Means
To Message
Stanley L. Jaki
Every philosophy is a message. For conveying that message there has
to be a tangible means, such as a book. Therefore for the sake of a minimum
of consistency, the philosopher's message or system should account in full
for the reality of the means.
This new book by Stanley L. Jaki aims at unfolding
the consequences of this minimum for the main topics of philosophy. The
necessary first topic is the objective reality of the means, or in
general "objects." Any neglect of this will result, Jaki argues, in philosophical
sleights of hand that endlessly breed one another. Jaki then removes some
misconceptions about clarity as actually identified with science, and demonstrates
that science as such cannot account for the reality of the means that carries
its message.
In keeping in focus the priority of the means over
the message, Jaki takes up such further topics as free will, purpose, causality,
change, and the mind. He thereby prepares the ground for discussing the
universe, ethics, God, and miracles. Finally he deals with history and
with the question of whether human beings are alone in the universe.
An important corrective to much of the work currently
taking place in the field of philosophy Means to Message provides
a rigorous, highly original presentation of the claim that any consistent
philosophical message must be steeped in a realist epistemology that is
fully open to metaphysics.