Religion, Non-Reductive and Saturated, Gains Respect in Post-Modern Academic World – Patheos

Posted: May 29, 2020 at 1:04 am

Some tricky vocabulary in Tracys Fragments, Chapter OneReligion, a fragmentary phenomenon, resists being caught in a system.

A philosophical dictionary or some background in phenomenology is useful in reading David Tracys Fragments. Like when he says, It may well be, as several contemporary phenomenologists claim, that religion is the nonreductive saturated phenomenon par excellence. (p. 20)

Its no secret that modern academic thought in general has not been particularly kind to religion. Tracy includes even some theological theories in that modern anti-religious, or better, anti-God sentiment. Much of the gradually passing modern age, especially its Enlightenment variety, aimed at control of the world and the self through technology and theory. The phenomenon of religious experience turned out to be particularly hard to control. Heres a secret that hasnt spread too far outside the post-modern academic world: Some of these later thinkers, including non-believers, increasingly find religion to be fascinating.

One religion-controlling tactic was to interpret religious as something else. It was bad psychology, transferring our feelings of love and dread toward our human fathers onto a Father in the sky. Or it was bad science, explaining mysterious events by way of unseen but powerful beings. But practitioners of phenomenology, the branch of philosophy that starts from a careful analysis of experience, say that that only explains some of what religious people experience and only some of the time. You cant reduce religion that way without a remainder that you cant account for.

Religion isnt bad science or bad psychology as some atheists would have it, denying truth to any field except the sciences. But neither can theologians dream up a system that would be fitting for God. Every ism, including theism, deism, pantheism, and panentheism, at bottom is reduces God to manageable proportions. That last ism, panentheism, was a viewpoint Tracy earlier had tried to develop in process categories. He now sees it also as too controlling for a phenomenon that cant be controlled. (See David Tracy in Boston Collaborative Encyclopedia of Western Theology.) Religion is nonreductive.

I suspect, though I dont know for sure, that religion for Tracy is nonreductive in a more profound sense. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy defines phenomenological reduction as a practice whereby one, as a phenomenologist, is able to liberate oneself from the captivation in which one is held by all that one accepts as being the case. As a philosophy student, I learned to call this procedure a bracketing of the question of existence to look merely at how things show up in consciousness. Its like taking your self with its commitments and biases out of the process.

It could be, though, that some phenomena dont lend themselves to this abstract treatment or attitude. A profound experience of a work of art may be nonreductive in that sense as well as the more everyday experience of astonishment. Or it might be the experience of a conversation that just flows without any self-consciousness among the speakers. Or a game that seems to play itself, especially when an athlete is in the zone. How does one liberate oneself from an experience in which there is so little self to begin with?

Some religious experiences may be like that. Not everyone has them, but some do. A fellow Patheos blogger and Fellow Dying Inmate has a lot to say about altered states of consciousness. Theyre very common in the Bible and across history and cultures. (Maybe not modern Western cultures so much.) Tracy denies having such experiences. Hes not a mystic, he says, but he still insists theologians need to take such experiences seriously. This may be another way religious phenomena are nonreductive. Its impossible to be abstract about them and understand them from the outside, so to speak.

Ill begin by going back again to what I learned in my long-ago student days. Think of your mind as stretching out to some object, but the object isnt there. Its what phenomenologys founder Edmund Husserl calls an empty intention. The object is only a concept or an image in your mind. Your intention begins to be filled when the object approaches or you approach the object. As you get a better and better view, that intention is more and more filled. It becomes saturated at the moment of maximum or clearest presence of the thing.

I think Tracy takes a related but different idea of saturated phenomena from his colleague at the Chicago Divinity School Jean-Luc Marion. According to Marion, some phenomena give more intuition [or presence of something] than is needed to fill a subjects intention. Such phenomena are saturated with intention, and exceed any concepts or limiting horizons that a [person] could impose upon them.

Such a presence explodes whatever inklings or anticipations we might have had, including the most general categories of space, time, quantity, quality, causality, and relation. A historical event like the Holocaust, when it strikes us in its full force, say, at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., might be such a mind-blowing experience. It seems climate change was something similar for Greta Thunberg. (See this post.) Im thinking also of more ordinary things like the experiences I described above of art, a conversation, or a game. Or the face of a loved one. Sometimes we just cant find the right words to describe an experience.

But there will be words, including truthful ones. (Science cant have all the truth.) Or the truth comes out in other forms like art, music, and dance. A famous dancer once answered a fan who asked her what her dance meant, If I could say it, I wouldnt have to dance it.

When words come, they wont necessarily fit in nicely with all that one accepts as being the case. They might even be closer to what one previously accepted as impossible. Jesus words were like that.

When words come, they will come from somewhere. Jesus interpreted his experience of God in words he found in his Scriptures. The first Christians drew from the same source to interpret their experience of Jesus and the Spirit. Words like Kingdom, Christ/Messiah (anointed), Son of God (a title kings claimed), Son of Man (human one but gradually morphing into divine-like), and, most daring, Lord.

Scholars have long recognized that the Old Testament doesnt present one coherent picture. It is fragments, sometimes jarring with other fragments, coming from many different experiences and forms of life. Selected fragments from the past come together in the memories and writings of the early Christians, but not into a coherent whole such as they never had before. They remain fragments. For example, its impossible to piece all the resurrection stories of the Gospels into a coherent picture.

In Fragments and even more in the next volume, Filaments, Tracy deals with fragments from Christian experiences through the centuries. Fragments are our spiritual situation, Tracy says. Three different groups approach fragments in three very different ways. Radical (or neo-) conservatives see fragments with regret and nostalgia, as all that is left of what was once a unified culture. Radical postmodernists love for fragments is part of their love for extremes, transgression, and excess and for offering a way out of the deadening hand of the reigning totality system. A third unnamed group, with which Tracy aligns, sees fragments as saturated and auratic [like an aura] bears of infinity and sacred hope. (p. 23-24)

Tracy learns from all three of these philosophical and theological types. He also subjects them to critical analysis. Fragments continues with a look at some of Tracys favorite fragmentary themes. Following is the Table of Contents for the rest of Part One (there are four parts) of this volume:

The rest is here:
Religion, Non-Reductive and Saturated, Gains Respect in Post-Modern Academic World - Patheos

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