II. The Name and Its Meaning
A philosophy requires a name, something that is more than an identifying label, something that serves to describe its essential orientation. The word should be memorable, pronounceable, and meaningful. It should capture the philosophy’s core insight and clearly distinguish the framework from its rivals. In addition to its identity, it also requires an objective and a foundation.
Veriphysics was chosen as the name for this new philosophy because unlike classical philosophy, which is focused on knowledge, metaphysics which examines the nature of reality, Scholasticism which combines the classical tradition with Christian theology, and Enlightenment philosophy, which claims to be established on reason but is based upon the hidden knowledge known as gnosis, veriphysics is focused solely on truth, or veritas. Every aspect of veriphysics is meant to explore and expand the concept of truth to the greatest extent possible, through every path that is capable to leading to some aspect of the singular, core, and underlying Truth.
The objective of veriphysical philosophy is veriscendance. Veriscendance derives from two roots: veritas and ascendance, suggesting both ascent and transcendence. This fusion is a deliberate choice. Veriscendance is defined as the end result of ascending through the various limited aspects of truth that humanity is capable of perceiving toward ultimate Truth, thereby recognizing the fact that human knowledge genuinely grasps various aspects of reality while acknowledging that the full truth about the comprehensive scope of existence across all its various dimensions intrinsically exceeds both our conceptual grasp as well as the limits of our knowledge.
Even the name of this objective therefore rejects the hubris of the Enlightenment’s epistemology. The Enlightenment imagined that autonomous reason could eventually achieve a God’s-eye perspective of existence, that sufficient improvement in method would somehow yield complete knowledge, and that every aspect of the universe was both a) material and b) would eventually be attainable through human inquiry. This fantasy has been entirely refuted by the very sciences the Enlightenment celebrated. Quantum mechanics has revealed the irreducible indeterminacy at the foundations of matter. Cosmology declares that ninety-five percent of the universe is dark matter and dark energy, unobservable and unexplained, and identified only by its gravitational effects. The Enlightenment materialism that once promised to explain everything now cannot account for most of what its own methods declares to be real and material.
Veriphysics is constructed on a series of very different axioms. It declares that human knowledge is real, but incomplete, genuine but inherently limited. As the apostle Paul declared, we see as though through a glass, darkly. The image in the glass is not an illusion or a shadow, it corresponds to reality, it can be refined and clarified, and it supports both genuine understanding and meaningful action. But the image is not, and it can never be, the thing itself. It can never be more than a small part of the thing. We cannot conceive the whole. The fullness of Truth exceeds and transcends both our present and our future capabilities. We ascend toward it but we do not arrive at it, not in this life and almost certainly not in the next either.
This is not skepticism. The skeptic denies that the glass portrays anything real. Veriphysics affirms that it does. The image is partial, but it is an image of something real. The ascent is incomplete, but it is neveretheless a genuine advancement toward something concrete. Truth exists, it is knowable, we genuinely know what we know, and we know more than the mere fact of our own cognition. The partial nature of the truth that is accessible to us is not a defect to be overcome by improved methodologies, it is a feature of our cognition as creatures, a limit designed into the structure of finite minds approaching the reality of the infinite.
In other words, the distinction between reason and revelation is intrinsically false. They are merely two different paths to the same end.
The objective of veriphysics also carries a connotation of elevation in the political sense, of dominance, of supremacy, and of the correct ordering of intellectual and social life. This connotation is intentional. Veriphysics necessarily means that an orientation toward the truth must order society and intellect, that the pursuit of truth is not one value among many but the architectonic value that makes all the others coherent and meaningful. A civilization that abandons truth as a fundamental objective does not cannot achieve either neutrality or progress, it instead assures chaos, manipulation, and degeneration.
Veriphysics is a necessary goal for the humanist, because the societal pursuit of truth is a precondition of human flourishing.
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