A Critical Appraisal of Bernard Lonergan's Notion of Judgment as a Response to the Critical Problem
Abstract
This project sets out to explore the core of the critical problem. The critical problem is
the epistemological question concerning the objectivity and subjectivity of human
knowing. The question raised is whether man is capable of cognitive self transcendence,
i.e., to go beyond himself as a subject and to know the object as it is in
itself. The critical problem is mainly concerned with the extent, limits, value or
validity of knowledge. The study highlights the philosophical debates since ancient
Greece to modern times and the manner in which different perspectives have shaped
the debate. It particularly examines Lonergan's treatment of the problem. From the
study, it emerges that philosophers have emphasized either the subject or the object
leading to objectivism or subjectivism, extremes that deny the human mind the ability
to constructively know the truth.
The research seeks to propose a comprehensive solution in the exploration of the
nature of judgment as a response to the critical problem since it is in judgment that
knowledge comes to finality. For one to claim that knowledge is exclusively
subjective or objective or both objective and subjective requires that one arrives at a
I judgment. The study therefore, attempts to explore the way in which an understanding
of judgment will possibly lead to a plausible solution from the theoretical perspective
of critical realism. In critical realism, the objective existence of reality is affirmed by
the need to rationally ground the existence of the object. This facilitates the
elucidation of the subject object relationship from a rational framework. The study
employs a descriptive, analytical, critical and evaluative method in explaining the
process of human consciousness and how depending on the approach one adopts,
he/she arrives at either subjectivity or objectivity of knowledge.
In the process, the study establishes that philosophers such as Immanuel Kant and
Franz Brentano who have extensively explored the nature of judgment fell short of
coming to a positive solution given their time and social-cultural environment. They
failed to highlight the nature of judgment as epistemologically relevant to the question
of cognitive self-transcendence. This led to the investigation of the subject as dealt by
Bernard Lonergan who is a zo" century philosopher, and who in his book Insight,
gives a fresh understanding of knowledge as comprising of a threefold process of
experience, understanding and judgment. The research centers on his perception of
judgment to establish the extent to which it addresses the question of cognitive self transcendence
as a possibility that is realized through the act of judgment. The study
progressively comes to the conclusion that indeed the critical problem has not been
solved since philosophers were not able to understand judgment as a mental synthesis
of both subjective and objective poles of human knowing.
The study recommends that Lonergan's theory of knowledge with regard to the nature
of the "virtually unconditioned" which for him is the core that defines judgment and
hence solves the critical problem to the nature of the "virtually unconditioned". It
also recommends that the aspect of judgment be further explored to establish ways in
which man can best avoid conflicts that arise from the subjectivity of his/her claim to
know and understand reality based on the understanding of the subject as capable of
personal discovery, self -affirmation and appropriation as a knowing being.
Citation
Degree of Master of Arts in Philosophy,Publisher
University of Nairobi,