Abstract
AbstractThis article describes the ultimate ground of reality, Brahman, as a single power unfolding in concert in all things. It uses counterfactual argumentation to imply that a cosmos must consist of telic causal orders or manifested ‘powers’ as its most granular building block – and that they must be unified into a single whole. It is based on an argument for a single causally-conditioning substrate of all things recorded in India’s classical Sāṃkhya Kārikā and Brahma Sūtras; this was used by scholastic Vedāntic thinkers including the non-dualist Śaṃkara and the ‘transformationist’ Bhedābheda thinker Śrīnivāsa. It takes up arguments for satkārya, the pre-existence of a thing’s various transformations in potentio within its substrate, and employs them to paint a picture of reality as an ordered yet entangled pattern of causal trajectories. These manifest as the changing world we know. While Vedānta’s main motivation for making the arguments was to prove monism, this conception of an ‘immanent cause’ of all was also seen as divine. We see how this accords with moves in contemporary analytic philosophy to shift away from a broadly Humean model of constant conjunctions (reminiscent of key Buddhist approaches) toward a Neo-Aristotelian ‘metaphysics of powers’. But we also indicate how it may go further than most modern powers-metaphysicians in proposing a deeper connection between powers and what it is for there to be a cosmos at all.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference65 articles.
1. Armstrong, D. (1999). ‘The causal theory of properties: Properties according to Ellis Shoemaker and Others.' Philosophical Topics, 26, 25–37.
2. Burley, M. (2012). Classical Sāṃkhya and Yoga: A Metaphysics of Experience. Routledge.
3. Cartwright, N. (1994). Fundamentalism vs. the Patchwork of Laws. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 94(1), 279–292. https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotelian/94.1.279
4. Cartwright, N. (2009). Causal Laws, Predictions, and the Need for Genuine Powers. In T. Handfield (Ed.), Dispositions and Causes. Oxford University Press.
5. Cartwright, N., & Pemberton, J. (2013). Aristotelian Powers: Without them, what would modern science do? In Ruth Groff & John Greco (Eds.), Powers and Capacities in Philosophy: The New Aristotelianism. Oxford University Press.