Happel, Stephen The Soul and Neuroscience: Possibilities for Divine Action."
In The Soul and
Neuroscience: Possibilities for Divine Action, Stephen Happel puts three
notions into conversation with one another: Edmund Husserls philosophical
interpretation of inner time-consciousness; Thomas Aquinass theological
language of the soul; and contemporary neuroscientific analyses of human
agency, memory, and bodily knowing.
Happel argues that medieval
soul-language is not simply a devotional leftover from a discredited dualist
substance philosophy. The concept of soul
was a medieval attempt to explain the living experience of the cognitive,
embodied subject. In his analysis of the role of the soul in human knowledge,
Aquinas makes a variety of philosophical claims that are relevant to current
research and discussion: First, human knowing is an active as well as a
receptive process, dependent on the empirical world, yet critical in
relationship to the world and to its own operations. Second, this knowing only
takes place with the intimate cooperation of the individuals body. Third,
intelligence is open-ended; it wonders and inquires about everything within its
horizon. Fourth, this intelligence can reflect upon itself. Fifth, open-ended
human intelligence can go beyond the senses, intending and estimating, even
understanding the reality of God. Sixth, human intelligence rightly apprehends
reality through its senses and makes correct judgments on the basis of the
evidence provided.
Time-consciousness is
central to Husserls phenomenological description of human subjectivity. The agency of human consciousness is found in
the retention, present awareness, and expectation that allow humans to be aware
of temporally-extended objects of consciousness. There is a flow of
interactions among memories, present consciousness, and future expectations
that gives consciousness its unity. Happel shows that Husserls notion of subjective
time consciousness coheres with Aquinass metaphysical vocabulary regarding
intellectual powers: the world of interiority that Husserl examines turns from
the consciousness of the subject to a self- reflexive knowledge of that
subject; the unified body and soul, for Aquinas, becomes a self- conscious
subject, examining itself introspectively.
Contemporary neuroscience
examines time-memory, embodiment, and human initiative in the empirical
subject, the knower who examines both self and the world through models and
experiments. Reflecting on current theories of long-term and working memory,
schema theory, somatic markers, and the hermeneutics of sense perception,
Happel raises questions about human agency. He sees Husserls analysis of
time-consciousness as a possible hypothesis for experiment and verification in
the neurosciences, and he challenges the neurosciences to think about mind and
consciousness not only as initiators but as radically open to their
constitution as a social reality.
The examination of human
consciousness in three major disciplines - philosophy, theology, and
neuroscience - has as its goal the criticism of modern individualistic
(solipsistic, autonomous) concepts of the human subject. Happel reasons that if
the subject can be conceived as open to finite transcendence (that is, to the
reality of the other in and to the subject) this should shed light on how God
operates through the interaction of finite subjects in our world to bring about
divine ends.
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