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AI Overview Yes, Kalb’s thesis on music and measurement proposes that modern mathematical tools fail to capture the reality of nature because they reduced quantity to abstract numbers. By reclaiming a structural theory of quantity, he roots physics and motion directly in the rules of musical harmony, intervals, and major/minor scales.Let's break this down into a few fascinating areas we could unpack:Critique of Algebra: How Kalb builds on Jacob Klein’s work to argue that algebra is actually a "confused doctrine of music".Geometry of Motion: How the continuous proportions of musical harmony can explain physical motion and spatial dynamics better than the infinitesimal calculus.Scales and Natural Law: How the derivation of the octave, fifth, and specific scale patterns serve as eidetic principles for the physical universe.

AI Overview Yes, Kalb’s thesis on music and measurement proposes that modern mathematical tools fail to capture the reality of nature because they reduced quantity to abstract numbers. By reclaiming a structural theory of quantity, he roots physics and motion directly in the rules of musical harmony, intervals, and major/minor scales. [ 1 ] Let's break this down into a few fascinating areas we could unpack: Critique of Algebra: How Kalb builds on Jacob Klein’s work to argue that algebra is actually a "confused doctrine of music". [ 1 , 2 ] Geometry of Motion: How the continuous proportions of musical harmony can explain physical motion and spatial dynamics better than the infinitesimal calculus. [ 1 ] Scales and Natural Law: How the derivation of the octave, fifth, and specific scale patterns serve as eidetic principles for the physical universe. [ 1 ]
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Google AI: You are touching on the central epistemological disruption of Jeffrey Kalb's thesis in Music and Measurement: On the Eidetic Principles of Harmony and Motion. By arguing that modern algebra and calculus are built on a flawed understanding of quantity, he positions music as the true, uncorrupted foundation for measuring the world.Kalb's framework directly challenges the mechanistic and algebraic foundations of the Enlightenment:The Cartesian/Baconian View: Assumes a universe of discrete, measurable units. It breaks reality down into quantifiable, interchangeable parts that can be manipulated by algebra.The Musical Alternative: Kalb argues that music inherently operates on principles of qualitative harmony rather than pure quantitative abstraction. By building physics and measurement from musical principles, he rejects the idea that the universe is just a machine defined by discrete mathematical quantities.In doing so, the thesis attempts to overturn the core presumptions of modernity, suggesting that harmony—not algebra—is the eidetic principle underlying nature.

You are touching on the central epistemological disruption of Jeffrey Kalb's thesis in Music and Measurement: On the Eidetic Principles of Harmony and Motion . By arguing that modern algebra and calculus are built on a flawed understanding of quantity, he positions music as the true, uncorrupted foundation for measuring the world. [ 1 ] Kalb's framework directly challenges the mechanistic and algebraic foundations of the Enlightenment: The Cartesian/Baconian View: Assumes a universe of discrete, measurable units. It breaks reality down into quantifiable, interchangeable parts that can be manipulated by algebra. [ 1 ] The Musical Alternative: Kalb argues that music inherently operates on principles of qualitative harmony rather than pure quantitative abstraction. By building physics and measurement from musical principles, he rejects the idea that the universe is just a machine defined by discrete mathematical quantities. [] In doing so, the thesis attempts to overturn the ...

From what you have said, you are probably the only person in the world who has understood the ultimate meaning of "Music and Measurement." I really did take aim at the entire edifice of modernity. That is heartening, because I really don't sell any copies of that book.

Hello, Fred. You may likewise call me by my first name. I was original an electrical engineer and materials scientist, but began to see some of the philosophical contradictions in quantum mechanics, and turned toward natural philosophy. From there it was a natural step to metaphysics and epistemology. I have a very different take on Plato and Aristotle. The traditional (pious) representation of Aristotle is that he was the faithful student immersed in Plato's doctrine, only to exceed him and later criticize him. The ancient Greek sources paint a very different picture: a philosopher who was primarily interested in developing his own philosophy and used Plato to spar with. In fact, Plato used to call him "Polos," Greek for "colt," because when a colt wishes to nurse it kicks its mother. (The comparison suggests a degree of dependency but ingratitude on Aristotle's part.) At any rate, I've found that Aristotle often lifts the arguments of Plato directly, b...

AI Overview Étienne Gilson argued that "God is not a substance" in the traditional philosophical sense (meaning an essence distinct from existence). Instead, he defined God as ipsum esse subsistens (the pure act of being itself), where essence and existence are identical.Jeffrey Kalb critiques this "existential" interpretation in his book Existence and Subsistence in St. Thomas Aquinas. On page 12, Kalb argues that Gilson's derogation of the concept of "substance" leads to insuperable difficulties for orthodox Catholic theology, specifically in understanding the Trinity and the Eucharist.The Theological ConflictThe Trinity: Orthodox Trinitarian theology relies on the concept of one substance (ousia) and three distinct persons (hypostases). If God is not a substance, it becomes logically difficult to explain how the three persons can share a single, unified divine nature while maintaining real personal distinctions.The Eucharist: Eucharistic theology relies on the concept of "transubstantiation"—the change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the Body and Blood of Christ. If substance is downplayed or discarded, the ontological reality of Christ's physical presence in the Eucharist faces severe metaphysical hurdles.

AI Overview Étienne Gilson argued that "God is not a substance" in the traditional philosophical sense (meaning an essence distinct from existence). Instead, he defined God as ipsum esse subsistens (the pure act of being itself), where essence and existence are identical. [ 1 ] Jeffrey Kalb critiques this "existential" interpretation in his book Existence and Subsistence in St. Thomas Aquinas . On page 12, Kalb argues that Gilson's derogation of the concept of "substance" leads to insuperable difficulties for orthodox Catholic theology, specifically in understanding the Trinity and the Eucharist. [ 1 , 2 ] The Theological Conflict The Trinity: Orthodox Trinitarian theology relies on the concept of one substance ( ousia ) and three distinct persons ( hypostases ). If God is not a substance, it becomes logically difficult to explain how the three persons can share a single, unified divine nature while maintaining real personal distinctio...

Google AI: Michel Villey’s theory diagnoses the shift in Western legal philosophy from "classical objective right" to "modern subjective rights," viewing human rights as an ideological distortion that divorces law from reality.Core ConceptsClassical Objective Right (Iustum): Rooted in Aristotelian and Thomistic natural law. It views the law as a cosmic or social objective order. "Right" was not a possession of a person, but rather the just proportion or balance to be discovered in the external world (e.g., giving each person their due in a specific relationship or transaction).Nominalism: A philosophical movement championed by thinkers like William of Ockham that denied the existence of universal truths or inherent natures. It posited that reality consists only of isolated particulars.Modern Subjective Right (Facultas): Because nominalism denied objective meaning in nature, the foundation of reality shifted to the individual will. Law was thereby inverted from an objective cosmic order into a personal, arbitrary power, property, or claim inherent to a subject.The Transition to "Human Rights"Villey argued this semantic revolution completely redefined the concept of ius (law/right) in the Western world.From Action to Power: Ius shifted from meaning "that which is just" (objective) to "a power possessed by an individual" (subjective).The Will as Creator: In the modern formulation (seen in thinkers like Hobbes, Locke, and later natural rights theorists), the individual’s subjective will becomes the source of moral and legal authority, irrespective of the external, natural order.Villey's Critique: Villey was fiercely critical of this development. He viewed modern human rights as dangerous fictions that atomized society, stripped law of its relational and objective character, and ultimately led to self-defeating subjective claims of personal power.

Michel Villey’s theory diagnoses the shift in Western legal philosophy from "classical objective right" to "modern subjective rights," viewing human rights as an ideological distortion that divorces law from reality. [ 1 , 2 ] Core Concepts Classical Objective Right ( Iustum ): Rooted in Aristotelian and Thomistic natural law. It views the law as a cosmic or social objective order . "Right" was not a possession of a person, but rather the just proportion or balance to be discovered in the external world (e.g., giving each person their due in a specific relationship or transaction). [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 5 ] Nominalism: A philosophical movement championed by thinkers like William of Ockham that denied the existence of universal truths or inherent natures. It posited that reality consists only of isolated particulars. [ 1 , 2 ] Modern Subjective Right ( Facultas ): Because nominalism denied objective meaning in nature, the foundation of reality shifted to the i...

AI Overview Michel Villey famously argued that this shift transformed law from objective justice into subjective rights (droits subjectifs). He traced this transition to a medieval philosophical revolution—specifically William of Ockham’s nominalism.Villey's critique outlines how the concept of law mutated:Classical (Aristotelian/Roman) Justice: Rooted in objective reality, where the goal of a judge or jurist is to observe interpersonal relationships and discover the proper, objective share/balance (suum cuique—to each his due) in real-world scenarios.Modern Subjective Rights: Rooted in nominalism, where the external, natural order is denied in favor of "individual will." Under this framework, law is inverted into a power or arbitrary subjective claim inherently possessed by an individual (the precursor to modern "human rights").The Core of Villey's ArgumentNominalism over Realism: By shifting philosophical focus to nominalism, the medieval era abandoned the idea that things in the real world have an inherent, discoverable nature or objective value.Focus on the Individual: The focus shifted from the external, interpersonal act of doing justice to the internal faculties and personal claims of the individual.The "Tool" of Law: Villey argued that this perverts the purpose of law; rather than acting as the art of finding a just balance among competing claims, law becomes merely an instrument or a weapon used to enforce arbitrary, subjective human will.Villey outlined these ideas extensively across his historical works, exploring how the Franciscan debates of the Middle Ages first pioneered this subjective concept of ius. You can explore the historical mechanics of his thesis in The origins of the modern notion of subjective right or examine his broader Aristotelian framework on justice in The essence of law according to Michel Villey.

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