Tetralemmic Polarity
Scott Roberts
Scott Roberts
Quote:I have found that, once one gets past belief in independent material existence, many of the remaining metaphysical questions can be dealt with through what Coleridge called 'polarity'. Coleridge borrowed the term from magnetism, with its feature that the north and south poles of a magnet existed in mutual dependence and mutual opposition. The metaphysical issues are more restrictive, however. While in magnetism one could just switch the labels "north" and "south" with nothing changing, one cannot do that with the polarities of interest here. The main example I will be discussing is the polarity of formlessness with form, though I think that other polarities like unity/multiplicity or permanence/change are in a sense equivalent to formlessness/form. One might call such polarities 'tetralemmic' in that one establishes the reality of such a polarity by going through the four horns of what is called the 'tetralemma'. The horns are, given the possibilities X and not-X: to affirm X alone as fundamental, to affirm not-X alone, to affirm both X and not-X, and to affirm neither X nor not-X. It is by running through the tetralemma that one recognizes such a polarity as being, on the one hand, not categorizable in any ordinary way (like "is" or "isn't"), while on the other hand, one finds it is necessary to make sense of our experience.
One gets a tetralemmic polarity when one of the poles is not an object. By "object" I mean whatever can be observed or thought about. So a tree, a hallucination, a concept, a process are all objects. All objects have form. A form is a set of distinctions that allows one to identify an object as a particular object, distinct from all other objects. However, this raises the question of whether an object is a form, or is it that it has a form, and its form is not all there is to it. If the latter, then that "extra" must be formless. I will argue that formlessness is indeed a reality in all objects, and that formlessness and form are a tetralemmic polarity.
Let us go through the tetralemma, considering the possibilities:
1) There is ultimately only formlessness (and form is somehow derived from formlessness).
2) There is ultimately only form (and formlessness is just vacuous word-mongering).
3) There is ultimately both form and formlessness.
4) The ultimate is neither form nor formlessness.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell