© Avi Sion, 1990 (Rev. ed. 1996) All rights reserved.
CHAPTER 2.
FOUNDATIONS.
Logic is founded on certain 'laws of thought', which were first
formulated by Aristotle, an ancient Greek philosopher. We shall describe them
separately here, and later consider their collective significance.
3.
The Law of the Excluded Middle.
The Law of Identity is an imperative that we consider all evidence at its
face value, to begin with. Aristotle expressed this first law of thought by
saying 'A is A', meaning 'whatever is, is whatever it is'.
There are three ways we look upon phenomena, the things which appear
before us, however they happen to do so: at their face value, and as real or
illusory.
We can be sure of every appearance, that it is, and is what it is. (i) Something
has presented itself to us, whether we thereafter judge it real or illusory, and
(ii) this something displays a certain
configuration, whether we thereafter describe and interpret it rightly or
wrongly. The present is present, the absent is absent.
Every appearance as such is objectively given and has a certain content
or specificity. We can and should and commonly do initially regard it with a
simple attitude of receptiveness and attention to detail. Every appearance is in
itself neutral; the qualification of an appearance (thus broadly defined) as a
'reality' or an 'illusion', is a subsequent issue.
That statement is only an admission that any phenomenon minimally exists
and has given characteristics, without
making claims about the source and significance of this existence or these
characteristics. The moment we manage to but
think of something, it is already at least 'apparent'. No assumption need be
made at this stage about the nature of being and knowledge in general, nor any
detailed categorizations, descriptions or explanations of them.
Regarded in this way, at their face value, all
phenomena are evident data, to be at least taken into consideration. The world
of appearances thus offers us something to
work with, some reliable data with which we can build the edifice of
knowledge, a starting point of sorts. We need make no distinctions such as those
between the physical/material and the mental, or sense-data and hallucinations,
or concrete percepts and abstract concepts; these are later developments.
The law of identity is thus merely an acknowledgement of the world of
appearances, without prejudice as to its ultimate value. It defines 'the world' so
broadly, that there is no way to counter it with any other 'world'. When we
lay claim to another 'world', we merely
expand this one. All we can ever do is subdivide the world of appearances
into two domains, one of 'reality' and one of 'illusion'; but these domains can
never abolish each other's existence and content.
What needs to be grasped here is that every judgment implies the
acceptance, at some stage, of some sort of appearance as real. There is no
escape from that; to claim that nothing is real, is to claim that the appearance
that 'everything is illusory' is real. We are first of all observers, and only
thereafter can we be judges.
Reality and illusion are simply terms more loaded with meaning than
appearance or phenomenon — they imply an evaluation to have taken place. This
value-judgement is a final characterization of the object, requiring a more
complex process, a reflection. It implies we went beyond the immediately
apparent. It implies a broader perspective, more empirical research, more
rigorous reasoning. But what we finally have is still 'appearance', though in a
less pejorative sense than initially.
Thus, 'real' or 'illusory' are themselves always, ultimately, just
appearances. They are themselves, like the objects of consciousness which they
evaluate, distinct objects of consciousness. We could say that, there is a bit
of the real in the illusory and a bit of the illusory in the real; what they
have something in common is appearance. However, these terms lose their meaning
if we try to equate them too seriously.
On what basis an appearance may
or should be classified as real or illusory is of course a big issue, which
needs to be addressed. That is the overall task of logic, to set precise
guidelines for such classification. But the first step is to admit the available
evidence, the phenomenal world as such: this gives us a data-base.
The Law of Contradiction is an imperative to reject as illusory and not
real, any apparent presence together of contradictories. This second law of
thought could be stated as 'Nothing is both A and not-A', or 'whatever is, is
not whatever it is not'.
We cannot say of anything that it is both
present and absent at once: what is
present, is not absent. If the world of appearance displays some content
with an identity, then it has effectively failed to display nothing.
Contradictory appearances cannot coexist, concur, overlap: they are
'incompatible extremes'.
We can say of something that it 'is' something else, in the sense of
having a certain relation to something distinct from itself, but we cannot say
of it that it both has and lacks that relation, in one and the same respect, at
one and the same place and time.
It is evident, and therefore incontrovertible (by the previous law), that
appearances are variegated, changing, and diverse. Phenomena have a variety of
aspects and are usually composed of different elements, they often change, and
differ from each other in many ways. However, for any respect, place and time,
we pinpoint, the appearance as such is, and is whatever it is — and not at once otherwise.
The law of contradiction is not a mere rephrasing of the law of identity,
note well, but goes one step further: it sets a standard for relegating some
appearances to the status of illusions; in a sense, it begins to define what we
mean by 'illusion'. It does not, however, thereby claim that all what is
leftover in the field of appearance is real with finality; nor does it deny that
some of the leftovers are real (as is assured us by the law of identity).
By the law of identity, whatever appears is given
some credence: therefore, one might suggest, the coexistence of opposites
has some credence. The law of contradiction interposes itself at this point, and
says: no, such events carry no conviction
for us, once clearly discerned. The first law continues to function as a
recognition that there is an apparent contradiction; but the second law imposes
on us the need to resolve that contradiction somehow.
The law of contradiction is itself, like anything else, an appearance
among others, but it strikes us as an especially
credible one, capable of overriding the initial credibility of all other
considerations. It does not conflict with the message of the law of identity,
since the latter is open to any event, including the event that some appearances
be more forceful than others. The law of contradiction is precisely one such
forceful appearance, an extremely forceful one.
Thus, though the world of appearances presents itself to us with some
seeming contradictions, they appear as
incredible puzzles — their unacceptability is inherent to them, obvious to us.
We may verbally speculate about a world with real contradictions, and say that
this position is consistent with itself even if inconsistent with itself. But
the fact remains that whenever we are face to face with a specific contradiction
(including that one) we are unavoidably skeptical — something seems 'wrong'.
The way we understand the apparent existence of contradictions is by
viewing the world of appearances as layered,
or stratified. Our first impressions of things are often superficial; as our
experience grows, our consciousness penetrates more
deeply into them. Thus, though each level is what it is (law of identity),
parallel levels may be in contradiction; when a contradiction occurs, it is
because we are superimposing different layers (law of contradiction). In this
way, we resolve the 'general contradiction' of contradiction as such — we
separate the conflicting elements from each other.
(Note in passing, as an alternative to the metaphor of 'depth', which
likens consciousness to a beam of light, we also sometimes refer to 'height'.
Here, the suggestion is that the essence of things is more elevated, and we have
to raise ourselves up to make contact with it.)
That resolution of contradiction refers to the diversity and change in
the world of appearance as due to the perspectives of consciousness. Thus, the
appearance of the phenomena we classified as 'illusory' is due to the
limitations of ordinary consciousness, its failure to know everything. This
restriction in the power of consciousness may be viewed as a 'fault' of our
minds, and in that sense 'illusion' is a 'product' of our minds. For that
reason, we regard the illusory as in some sense 'imaginary' — this is our
explanation of it.
On a more objective plane, we may of course accept diversity and change
as real enough, and explain them with reference to the space and time
dimensions, or to uniform and unchanging essences. In such cases, we are able to
meet the demands of the law of contradiction without using the concept of
'illusion'; only when space, time, and respect, are clearly specified, does a
contradiction signify illusion.
3.
The Law of the Excluded Middle.
The Law of the Excluded Middle is an imperative to reject as illusory and
not real, any apparent absence together of contradictories. This third law of
thought could be stated as 'nothing is neither A nor not-A', or 'whatever is,
either is some thing or is-not that thing'.
We cannot say of anything that it is at once neither present nor absent: what
is not present, is absent. If the world of appearance fails to display some
content with an identity, then it has effectively displayed nothing. There is no
third alternative to these two events (whence the expression 'excluded middle'):
they are exhaustive.
We may well say that some parts or aspects of the world are inaccessible
to our limited faculties, but (as pointed out in the discussion of identity) we
cannot claim a world beyond that of appearances: the moment we mention it, we
include it.
It may be that we neither know that something is so and so, nor know that
it is not so and so, but this concerns knowledge only, and in reality that thing
either is or is-not so and so. Whatever we consider must either be there or
not-there, in the specified respect, place and time, even if we cannot discern
things enough to tell at this time or ever. There is an answer to every
meaningful question; uncertainty is a 'state of mind', without 'objective'
equivalent.
Moreover, strictly speaking, 'questions' are artificial attempts to anticipate
undisplayed layers of appearance. As things appear now, if nothing is being
displayed, that is the (current)
'answer' of the world of appearances; in the world of appearances there are no
'questions'. 'Questions' merely express our resolve to pursue the matter
further, and try to uncover other layers of appearance; they are not statements
about reality.
If we choose to, loosely speaking,
regard doubts as kinds of assertions, the law of the excluded middle enjoins us
to class them at the outset as illusory, and admit that in reality things are
definite. Problematic statements like 'it might or might not be thus' are not
intended to affirm that 'neither thus nor not-thus' appeared,
but that what did appear (whether it was 'thus' or 'not-thus' — one of them
did, for sure) was not sufficiently forceful to satisfy our curiosity.
Even if no phenomenon is encountered which confirms or discredits an
idea, there must be a phenomenon capable of doing so, in the world somewhere,
sometime. We have to focus on the evidence, and try and distinguish the
appearance or nonappearance of that imagined phenomenon.
Thus, the law of the excluded middle serves to create a breach of sorts
between the 'objective world' and the 'world of ideas', and establishes the
pre-eminence of the former over the latter. The breach is not an unbridgeable
gap, but allows us to expand our language, in such a way that we can discuss
eventual layers of appearance besides those so far encountered, even while we
admit of the evidence at hand.
Such an artifice is made possible by our general awareness from past
experience that appearances do change in some
cases, but should not be taken to mean that any given appearance will
change. It is only the expression of a (commendable) 'open-mindedness' in
principle, with no specific justification in any given case.
What we have done, effectively, is to expand what we mean by
'appearance', so as to include future appearance, in addition to appearances
until now in evidence. Thus far, our implicit understanding was that appearance
was actual, including present
realities and present illusions. Now, we reflect further, and decide to embrace
our anticipations of 'possible’ appearances
as a kind of actuality, too.
Such hypothetical projections are also, in a sense, 'apparent'. But they
are clearly imaginary, inventions of the mind. Their status as appearances is
therefore immediately that of 'illusions'; that is their present status,
whatever their future outcome. However, they are illusory with less finality
than the phenomena so labeled by the law of contradiction; they retain some
degree of credibility.