Lecture 42

42. Truth in the Mind and the Contrariety of Knowledge and Love

Summary
This lecture explores where truth and falsity are located, arguing they exist primarily in the mind through statements that compose or divide concepts, not in things themselves. Berquist contrasts this with goodness and badness, which exist in things, and develops the profound principle that knowledge and love operate in contrary ways: knowledge draws things into the mind, while love directs the heart toward the thing loved. He illustrates how this distinction affects theological considerations of God’s goodness (under substance) versus God’s truth (under operations), and reflects on how Plato and Aristotle differently approached understanding the first principles of all things.

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Lecture Notes

Main Topics #

Truth as a Property of the Mind, Not Things #

  • Truth and falsity are not found in things or in simple apprehensions (understanding what “man” or “stone” is)
  • Truth and falsity are found only in the mind, specifically in statements that compose or divide concepts
  • Simple apprehensions lack truth value; truth emerges only when the mind puts together concepts (affirmative statement) or divides them (negative statement)
  • Example: “Man” alone has no truth value, but “man is an animal” or “man is not a stone” are true or false
  • This is a fundamental principle: truth requires correspondence between the mind’s composition/division and the composition/division of things

Goodness and Badness: Existing in Things #

  • Goodness and badness are chiefly of things, not primarily of the mind
  • This contrasts sharply with truth, which is a property of mind
  • This difference reflects the distinct natures of knowledge and love

The Contrariety of Knowledge and Love #

  • Knowledge operates by bringing things into the mind: the knower receives the thing known
  • Love operates by the heart going to the thing loved: the lover goes out to the beloved
  • Augustine: “The soul is more ubi amata [where it loves] than ubi animata [where it animates the body]”
  • Our Lord: “Where your treasure is, there your heart shall be”
  • These are contrary operations, not contrariety in the strict sense, but contrary in how they work

The Same Knowledge of Opposites #

  • Same knowledge of opposites: knowing virtue requires understanding vice; knowing health requires understanding sickness; knowing blindness requires understanding sight
  • A doctor who knows high blood pressure must know proper blood pressure
  • Rhetoric enables persuasion to good or bad; medical knowledge can save life or end it
  • Aristotle teaches in Book V of Politics how to preserve and how to overthrow a government—same knowledge for opposites
  • The reason: in knowledge, opposites are both put into the mind through definition and understanding
  • Example: blindness is defined as “lack of sight in an animal apt to have sight”—sight is included in the definition of blindness

Different Love of Opposites #

  • No same love of opposites: love of one opposite excludes love of the other
  • The reason: love goes to the thing in itself, and in things themselves, one opposite excludes the other
  • If I love sight, I cannot love blindness; if I love virtue, I cannot love vice (in the same respect)
  • This reflects the condition of things: being blind excludes sight; having sight excludes blindness
  • Knowledge puts opposites together in the mind, but things keep them apart

Theological Order: Goodness Before Truth #

  • In Thomas’s Summa Theologiae:
    • God’s goodness is treated under God’s substance (as a perfection of divine substance)
    • God’s truth is treated only after God’s understanding and operations are established
  • This reflects the principle that goodness exists in things, while truth exists in mind (understanding)
  • Contrast with Plato: Plato begins with “the Good itself” and “the Beautiful itself” as the beginning of all things
    • Plato does not explicitly recognize that the Good itself understands and wills
    • He sees goodness/beauty before recognizing divine understanding and will
  • Contrast with Aristotle: Aristotle begins with “mind and will” as the first principles
  • Thomas’s synthesis: goodness is more fundamental than truth in the consideration of God’s substance, but truth cannot be properly understood until understanding and operations are addressed

Knowledge Requires Analysis; Love Does Not #

  • To know something well requires analysis (Greek: ana-lysis, taking apart)
  • Love is not a taking apart; the lover does not analyze what is loved
  • Figurative speech is more appropriate to love than precise analysis
  • Music, the perfect sign of love, can communicate without words
  • This reflects the deep contrariety between how knowledge and love operate

Key Arguments #

The Location of Truth Argument #

  • Premise 1: If you dig in the ground, you find rocks and soil, not truth
  • Premise 2: If you walk through the ocean or air, you find no truth or falsity
  • Premise 3: Truth and falsity must be somewhere
  • Conclusion: Truth and falsity are found only in the mind, not in things themselves
  • Refinement: Not just anywhere in the mind, but in statements (composition or division of concepts)

The Same Knowledge of Opposites Argument #

  • Premise 1: To know one opposite, one must know what the other opposite is (for definition and comparison)
  • Premise 2: In knowledge, the mind puts both opposites into itself through definition and understanding
  • Premise 3: The mind can hold contradictory definitions simultaneously without contradiction
  • Conclusion: The same knowledge encompasses both opposites
  • Example: A doctor’s knowledge of health necessarily includes knowledge of sickness; medical knowledge can heal or harm

The Different Love of Opposites Argument #

  • Premise 1: Love goes to the thing in itself, as it is
  • Premise 2: In things themselves, one opposite excludes the other (ontologically)
  • Premise 3: If I love one thing as it is, I cannot love its opposite as it is (same respect)
  • Conclusion: Love of one opposite excludes love of the other
  • Contrast: Knowledge holds opposites together; love keeps them apart

Important Definitions #

Truth (Veritas) #

  • Primary location: In the mind, specifically in statements
  • Condition: Requires composition or division of concepts that corresponds to composition or division in things
  • Not in simple apprehensions: Understanding what “man” is does not yet give truth value
  • Requires putting together or dividing: “Man is an animal” (true) or “Man is not a stone” (true)

Knowledge (Scientia) vs. Love (Amor) #

  • Knowledge: The knower receives the thing known into the mind; cosa in cognitore (thing in the knower)
  • Love: The lover goes out to the thing loved; cor in amato (heart in the loved thing)
  • These are fundamentally contrary operations in how they direct consciousness

Being as True (Ens Verum) vs. Accidental Being (Ens per Accidens) #

  • Being as true: Has a cause that is indeterminate; is an “underblowing” of the mind
  • Accidental being: Also indeterminate, hence set aside from fundamental metaphysical consideration
  • Primary being: Being as being in things themselves, apart from truth and accident

Examples & Illustrations #

Augustine’s Boy on the Shore #

  • Augustine saw a boy digging a hole in the sand and putting ocean water into it
  • Augustine asked, “What are you doing?”
  • Boy replied: “I’m putting the ocean into this hole”
  • Augustine responded: “You can’t fit the ocean into that little hole”
  • Application to knowledge of Trinity: “Neither can you get the trinity fully into your mind”
  • Application to love: “But you could jump into the ocean—and that’s what he does in loving God”
  • Point: Knowledge tries to bring things into the mind (limited); love goes out to the thing (more capable of infinity)

Truth Examples #

  • “Man is an animal” — TRUE (composition of what is together in things)
  • “Man is not a stone” — TRUE (division of what is divided in things)
  • “Man is a stone” — FALSE (composition of what is divided in things)
  • “Man is not an animal” — FALSE (division of what is together in things)

Medical Knowledge #

  • A doctor who knows high blood pressure must understand proper blood pressure
  • Medical knowledge can be used to save a baby’s life or to end it
  • The doctor, through knowledge, knows how to do both

Questions Addressed #

Where is Truth Found? #

  • Question: If you search physically in the world, where would you find truth or falsity?
  • Answer: Nowhere in the physical world; truth is found only in the mind, in statements that compose or divide
  • Implication: Truth is not a property of things but of the mind’s judgment

Can There Be the Same Knowledge of Opposites? #

  • Question: If you teach ethics, don’t you teach both virtue and vice? Don’t you make students capable of vice?
  • Answer: Yes, knowledge encompasses both opposites because knowledge puts both into the mind through definition
  • Challenge: This raises questions about teaching subjects that enable harm (rhetoric, medicine, statecraft)
  • Aristotle’s response: This is the nature of knowledge; knowledge itself is neutral

Is There the Same Love of Opposites? #

  • Question: Can you love both virtue and vice? Both sight and blindness?
  • Answer: No. Love of one opposite excludes love of the other because in things themselves, opposites exclude each other
  • Reason: Love goes to the thing as it is, and opposites cannot both be as they are in the same thing

Why Does Thomas Put Goodness Before Truth in Theology? #

  • Question: Why is God’s goodness discussed under divine substance, but truth only after divine understanding?
  • Answer: Because goodness exists in things (and God is substance), while truth exists in mind (and requires understanding)
  • Implication: Goodness is more fundamental in being; truth is more derivative, dependent on mind

How Do Knowledge and Love Work Contrary to Each Other? #

  • Question: What is the deep difference between how knowing and loving operate?
  • Answer: Knowledge draws things into the mind; love directs the heart toward things. They are contrary motions.
  • Implication: This explains why analysis (taking apart) belongs to knowledge but not love; why precision belongs to knowledge but not love

Notable Quotes #

“Where do you find truth or falsity? If you dug down to the ground, you know, would you find truth or falsity? No, I think you’d find rocks in this soil, but you don’t find truth or falsity.” — Duane Berquist, illustrating that truth is not in physical things

“The soul is more ubi amata, where it loves, than ubi animata, where it animates the body.” — Augustine, on the nature of love’s movement

“Where your treasure is, there your heart shall be.” — Jesus Christ (Matthew 6:21), illustrating love’s direction toward its object

“I left my heart in San Francisco.” — Popular song (cited by Berquist), illustrating how love makes the lover’s heart go to the beloved

“The good and bad are chiefly of things, huh?” — Duane Berquist, highlighting the contrast between truth (in mind) and goodness (in things)

“You don’t find any truth or falsity in the Gated Sister [simple apprehensions], right? Which simplifies life, right? Not to worry about falsity. But you don’t get any truth either.” — Duane Berquist, on why simple concepts lack truth value