteeing a time by which it will happen.

Monday, September 22, 2025

Requests and obligations

By requesting something from someone, we create a reason for them to fulfill the request. On an individualistic view of human beings, this is a rather awesome power—somehow I reach into your space of reasons and create a new one.

It is tempting to downplay the force of reasons created by a request. After all, it seems that a mere request can always be legitimately turned down.

But that’s not right. There are times when a request creates an obligation. For it may be that apart form the request one’s reasons for an action were nearly conclusive, and with the request they become conclusive.

And besides that, a successfully transmitted request always creates a moral obligation to consider the request. Sometimes, the request may be quickly rejectable on the basis of a background policy. But a quick rejection still requires a consideration.

Questions, of course, are a type of request: they are a request for an answer. Thus, they too always create a moral obligation.

Friday, September 19, 2025

Wolterstorff on worship and intention

In Acting Liturgically, Wolterstorff offers a necessary and sufficient condition for when someone “is performing acts of worship or just saying the words and making the gestures”:

if a participant performs some prescribed verbal or gestural action with the intention of not thereby performing whatever be the act of worship prescribed to be performed thereby, then he has not performed that act of worship; otherwise he has

In other words:

  1. One worships with the action as the community does if and only if one does not intend to dissent from the community’s understanding of the action.

But both directions of the biconditional are false.

Case 1: Alice visits a foreign country where she does not know the language and enters an ornate religious building. She believes the building to be a pagan temple and, seeing people kneeling, she thinks them to be thereby worshiping some pagan deity. She feels an urge to pray to God, and she kneels with the dual intention of thereby worshiping God and of not doing what the local community is doing. Her worship is heartfelt and sincere. But unbeknownst to her, the building is a church and the people are worshiping God by kneeling.

Alice is worshiping God by kneeling. An intention to worship God by kneeling while acting in a heartfelt and sincere way is sufficient for the kneeling to constitute worship of God. But by Wolterstorff principle, because she also intends—perhaps in Wolterstorff’s own words (she might be a reader of his)—to “not thereby perform[…] whatever be the act of worship prescribed to be performed” by the kneeling, she is not performing “that act of worship”. But that act of worship—the one the community has prescribed the kneeling to constitute—is worship of God. So if Wolterstorff’s no-intended-dissent condition is necessary for worship, Alice doesn’t worship God. But she does. So the no-intended-dissent condition is not necessary.

Objection: Alice is not worshiping communally but individually. The community is worshiping communally. So, Alice does not perform what the community understands the action to be, namely communal worship.

Response: Add to the story that this particular church has a special meaning for “kneeling”: it’s not just worship, but individual worship.

Case 2: Bob visits a foreign country where he does not know the language and enters an ornate religious building. He believes the building to be a Christian church and, seeing people kneeling, he thinks them to be worshiping God. He intends to worship God, kneels and prays in a heartfelt and sincere way. The thought that there might be some pagans in this country does not even occur to him, since the country is known for being very Christian. He kneels with the intention of worshiping God. But unbeknownst to him, the building is a pagan temple and the people are worshiping a pagan deity by kneeling.

Since it doesn’t occur to Bob that the community’s kneeling might be worship of a pagan deity, he does not form any intention to dissent from the community’s understanding. Granted, his own explicit intention to worship God disagrees with the community’s understanding of what they are doing. But to have an intention that in fact disagrees with the community’s understanding of what they are doing is not the same as intending to do otherwise than the community understands. Compare: If an expert uses complicated verbage to deny the existence of life on Mars, and I misunderstand him to be saying there is life on Mars, and I say “Indeed, there is life on Mars”, I am not intending to say otherwise than the expert did—even though what I am intending to say is, as a matter of fact, otherwise than what the expert said.

It is tempting to say that explicit intentions about the meaning of the action trump implicit ones, and so both Alice and Bob are worshiping God, and neither is worshiping a pagan deity. But that’s not quite right. A religious person may intend for the community’s understanding of an action to trump at least certain aspects of their own understanding. For instance, when a Christian prays the Nicene Creed, they may have their own understanding of “consubstantial with the Father”, but they would do well to defer to the Church for what it really means. Thus, their explicit intention to worship the Son as X (where X is their understanding of consubstantiality with the Father) is overridden by their faithful intention to worship the Son under whatever description the Church means by these words.

So, probably, what we want to say is that the individual worshiper can have a complex of set of intentions with priorities between them. For instance, the faithful Christian who prays the Nicene Creed may have intentions where their understanding of “consubstantial” is subordinated to the community’s understanding, but only within some limits. If it were to turn out that what the community means by “consubstantial with the Father” is that the Father and the Son are finite deities with beards of equal bushiness, then the faithful Christian’s intention to worship an immaterial and infinite God trumps their intention to go with the community’s understanding. I suspect there is no good way to encapsulate the complex ways that the prioritization between intentions can go in a simple definition like Wolterstorff’s.

Could there be a grain of truth in Wolterstorff’s condition? I think one could say that one defaults to worshiping as the community does in the absence of overriding intentions. I am not sure I would agree with that, but it might be true.

I am grateful to Tyler Sharp and Juliana Kazemi for pointing me to Wolterstorff’s very interesting ideas on this, and for conversations on this. In a recent conference presentation, they gave an example that has a lot of similarity with Case 2.

Random causation across temporal gaps

Suppose that causation across temporal gaps is possible: that an object x can have a direct effect in a future time, with no intermediate causes. Given that a cause clearly can have a random effect—say, you press a button and you get a green light or a red light at random—then it should also be possible for a cause to have an effect at a random future time.

Now imagine a button that, when pressed, causes a flash of light at a random time in the future, from tomorrow onward, with the probability that the flash happens in n days being 1/2n.

This is not very different from a button that, when pressed, triggers a sequence of fair coin tosses, one per day, with a beep that goes off as soon as heads comes up. The probability that there will be a beep in n days is 1/2n.

But there is still an important difference between the flash and the beep, even though they are probabilistically isomorphic. The flash is guaranteed but the beep is not (it is possible to get tails everyday). On open-future views, it is true that the flash will happen but not true that the beep will.

One could imagine the flash method being used by God in connection with indefinite-time future promises like “One day I’m going to make a flash of light.” God can just create the button that causes the flash to happen on a random future day and then trigger the button.