VIII. Through a Glass, Darkly
The Triad of Truth known as the Triveritas is a powerful tool, but it must be wielded with appropriate humility. Veriphysics does not claim omniscience. It does not promise a God’s-eye view. It does not pretend that sufficient method will dissolve all mystery and render reality fully transparent to human inquiry.
The Apostle Paul’s words provide the governing image: “For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.” This is not mysticism or obscurantism; it is realism about the human condition. We are finite creatures attempting to know an infinite reality. Our knowledge is genuine, and we truly see what we see, but what we see is limited and partial. The glass is real; we cannot step outside it. The darkness is real; we cannot fully dispel it.
The Enlightenment rejected these intrinsic limitations. It imagined that progress would asymptotically approach complete knowledge, that better methods would gradually eliminate the darkness, that the glass would eventually become perfectly transparent. This fantasy produced the characteristic Enlightenment vices: overconfidence, dogmatism dressed as skepticism, the dismissal of mystery as mere ignorance awaiting resolution. When reality refused to cooperate, when quantum mechanics revealed irreducible indeterminacy, when cosmology discovered that most of the universe is dark, when every attempt to explain consciousness in material terms failed, the Enlightenment had no resources for acknowledging its limits. It could only assume that future science would somehow manage to solve what present science could not, with all its empirical falsifications indefinitely deferred.
Veriphysics begins where the Enlightenment failed: with the acknowledgment that some darkness is permanent, that some limits are structural, that creaturely knowledge is necessarily partial. This acknowledgment is not defeat; it is the precondition of genuine inquiry. The investigator who knows he sees through a glass will attend carefully to the glass, he will study its distortions, compensate for its limitations, and refine his vision within the constraints it imposes. The investigator who imagines he sees directly will not notice his errors until they have produced catastrophe.
The Triveritas operates within these epistemic limits. It does not promise certainty; it offers warranted assent. It does not claim to establish truth absolutely; it distinguishes claims that deserve belief from claims that do not. The distinction is real and important even if neither category achieves the Enlightenment’s fantasy of transparent access to the thing itself. We can know with certainty that Neo-Darwinism is false, being refuted by logic, math, and empirical evidence, without pretending to know, fully or even in meaningful part, what the true historical account of Man’s biological origins were. We can know that the Enlightenment’s foundations are rotten without claiming to have mapped every room in the edifice that will replace it.
This humility is not weakness but strength. The Enlightenment’s overconfidence made it brittle; when the failures accumulated, it had no way to assimilate them except denial. The intellectual humility of Veriphysics makes it resilient; it expects partial knowledge, provisional conclusions, and future revisions. The tradition developed for two millennia precisely because it understood itself as an ongoing inquiry, not a finished system. The Enlightenment failed in less than one-quarter that time because it did not. Veriphysics builds upon the philosophical tradition, adding the mathematical and empirical tools that the tradition did not possess or did not deploy, while retaining the structural humility that kept the tradition open to growth.