Thursday, January 29, 2026

Does everything in time change?

Over the last two days, I’ve been thinking critically about Aquinas’ First Way. Central to my thinking, and especially yesterday’s post, was the idea that you could have an unmoved mover who is in time but isn’t pure act and who isn’t God. Such an unmoved mover constantly and unchangingly exercises—perhaps mentally—one and the same causal power to make something else move.

But I now wonder if this is possible. Suppose a demiurge that exists in time and has the power to make Bob rotate, and constantly exercises this power. Could this demiurge be unchanging? After all, at noon the demiurge is actively rotating Bob at noon, and at 1 pm the demiurge is actively rotating Bob at 1 pm. We can easily and coherently suppose that the demiurge engages in qualitatively the same activity at 1 pm as at noon. That was the intuition that was driving my thinking about this. But can we coherently add that it is the numerically same activity? For if it’s not numerically the same activity at 1 pm as at noon, then the demiurge has undergone a change, from engaging in activity a12 to engaging in activity a13, even if the two activities are exactly alike.

I am not sure, but I feel a pull to thinking that rotating Bob at 1 pm is a different thing from rotating Bob at noon, assuming that the agent is in time. I don’t just mean that it has different effects—which it does, since spinning-at-noon is a different effect from spinning-at-one—but that the activing of causing rotation is itself different. Maybe the pull comes from this thought. Perdurantists think that substances exist at different times by having different temporal parts at them. Perdurantism is likely false for substances. But whether or not it is true for substanes, it seems very plausible for events and activities. What made World War II exist on each day between September 1, 1939 and September 2, 1945 is that there were hostilities on each day, hostilities that are a part of World War II. Even if on two successive days the hostilities happened to be exactly alike, they would have been numerically different hostilities. If this is right in general, then the activity of rotating Bob at 1 pm is numerically different from that of rotating Bob at noon.

Furthermore, I think existence is a kind of activity. This is most obvious in the case of living things, given the Aristotelian idea that life is the existence of the living and life is an activity, but I think is true in general. Thus a thing that exists in time over a lifetime engages in a sequence of numerically different activities—existing at t1, existing at t2, and so on. And hence it changes. And intrinsically so. If so, then everything that exists in time must always change.

If the suggestion that there are no unchanging activities that last over time, then we can escape my worry yesterday that perhaps the sequence of moved movers in the First Way leads to a mover that is unchanging with respect to the activity of moving the next mover in the sequence but is still changing in some other coincidental respect. For the activity of moving the next mover in the sequence would have to change over time, and so the mover would be changing in respect of of its moving the next item in the sequence.

But perhaps not. For we might admit that in all the cases we are familiar with, activity only perdures over time, and there is always something numerically different happening at different times, but say that we could still imagine a being where the numerically same activity is temporally multilocated. And such a being could everlastingly rotate Bob with the activity of spinning Bob being genuinely unchanging.

I don’t know.

Gale's criticism of Stump and Kretzmann's ET-simultaneity

Stump and Kretzmann give three main concepts of simultaneity in their famous paper:

  • T-simultaneity between items in time

  • E-simultaneity between items in eternity

  • ET-simultaneity between items in time and items in eternity.

Stump and Kretzmann observe that ET-simultaneity is not reflexive: a temporal item is not ET-simultaneous with a temporal item and an eternal item is not ET-simultaneous with an eternal item. My mentor Richard Gale in his book on God argues that this is a serious problem: a relation that is’t reflexive just doesn’t have a hope of counting as a simultaneity relation.

But Gale is wrong. For T-simultaneity and E-simultaneity are clearly simultaneity relations, but neither of them is reflexive either! For an eternal item is not T-simultaneous with itself and a temporal item is not E-simultaneous with itself.

Now, granted, when we talk of reflexivity of a relation, it’s within a relevant domain. Thus, we say that being the same color is reflexive, even though St Michael the Archangel is not the same color as himself, because the relevant domain for sameness of color is things that have color, not immaterial intellects.

So we might say that T-simultaneity and E-simultaneity are reflexive because their respective domains are temporal and eternal things, and they are each reflexive in their domains.

We might, but we shouldn’t. Stump and Kretzmann’s investigation is of a domain of items that may or may not be simultaneous in different senses, a domain that includes both eternal and temporal things. And in that domain, none of the relations they consider are reflexive. And that’s OK.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Does it follow from van Inwagen's answer to the Special Composition Question that all complex things are alive?

The view that all objects are either living or simple appears to be a consequence of van Inwagen’s answer to the special composition question, namely that a proper plurality only composes a whole when the parts have a life together, where a proper plurality is a plurality of two or more things.

But this does not follow. Van Inwagen defines:

  1. The xs compose y if and only if “the xs are all parts of y and no two of the xs overlap and every part of y overlaps at least one of the xs”.

Now the view that all non-simples are alive follows from van Inwagen’s answer to the special composition question (SCQ) provided that we have to have:

  1. Anything that has proper parts is composed of some proper plurality of its proper parts.

  2. Whenever something is composed of a plurality of things that have a life together, it is alive.

Indeed, if we have 2 and 3, then anything that has proper parts is composed of proper plurality by 2, which thus have a life together by van Inwagen’s answer to SCQ, and hence the thing composed of them is alive by 3. On the other hand, if there can be something that has proper parts but isn’t composed of a proper plurality of proper parts, then there is no way to use van Inwagen’s answer to SCQ to argue that it’s alive. Furthermore, if there is something that is composed of a proper plurality of proper parts that have a life together but isn’t alive, then we have another counterexample to van Inwagen.

Neither 2 nor 3 is completely obvious. You might, for instance, think that where you are, there is also a heap of atoms shaped just like you. If, further, you are a presentist and a materialist, you will think the atoms compose you and compose the heap. Moreover, the atoms have a life together. But the heap of atoms is not alive, unlike you. So (3) on that view is false.

For a view on which (2) is false, imagine a world consisting of four objects, A, B, C and D. Object A has B, C and D as proper parts. Object B has D as a proper part. Object C has D as a proper part. There are no other instances of proper parthood. This is a world where the company axiom of mereology fails (since B and C have D as a proper part and no other proper parts). It would be interesting to characterize in some non-trivial way the mereological theories where (2) is true. A sufficient condition is to assume atomism (Gemini Pro noted this). We can define this by saying every object has a simple part. For then if an object has a proper part, it is easily seen to be composed by its proper parts. But atomism is not a necessary condition. Consider a gunky mereological model whose domain is infinite sets of natural numbers and parthood is inclusion—then (2) is true.

We could also escape this worry by weakening the definition of composition by dropping the requirement that no two of the xs overlap. That makes van Inwagen’s answer to the SCQ put a more stringer requirement on reality, and it becomes trivial that everything that has proper parts is composed of them, and (2) becomes a matter of logic. We still need an argument for (3), however.

Proper parts and dependence

Consider this initially plausible thesis:

  1. If x has a proper part, and all of x’s proper parts depend on y, then x depends on y.

Add:

  1. An effect depends on its cause.

  2. Nothing depends on itself.

We conclude:

  1. Nothing that has proper parts is a cause of all of them.

This has a nice theological application.

  1. God is the cause of everything that is not God.

  2. Therefore, if God has proper parts, he is the cause of all of them.

  3. So, God has no proper parts.

However, I am dubious of premise 1. I think (1) depends on a story about parthood on which a whole is made of its parts. But if we don’t have that story, we could imagine a simple thing that then goes on to produce a proper part for itself. And so we lose the nice argument for divine simplicity. Which is too bad, but there are others.

How do we get to an unmoved mover?

I just realized that there is a difficulty in Aquinas’ First Way that I think hasn’t been noted, which builds on the difficulty noted yesterday.

Put the First Way in the following simpleminded way, which I think captures the central ideas:

  1. Causes of change are either passers-on of change or originators of change.

  2. It can’t be that the causes of change are all passers-on of change.

  3. So there must be an originator of change.

  4. And this is an unmoved mover (or, more precisely, unchanged changer).

There is a fair amount of detail one can fill in to argue for (2), but that’s not what I want to focus on. I want to focus on the move from (3) to (4).

What licenses us in thinking that an originator of change is itself unchanging?

The idea seems to be that if a cause of change is itself changing, then it is merely a passer-on of change. But this need not be. In my previous post, I imagined an unchanging and timeless demiurge endowed by God with the power to originate change, and noted that in that scenario the demiurge is an unmoved mover but isn’t God.

But now let’s build up and modify my demiurge story. First, let’s be concrete about what motion the demiurge causes. The demiurge has been gifted by God with the power to directly will Bob to rotate around a fixed axis, and the demiurge changelessly exercises this power. (Maybe Bob is one of the Aristotelian heavenly spheres). Second, let’s specify that the demiurge, albeit unchanging, is in time and has an unchanging body in addition to a mind and will. If we can’t have a changeless thing in space and time, don’t worry about it. The third step will fix that. The third step is this. The demiurge itself is caused by God to slowly orbit the sun in a way that the demiurge does not notice.

Thus, we have a demiurge with a mental power to make Bob rotate, and the demiurge exercises this mental power changelessly. At the same time, and completelessly coincidentally to the demiurge’s exercise of the mental power to make Bob rotate, the demiurge orbits the sun.

The demiurge is thus a moved mover. But it is also an originator rather than passer-on of change. In Aristotelian terminology, the demiurge is a moved mover per accidens: its own movement around the sun is coincidental to its origination of Bob’s axial rotation.

We cannot, thus, assume from the existence of an originator of change that there is an unmoved mover.

Does Aquinas have the resources to fill in the gap? Of course, if the (accidentally) moved originator of change coming out of step (3) of the argument is itself changing, that change has to have a cause, and we can then run the argument again. If we can rule out an ungrounded infinite sequence of accidentally moved originators of change—ones that like our demiurge happen to be moving in one respect but produce change by a coincidental exercise of power—then we can get to a genuinely unmoved mover.

But Aquinas’ main tool for avoiding regresses in cosmological arguments is the idea that there cannot be an infinite regress in a per se causal sequence. And while there are complications in the notion of a per se causal sequence, I think it is pretty clear that the sequence I am imagining is not a per se causal sequence. The demiurge’s moving of Bob is coincidental to the demiurge’s own motion. Suppose that a demiurge makes Bob spin by an unchanging exercise of a mental power, and a tetartourge by an unchanging exercise of a mental power makes the demiurge coincidentally slowly orbit the sun while the tetartourge coincidentally orbits the moon. Then the tetartourge is not a cause of Bob’s motion. But in a per se causal sequence we have transitivity: the earlier items are always causes of the later ones. So this is not a per se causal sequence.

Of course, we might ask what explains the demiurge’s (and tetartourge’s) possession and exercise of the mental power to make something else move. But now we are deviating from the First Way: we are asking for explanations of something other than change. I think one can fill this in, by an argument about causation and regresses rather than change and motion. But if we do that, then the stuff about change and motion that is at the heart of the First Way can simply drop out.

I titled my previous post “An easily patched hole in the First Way”. But I think I was too glib there, too. In that context, too, I think one needs to go beyond the resources of the First Way to patch the hole.

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

An easily patched hole in the First Way

In his First Way, Aquinas argues that as we trace back the sequence of movers from effect to cause, we get to a first unmoved mover, and this is God.

But need the unmoved mover thus reached in the sequence of movers be God? Imagine this scenario. God creates some material beings, as well as an unchanging, timeless and immaterial demiurge that has the power to make the material beings move—and indeed exercises that power. Then if we were to trace back the sequence of movers, the unmoved mover we would get to would be the demiurge, not God. This demiurge would have potentiality, but not a temporal potentiality, so it would not be itself in motion, and hence it would be an unmoved mover.

This doesn’t deeply affect the argument, since Aquinas could do the same thing as he does in the Third Way, where he traces contingent beings to a necessary being, and then considers the possibility of necessary beings that get their necessity from other beings, and traces it back to an absolutely necessary being, namely God. Similarly, God could say that any unmoved mover that has some potentiality or contingency depends on a prior being and so on, and in the end we would get to God anyway.

Indeed, even in this scenario with a demiurge, we might want to say that it is God and not the demiurge who is the first unmoved mover. For God would still be a mover, albeit working through the demiurge who is a secondary cause, and God would be unmoved, and God would be first. So Aquinas would still be correct that the “first mover” is God—it’s just that the scenario suggests that Aquinas does skip a step.

Explanatory principlism

There are three views about ultimate explanations of reality:

  1. Nihilism: There is no ultimate explanation of reality.

  2. Onticism: The ultimate explanation of reality involves one or more beings.

  3. Principlism: The ultimate explanation of reality involves principles rather than beings.

Nihilism is the standard view among atheists. Onticism is the standard view among theists. The main examples of principlism are axiarchism and optimalism, on which reality is explained by its having the kind of value it does. But other combinations are possible: Rescher was an principlist theist, since he thought that God’s existence could be explained by the fact that it’s for the best that God exists.

I want to say a little about what I think is wrong about principlism. Start with the observation that if truthmaker maximalism is true, principlism cannot get off the ground, because whatever principle helps explain the world is made true by the existence of some being, and if an explanatory proposition is made true by a being, that being is certainly “involved” in the explanation.

Truthmaker maximalism is false. However, I think that a neighboring grounding view is true:

  1. Being grounds truth (BGT): All truths are grounded in a combination of what there isn’t, what there is and how what is is.

Given BGT, we have very good reason to reject principlism. For presumably all the principles involved in the explanation of reality are true. If any of them are grounded in what there is or how what is is, then we have onticism rather than principlism: onticism is compatible with principles being involved in explanation, as long as beings are also involved. Thus the only way to defend principlism is to say that what gives the ultimate explanation are principles made true solely by the nonexistence of certain entities. And it is very implausible that the nonexistence of certain entities is the ultimate explanation of our reality, rich in being as it is.

The one version of principlism I can think of that I can reconcile with BGT would be an explanation of our reality in terms of the non-existence of beings that would prevent this reality. (This is kind of like the idea in the Scotus argument that nothing can prevent the existence of God, so God exists.) But this is dubious. Mere lack of preventers of x is not enough to explain the existence of x. One would need some kind of basic principle of plenitude on which everything not prevented must exist.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Punishment and presentism

This seems a bit plausible:

  1. It is unjust to punish someone for a feature that is not intrinsic to them.

  2. If presentism is true, then having done A is not an intrinsic feature of the agent.

  3. Thus, if presentism is true, then punishment for past actions is always unjust.

The presentist may well question (2), insisting that presently having a past-tensed feature that was intrinsic when it was presently had counts as intrinsic. I am a bit unsure of this. It’s a question someone should investigate.

Here is a reason to think that presently having a past-tensed feature should not count as intrinsic. Suppose I am facing a free choice, with the possibilities of doing B and not doing B. Then it seems that no present intrinsic feature of me entails what I will do. But suppose that in fact I will do B. Then just as I have past-tensed properties like having done A, I presently have future-tensed properties like being about to do B. And it seems that if one is intrinsic, so is the other. Thus, if my being about to do B is not a present intrinsic feature of me, my having done A is not a present intrinsic feature of me.

The presentist might respond by embracing an open future and denying that it can be true in the case of a free choice that I will do B. But if this is right, then it seems that in order to defend the justice of punishment for past deeds, the presentist has to do something very controversial—accept an open future. Moreover, this means that a classical Jew, Christian and Muslim can’t be a presentist, since classical monotheists are committed to comprehensive foreknowledge, and hence to the denial of an open future, and the justice of retrospective punishment.

Of course, one might question (1). Here’s how one might start. We can punish Alice for punching Bob. But that’s not an intrinsic feature of Alice. We might respond by saying that Alice is punished for her internal act of will, but that doesn’t seem quite right. Probably a better move is to replace (1) by saying that there must be an intrinsic component to the feature one punishes someone for—say, Alice’s act of will. And the presentist now has trouble with this intrinsic component.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Old Polish Almond Torte

In my family, when someone (including me) has a birthday, they choose a type of cake, and then I bake it, often with the help of one or more kids. A family favorite is the old Polish Chocolate Almond Torte. This is a gluten-free cake, made of almond meal, with leavening provided by a full dozen egg whites (with the twelve yolks going into the cake, too), and a layer of home-made marzipan in the middle. My kids found a version of it in Lemnis and Vitry’s Old Polish Traditions, but the recipe was somewhat confusing and we didn’t like the lemon juice in the marzipan. We found another version online here, which pointed us to the original source as the 1931 Polish cookbook How to Cook by Maria Disslowa. Between the three sources, and experimenting across multiple birthdays, we have the following recipe which I baked for my last birthday.

Old Polish Almond Torte

Note: The recipe takes three days (though perhaps days 2 and 3 could be combined) and is ready to eat on the fourth day, but the only thing done on the first day is freezing the chocolate chips.

Ingredients for Cake

  • 284g almond meal (unblanched)

  • 227g castor sugar

  • 284g powdered sugar

  • 12 eggs, separated

  • 284g dark chocolate chips (we use Hershey’s Special Dark)

  • a couple of tablespoons of unsweetened cocoa

  • optional: 1 tsp almond extract (my current opinion: omit to have better taste contrast between layers)

Notes on cake ingredients: Our grocery store doesn’t have unblanched almond meal, so we just buy unblanched (i.e., with skin) unsalted roasted bulk whole almonds and grind them in a coffee grinder. Similarly, we can’t get castor sugar, so we grind granulated sugar in a coffee grinder.

Ingredients for Marzipan Filling

  • 250g almond flour (blanched)

  • 273g powdered sugar

  • 78g (or 78mL) water

  • 2.5-3.5 tsp almond extract (use 3.5 if you didn't add the teaspoon to the cake)

Ingredients for Ganache

  • 320g dark chocolate chips (Hershey’s Special Dark)

  • 43g unsalted butter

  • 238g (or 1 cup) heavy whipping cream

Additional Topping Ideas:

  • slivered almonds or sweet strawberries

Instructions

Day 1:

Freeze the 284g of chocolate chips for the cake. Do not freeze the chips for the ganache!

Day 2:

Preheat oven to 356F (= 180C). Read over all the instructions for this day.

Grind the pre-measured frozen chocolate chips into a fine powder with a coffee grinder. Since a coffee grinder can’t take all of the chips at once, keep the ones that aren’t ground yet in the freezer.

If you don’t have almond meal, grind the almonds in a coffee grinder as finely as you can.

If you don’t have castor sugar, grind granulated sugar in a coffee grinder. It should be a bit coarser than powdered sugar.

Mix up the chocolate chip powder, sugar and almond meal.

Prepare a 10-inch spring form pan by buttering the bottom and sides, and putting a parchment paper circle on the bottom. Coat the sides with cocoa (this way, the cake remains gluten-free, and it’s better than flour).

Separate the 12 eggs.

Cream the egg yolks with the sugar until a bit fluffy, and while creaming mix in the sugar/meal/chocolate mix.

Stiffly beat the egg whites. Lightly mix them into the yolk-sugar-meal combination. (The egg whites provide all the lift to the cake, so the cake will be too dense if you overmix.)

Pour into the pan. Bake for one hour. Cover and leave overnight. Feel free to refrigerate.

Day 3:

Combine almond flour and powdered sugar for marzipan filling, together with the water and the almond extract. Knead into a homogeneous ball of dough. I start by using a dough hook in a stand mixer, and finish up by hand. Roughly flatten into a thick disc of the same diameter as the cake. It will be about 1 cm thick.

Remove the cake from the pan (I like to use a plastic knife). Cut into two layers and put the disc of marzipan between, making a level layer that reaches the sides.

For the ganache, heat the butter and cream together in the microwave until it is hot, with the butter melted, but before it boils. Add chocolate chips, mixing to ensure they all melt into the ganache. The last couple of grams took more time to dissolve.

Allow the ganache to cool somewhat and become more viscous. (I am usually impatient at this stage, and regret not having enough viscosity.) Pour it a bit at a time on the top of the cake, letting it drip over the sides on a very large plate or other clean platform. Use a spatula to push the drippings up over the sides again, repeating until the cooling ganache stops dripping significantly, and you have nice smooth edges.

Refrigerate overnight.

Fine moral distinctions

I find myself sometimes troubled by narrow moral distinctions in the Christian, and sometimes more specifically Catholic, tradition. Lying is wrong, but deception—perhaps including verbal deception—is not. Intentionally killing the innocent is wrong, but redirecting trolleys onto innocent people can be acceptable. Salpingostomy is wrong as a treatment of ectopic pregnancy, but salpinectomy is right. In each of those cases, of course, there is a defensible moral theory justifying the distinction, and in fact in each case I accept such a theory. But I still feel troubled.

There is an old Polish joke. After World War II, the Soviets are shifting the border between Poland and Russia. A farmer used to have a farm in Poland, but now the farm is going to be half in Poland and half in Russia. The farm is given a choice of which half he wants. He says: “The Polish half, of course. Russia is too cold.”

Of course, when you divide a continuous landmass into countries, there will be places where a step in one direction will get you into another country. And the climactic conditions are going to seem pretty similar. They will seem pretty similar, but they won’t be exactly the same.

Similarly, if you divide the space of human actions into, say, murder and non-murder or into wrong and non-wrong, one will find pairs A and B where A falls on the bad side and B on the good, and yet A and B are pretty similar. That’s just how it is. As long as we have moral objectivity, classical logic, and continuity among actions, this is unavoidable.

This does not mean that the distinctions will be arbitrary. If there is a roadside honor-system vegetable stand and a bunch of carrots is $3.50, then there is indeed a distinction between stealing by paying $3.49 and giving a fair payment of $3.50, even though the actions are very similar. Nonetheless, non-arbitrary as the distinctions are, they may not be major.

We should thus not be surprised if there are fine moral distinctions. There have to be.

Of course, we might dispute over where the boundaries lie. One might propose different boundaries: perhaps instead of saying lying is wrong while mere deception is permissible, one will say that both are permissible when needed to save lives and neither is permissible otherwise. But the alternate distinction will also have close-by cases. Why is it, on this story, permissible to lie to save oneself from death but not from torture? And what does it mean to save a life? One is never certain that a lie will save a life. What probability of saving a life is needed? There is no way to avoid boundaries between cases that will seem similar.

Monday, December 29, 2025

Permissivism about lying

I am an absolutist about lying: I think it’s always wrong to lie. But even if I were a permissivist about lying, I would think that there are certain subject matters about which it is always wrong to lie, no matter the costs and benefits. It is completely clear to me, for instance, that it is wrong for Christians to lie about their allegiance to Christ, no matter what the cost. There are two grounds for this: first, the Christian tradition of martyrdom makes this clear and, second, it is clear that Peter’s lying three times that he doesn’t know Jesus is treated as a sin by both Peter and Jesus.

If lying isn’t always wrong, but it is always wrong to lie about one’s allegiance to Christ, where do we draw the line? Observe that it is similarly wrong for a Christian to deny that Jesus is God as it is to deny being a Christian. This is also clear from the Christian tradition on martyrdom. Thus, it is not only always wrong to lie about allegiance to Christ, but it is also always wrong to testify falsely about central Christian doctrines.

If we think lying isn’t always wrong, we now have a choice point: Do we say that all lies about religion are wrong or only lies about major theological matters?

Here is a reason to think that all lies about religion are wrong. Suppose you are a non-Christian friend who trusts me completely, so that I could get you to become a Christian by lying to you that I privately witnessed something that would be an undeniable miracle—say, when I was a kid my dog was crushed by a truck, and I prayed fervently to Jesus and the dog immediately came back to full health. If it is permissible to lie to save lives, it is permissible to lie to save souls. But it is clearly wrong to lie about the miracle. However, whether Jesus healed my particular dog is a religious matter of very little theological importance, and the lie is in support of an important theological truth (namely, that Jesus has the power of healing). So I conclude it’s always wrong to lie about religious matters.

But now notice this. Sometimes absolutists about lying offer clever solutions to cases like the Nazi at the door case. For instance, instead of saying “I do have a Jewish family in my basement” in response to the Nazi’s question whether there are any Jews in the house, one could say perfectly truthfully that one would never allow anyone into one’s house who is a member of a race that is opposed to the flourishing of the German people (one just omits one’s belief that there is in fact no such race). Permissivists about lying tend to respond by noting that it’s easy to modify the case so that such clever solutions don’t work. For instance, the cleverer Nazi could respond: “Whatever! But do you have anybody in your house whose ancestors prayed in Hebrew?” And now the absolutist likely has no clever answer. The absolutist, no matter how clever, has to admit there are times where moral restrictions on lying make it impossible to save people one is hiding from evildoers.

But this is also true if lying isn’t always wrong. For suppose that a clever Nazi says: “I know some Christians think that we are unjustly persecuting minorities, and that Jesus would want them to be rescued from such persecution. Are you such a Christian?” Since it’s always wrong to lie about religious matters, you must say “Yes”, absent some clever way out which won’t always be available. But as soon as you say “Yes” to this, it seems quite unlikely that the Nazi will believe you if lie that, in fact, you aren’t hiding any Jews—they will want to search your house to be sure. Thus, even if the prohibition on lying is restricted to religious matters, there will be cases where moral restrictions on lying make it impossible to save people one is hiding from evildoers.

Or, suppose, that after you lied about who is in your basement, the clever Nazi went on to ask: “Do you think Christianity would permit you to lie about who is in your basement if you thought you were hiding innocent people?” Again, if lying about religious matters is always wrong, you must say “Yes”, and now there is no avoiding a search of the house.

I conclude that a Christian who is a permissivist about lying will still have situations where the prohibition on lying prevents saving people from Nazis at the door. One might respond that such cases are much less common than the ones the absolutist faces. Maybe. But there are also cases where absolutists are able to save people whom the morally upright permissivist cannot. Suppose a country where members of a minority are being executed for very minor crimes. A friend of yours is accused of a very minor crime, but they were with you at the time of the alleged crime. If you are a permissivist, you will say “They were with me”, but if the prosecutor were to go on to ask “But if they weren’t with you, would your religion allow you to lie about that in order to save their life?” you would have to say “Yes”, since it’s wrong to lie about religious matters.

Furthermore, the permissivist Christian needs an account of why it is that it is always wrong to lie about religious matters, even minor ones, if it is not always wrong to lie.

This post doesn’t prove absolutism, but I think does shift the evidence in favor of absolutism.

The above was predicated on this intuition:

  1. Even if it is not always wrong to lie, it is always wrong to lie about one’s religion.

Here is another intuition in the vicinity, which could also be used in a similar way to my above arguments:

  1. Even if it is not always wrong to lie, it is always wrong to lie about morality.

Friday, December 26, 2025

Dishes of food

Let’s say I am eating a dish, say a soup, a salad or a sandwich. At some point there is half-eaten dish, and finally all that’s left are some odds and ends. When did the dish perish?

One option is that the dish perished when the elements distinctive of the type of dish have been eaten. But that doesn’t seem right. Suppose I am eating a cucumber and radish salad, and I have eaten out the cucumbers, leaving the best for last. I haven’t eaten the salad yet, so the salad continues to exist. And if someone asks “What is he eating?” while I am eating the last radish the right answer is still “A cucumber and radish salad.”

[So, interestingly, while it is essential to a cucumber and radish salad that it have cucumbers at the beginning, it is not essential that it have cucumbers at every time in its existence. So we need to distinguish between two kinds of essential parts: parts that are four-dimensionally essential in the sense that the entity must have them at at least one time (cucumbers) and parts that are three-dimensionally essential in the sense that they are needed at all times (the cucumber and radish salad doesn’t have specific parts like that, but it needs to have a bit of a cucumber or a bit of radish at any given time. It is plausible that the four-dimensionally essential parts must be found at the entity’s beginning (otherwise whether the entity exists depends on the future).]

The above argument suggests a test for whether the dish still exists: am I still eating it. But what if I am licking up the crumbs? I suspect, however, licking crumbs is not eating the dish—it’s eating what’s left of the dish.

So the dish perishes into the crumbs and other odds and ends. When exactly that happens is unclear, perhaps vague.

The felt absurdity in the above ontological investigation is rightly to be taken as evidence that dishes, and by extension most other artifacts, do not actually exist.

Monday, December 15, 2025

God and growing block

  1. On the growing block theory of time, if God is in time, God grows.

  2. God doesn’t grow.

  3. So, God is not time or the growing block theory is not true.

Divine timelessness

This is probably the simplest argument for the timelessness of God, and somehow I’ve missed out on it in the past:

  1. God does not change.

  2. Creation has a finite age.

  3. There is nothing outside of creation besides God.

  4. So, change has a finite age. (1–3)

  5. There is no time without change.

  6. So, time has a finite age. (4,5)

  7. If something is in time, it has an age which is less than or equal to the age of time.

  8. God does not have a finite age.

  9. God is not in time. (6–8)

Premise (2) is supported by causal finitism and is also a part of Jewish, Christian and Muslim faith.

Some philosophers deny (3): they think abstract things exist besides God and creation. But this theologically problematic view does not affect the argument. For abstract things are either unchanging or they change as a result of change in concrete things (for instance, a presentist will say that sets come into existence when their members do).

The most problematic premise in my view is (5).

Friday, December 12, 2025

Semi-statistical views of health

On a purely statistical views of health, the health of a bodily system is its functioning near the average or median. This leads to the absurd conclusions in Kurt Vonnegut’s “Harrison Bergeron”: we should push those who are above average closer to the average.

A better view is Bourse’s semi-statistical view on which non-statistical facts determine the direction in which functioning counts as better and the direction in which it counts as worse, and then one says that the health of the system is its functioning either better than average/median or sufficiently close to the average/median.

The semi-statistical view has the following curious consequence. A government program to promote exercise if successful in significantly improving cardiac function in a sufficiently large number of participants and thereby raising the average/median is apt to make some non-participants who would otherwise have been marginal with respect to cardiac function fall below the norm. Thus, some non-participants are literally sickened by the program, and non-consensually so.