You are on page 1of 10

Immanence & Immediacy:

Epistemology in William of Ockham

by Brian Rose
University of North Carolina at Asheville
28 April 2009

The esoteric task of Medieval philosophy is quintessentially defined by the desire to reconcile the
revealed truths of Scripture with the demonstrated truths of the Classical philosophers (namely, Plato and
Aristotle). The epistemological work of Aristotelian Scholastics (specifically, Aquinas) posits a species
account wherein cognition is mediated through various structures of mediums and species. These mediating
species represent a malignance within epistemology wherein all knowledge is intrinsically uncertain, the
cognitive agent is distant and removed from the cognized object, and the intellect is unable to legitimize the
alleged pureness of its own activity. Ockhams ontological project is that of transposing the epistemological
significance of experience as being contained within the human entity. That is, it is an epistemology of
Immanence. Ockhams analyses of cognition presuppose a passive intellect which is immediately engaged
with its environment. In doing so, Ockham establishes a foundation for epistemological certainty.
Aquinass species account represents cognition in terms of species structures, then Ockhams act theory
constitutes nothing less than a sort precursory post-structuralist philosophy of Immanence which provides a
humanistic foundation for future epistemological discourse. It is my intention to enumerate a
poststructuralist comparison with Immanence through a rigorous, tripartite examination of Ockhams
epistemological act theory, his account of deceptive and false judgments, and the problem of will and
intentionality.
In order to fully understand the significance of Ockhams theory of cognition, it is necessary that it
is contextualized by the theory he is rejecting that is, the Thomist species account of cognition. The
species account maintains that the sensible species of [an object] are transmitted to some medium for
example, air between [the object] and the person, and the medium receives those species with spiritual
reception (Stump 170). Sensible species are accidental forms of the object imposed on the matter of that
which is sensed. What Aquinas thinks of as transferring and preserving a configuration we tend to consider
as a way of encoding information. Aquinas calls it the spiritual reception of a form, or in the case of
sensory cognition, the spiritual reception of sensible species. (Stump 170). To say that the medium
receives the species with spiritual reception is to say that the accidental form is not imposed on the medium
itself. Aquinas species account of spiritual reception as encoding information necessarily implies the
need for an agent to decode this information in the process of perception, and thus this imposes a distance
between the agent of perception and the actual reality it perceives; this distance is something that must be

transcended. Furthermore, if sensible species must be encoded, in a sense, in order to undergo spiritual
reception, what is the phenomenological process that will account for this manipulation so as not to impose
form upon the intellect? Aquinas posits a further mechanism in the process of cognition which he deems an
intellective power known as phantasia, which are phenomenal images that convey extramental objects to
the cognitive faculty.
This nebulous, ornate concept continues to obscure the mechanisms of perception so that not only
does one receive images as encoded within sensible species, but furthermore these images are only
available to the consciousness through an esoteric power that, by its own etymology, infers a merely
apparent quality to perception. Knowledge itself becomes the ghost of a ghost: a shadow upon the wall of
Platos cave. And though the agent of perception stands within the sensual world, he is forever cut off from
it by an epistemological bureaucracy.
Stump writes that [t]he intellect abstracts a universal from the phantasm in phantasia . . . called
the intelligible species, [which] is received in the intellect with spiritual reception (Stump 172). Even
still, this intelligible species does not constitute a cognition for Aquinas, but merely a means for cognition.
If, as Aquinas suggests, the intellect is said to abstract a universal from particular sensory input, are we to
suppose that all concepts in the mind, and therefore the complex syllogisms derived of these concepts, are
cognized by induction? That is to say, is all knowledge such that it constitutes a synthesis of phenomenal
patterns? In such cases where many objects of a single genus are perceived, it seems plausible to assert that
the intellect might abstract the universal from such a group. However, when one first perceives a single
member of this genus, with what other relative particulars may the intellect abstract any sort of universal?
If we assert that this is plausible, then we ascribe a creative faculty onto the intellect. And by this view, it
would appear that the intellect acts by creating something from nothing by generating the universal in the
absence of a collective universality. In this case, all substantial knowledge is in question on the basis that it
derives its legitimacy entirely from the void space conceived between phenomenal stimuli. This constitutes
the quintessence of uncertainty nothing less than nihilism. This is the uncertainty that Ockham seeks to
overcome in his epistemological theory.
Stump concludes her enumeration of the species account by stating, Once the intellect has
abstracted the intelligible species from the phantasm, it turns that species into what Aquinas calls a

concept or an intellected intention (Stump 173). This is the final process by which cognition is
complete. It would seem philosophically disingenuous to advocate the segregation of the perceptual
mechanism into such distinct components: the sensitive power which receives accidents and that which is
sensed to be, and the cognitive intellect which receives substances and that which is intelligible. Since it is
not the accidental form of sensible species but the substantial form of intelligible species to which the
intellect has access, are accidents completely unintelligible? Is that which is sensed to be distinct from that
which we intellectually abstract? If this is so, then what reliability can be claimed by the intellect as being
an accurate representation of a real world cohabitated by diverse agents of perception?
This criticism is dismissed by Stump, who writes, It would be a mistake to suppose the individual
components of this process are, for Aquinas, psychologically separable or extended in time in a
subjectively discernible way (Stump 174). If this is indeed a mistake, and these processes are indeed not
extended in time as to be subjectively discernable, then how is it that Aquinas justifies that he has
subjectively discerns them? This antireductionist caveat would seem fallacious at best on the part of
Aquinas, for he qualifies what would appear to be a very reductionist structure, a structure in which
accidental forms are essentially delivered unto the perceptual agent, and [through phantasia] are made
intelligible and thereby cognized. This structure can only operate under the condition that these species
possess some sort of actuality and are not merely a means for cognizing the extramental object, as
Aquinas posits.
And so Ockham rejected the species account for what is known as his act theory, derived largely
from the discourse of Duns-Scotus. This act theory was conceived on the foundational aspects of intuitive
and abstractive cognition. Ockham felt that the legitimacy of this epistemology was justified by the fact that
it is simpler, positing fewer intermediary mechanisms of cognition; a justification known today as
Ockhams Razor. Ockham writes, I say that a thing itself is seen or apprehended immediately, without any
intermediary between itself and the [cognitive] act (Sent. I.27.3 [241]). Furthermore, just as no
intermediary is found between the object and its intuitive cognition, Ockham maintains the same is true
between the intuitive and abstractive cognition. He writes, [W]hiteness can be apprehended by sight
without the apparent beings being apprehended. Consequently, its being sensed does not require such
intermediary apparent being, and consequently it is pointless to postulate such being (Apparent 228).

This immediacy to which Ockhams theory lays claim is integral to an understanding of the
cognitive agent the identity as subsisting in a state of immanence. The force of cognition does not
reside outside of the agent, but is instead contained within it. It is because the species account places
epistemic contact and cognitive significance outside the self that Aquinas must compensate by supposing
the intellect as absolutely active. But Ockham need not make such claims, for to him knowledge is
immediately accessible to the agent, and as such its very reality is compelled toward a radically existential
quality.
Stump outlines three basic distinctions that Ockham gives regarding intuitive cognition. Ockham
maintains that intuitive cognition is identifiable insomuch as it is [a] simple cognition which is proper to a
singular and first [in the order of generation] (Quodl. I.13), it cannot be caused or sustained unless the
object [of that cognition] exists (Quodl. VI.6), and is knowledge such that by virtue of it one can know
whether a thing exists or not (Sent. I.Prol.I [31]). Furthermore, that which Ockham posits as abstractive
cognition is defined as cognition that is not intuitive and abstracts from judgments of existence or
nonexistence (Stump 183).
Stump continues, [P]roponents of the distinction [between intuitive and abstractive cognition]
seem to want to claim that . . . [in the cognition wherein] we perceive some part of extramental material
reality, there are no mechanisms or processes. There is just direct epistemic contact between the cognizer
and the thing cognized (Stump 184). It is this sense of immediacy in this act theory which represents
Ockhams departure from earlier Medieval theories of cognition a departure so radical that it echoes an
epistemological perspective which continues to define philosophical inquiry, however subliminally. It is
this deconstructionist effort that Ockham champions, this demystification of structural species, that allows
comparison to the post-structuralist Deleuze and his doctrine of Immanence. Pasnau maintains:
Ockham does not hold the view that cognition is an utterly mysterious, primitive and sui
generic property, about which nothing more can be said. In some sense, his proportion
might be called antireductionist in that he denies that a general reductive account of
cognitive phenomena can be given. (This proposition finds its parallel today in
philosophers who accept that mental states supervene on physical states but reject
reductive materialism.) (Pasnau 62)
This mental supervening can be seen in the post-structuralist attempt to dissolve the reductionist efforts of
structuralism, as well as the phenomenological annexation of the Scholastic problem of intentionality.

Ockhams antireductionist account of cognition, in some sense, relies upon a post-structuralist


plane of immanence. Gilles Deleuze and Flix Guattari describe this plane in What is Philosophy?:
Concepts are like multiple waves, rising and falling, but the plane of immanence is the single waves that
rolls them up and unrolls them. . . . From Epicurus to Spinoza . . . and from Spinoza to Michaux the
problem of thought is infinite speed. But this speed requires a milieu that moves infinitely in itself the
plane, the void, the horizon (Deleuze 36). This ontological plane of immanence is fundamentally implicit
within Ockhams epistemological act theory of immediate intuitive cognition.
Furthermore, this immediacy supposes a Cartesian certainty of subjective identity, as Ockham
writes, [I]n the soul there is a single act of understanding by which, without any intermediary, the soul is
truly understood. This is what St. Augustine means (Apparent 236). Herein one may observe the potential
for humanistic modernity intrinsic within Ockhams claim of the souls immediate subjective
understanding of itself. For Descartes, this constitutes the foundation for all knowledge. This constitutes the
first cock-crow of Modern science, wherein the Western World departs from derelict Aristotelian structures
of species in lieu of a more basic, empiricist foundation.
Considering Ockhams account of deceptive and false judgments, Ockham concedes that, since all
intuitive cognitions cause a correct judgment on the existence or nonexistence of an object, God cannot
cause an intuitive cognition that leads to a false judgment. He thus introduces an altogether new level of
consideration to his epistemology of intuition and abstraction, wherein we may begin to evaluate the limits
of our own certainty in a serious way. Still, as Stump writes, There is no limitation on Gods power on his
own view, Ockham says, because he holds that God can cause a false belief directly in us, although this
will not be a case in which the judgment is formed in virtue of an intuitive cognition (Stump 187).
Once again, this seems to contain elements echoed within Deleuzes post-structuralist model. God,
as Ockham conceives, may serve as the imposition of an illusory quality of presence to a nonexistent
cognitive object. Yet the imposition of this quality of presence (leading to a false judgment) represents not
an intuitive cognition itself but rather a belief which is superimposed as an accident onto the intuitive
cognition imposed by Gods will. Thus while the intuitive cognitions independent of Gods influence
represent conceptual cognitions, a cognition imposed on the intellect by God is necessarily declarative: it is
propositional rather than conceptual. The nonexistent cognitive object is proposed to exist (by God) rather

than conceived to exist (by the intellect). For Ockham, deception occurs through propositions, not
conceptions; this implies a humanistic certainty that all false judgments do not occur in our perceptual
activity but rather in the manipulation of our perspective itself. As Deleuze writes:
In becoming propositional, the concept loses all the characteristics it possessed as
philosophical concept: its self-reference, its endoconsistency and its exoconsistency. This
is because a regime of independence (of variables, axioms, and undecidable propositions)
has replaced that of inseparability. Even possible worlds as conditions of reference are
cut off from the concept of the Other person that would give them consistency (so that
logic finds itself oddly disarmed before solipsism). The concept in general no longer has
a combination but an arithmetical number; the undecidable no longer indicates the
inseparability of intensional components (zone of indiscernability) but, on the contrary,
the necessity of distinguishing them to the requirement of reference, which renders all
consistency (self-consistency) uncertain. (Deleuze 137-8)
Deleuze states that the propositional concept (considered herein as Gods imposition of a false belief onto
an intuitive cognition) is the ultimate source of uncertainty just as Ockham maintains that only the
intuitive cognition proposed by God to be falsely perceived is the only means by which an intuitive
cognition could appear to produce a false judgment.
Ockham states, To the inference that one who denies such apparent and intentional being denies
all deception (ludificationem), it should be said that this is not so. . . . Sometimes, [deception] occurs
through mirrors in nature. For a demon, with his knowledge of the natures of things, can set up various
mirrors in various in various ways, through which far away [or nonexistent] things will be seen (Apparent
235). One may infer from this that the capacity for deception and false judgments is not contained within
the cognitive agent, but deception only exists through external influence. God or demons may distort the
reality that is cognized, but the act of cognition is certain and absolute. Stump maintains, For Ockham the
reliability of the cognitive powers responsible for intuitive cognition is built into those powers themselves;
it is not possible for them to produce false judgments (Stump 187). To suppose that reliability of
cognitions resides within the powers themselves is the quintessence of immanence; such epistemic certainty
cannot be claimed by the species account. This intrinsic sense of certainty regarding the presence of
things is infallible.
We may now proceed to an examination of intentionality a topic which Heidegger suggests that
Scholasticism considers only in the context of the will. Much of Ockhams epistemological claims rest on
his supposition of a will which is absolutely distinct from the intellect. This too represents a radical

departure from the Thomist conception of the will as absolutely subservient to the intellect. As Stump
posits, Because for Ockham the intellect itself is largely determined by something outside the agent, if he
thought the will were also determined by the intellect, as Aquinas does, it is hard to see in what way the
will would be free (Stump 193).
Aquinas portrays the intellect as an active agent acting upon images rather than receiving them.
This contrasts with Ockhams view of the intellect as pure passivity. Robert Pasnau writes, [For Ockham,]
Intellect is no more active than a stone heated by the sun. Like the stone, intellect is just a recipient of
external impressions (Pasnau 151). Several issues arise in this conceptualization. It is obvious that the
mind is able to actively abstract and intentionally move between distinct thoughts, and these abilities
cannot be explained by external causation rather, Ockham maintains, they are derived of the independent
will. Within the Thomist account, the active powers of the intellect determine this motion, and the will
follows determinately. However, without any efficient causation, then the intellect acts alone and isolated
from its conceptual world. When Ockham inverts this dynamic so that the intellect is subverted under the
will, this problem is seemingly solved.
Aquinas account of active intellect erects rigid boundaries between the cognizer and cognized,
wherein it may not derive any of its motion from anything other than itself. This, due to the law of the
conservation of energy, is impossible one cannot get something for nothing; there is no perpetual motion.
Thus while, for Ockham, the efficient cause of cognition exists outside of the cognizer, through a concept
of Immanence we may still maintain that this extrinsic causation subsumes the object within the cognizer
during the experience of cognition; this is what Husserl terms intentional objects. Verena Mayer writes:
Here the physical thing will be considered as the basis of the experience stream gradually
constituted, so that there is no chasm between the Self and the Outer World, nor
between Immanence and Transcendence in Husserls sense. For Carnap, it is not the issue
how the solipsistic subject managed to leap into the intersubjective world. The
intersubjective world is much more than the natural setting provided contingently, so that
the task of constitutional systems consists therein of reconstructing these provided ways.
Thereby what is meant by a particular experience is the material, as in what Carnap
posits a physical thing represented in Husserls intentional object. (Mayer 292)1

Auch hier wird etwa das physikalische Ding auf der Basis des Erlebnisstroms schrittweise konstituiert, d.h. es gibt keinen 'Abgrund'
zwischen dem Ich und der Auenwelt oder zwischen Immanenz und Transzendenz im Sinne Husserls. Auch fr Carnap ist die Frage
nicht, wie das solipsistische Subjekt den Sprung in die intersubjektive Welt zustandebringt. Die intersubjektive Welt wird vielmehr als
der natrlichen Einstellung gegeben vorausgesetzt und die Aufgabe des Konstitutionssystems besteht darin, diese Gegebenheitsweise
zu rekonstruieren. Dabei ist ein Gegenstand, z.B. ein physikalisches Ding, nach Carnap das, was durch ein bestimmtes Erlebnis
'gemeint' ist, entsprechend Husserls intentionalem Objekt. (Mayer 292)

Stump concludes, [For Ockham,] the states of the intellect are determined, ultimately, by something
outside the cognizer, either by some object that acts on the senses or by God himself, who acts directly on
the cognizer to produce some state of sense or intellect (Stump 192). If the intellective agent, as Aquinas
conceives, is absolutely active and requires no efficient cause in order to perpetuate its activity, then it
follows that the intellect possesses no purpose for its activity. This would not only upset the Christian
conception that God has endowed the human intellect with a divine significance, but also the existentialist
conception that an identity must authenticate itself with a meaning behind all cognitive activity.
I have heretofore attempted to demonstrate comparisons between Ockhams theory of cognition
and post-structuralist conceptions of Immanence; my purpose for this was to establish emphasize the
tension Ockham contributed to the Thomist methods of reductionism and structure how his radical new
foundation for understanding, among other aspects of his philosophy, earned him excommunication. Stump
criticizes Ockhams act theory, implying that he needs to explain epistemic contact in terms of
mechanistic reductionist structures. Franois Zourabichvili states, [T]hought affirms an absolute relation
to exteriority, refuses the postulate of recognition, and affirms the outside in this world: heterogeneity,
divergence. When philosophy renounces the activity of foundation, the outside abjures its transcendence
and become immanent (Zourabichvili). This moment of epistemic contact which Stump believes to be
lacking in Ockhams act theory is easily reconciled by the coplanar ontological positions of subject and
object within the encompassing plane of Immanence. This immediacy of the identity within the world
affirms an absolute relation to exteriority. This immediacy and absolute relation between the cognitive
agent and the cognized world would seem a preferable conceptualization when contrasted against the
system of species mediation. The species account may allow for this epistemic contact in a structural
context, but it cannot adequately explain the underlying processes which propel the motion of these species
in contact with one another through mediums and materialist intentionality.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Deleuze, Gilles and Flix Guattari. What is Philosophy? Trans. Hugh Tomlinson and
Graham Birchill. New York: Columbia University Press, 1994.
Mayer, Verena A. Die Konstruktion der Erfahrungswelt: Carnap und Husserl.
Erkenntnis 35:1 (July 1991): 287-303. JSTOR. Ramsey Library. UNC Asheville.
20 April 2009 <http://www.jstor.org>.
Ockham, William of. Apparent Being. The Cambridge Translations of Medieval
Philosophical Texts. Ed. Robert Pasnau. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University
Press, 2002. 219-244.
Ockham, William of. In libros Sententiarum. William of Ockham: Philosophical
Writings. Ed. & Trans. Philotheus Boehner. Indianapolis, Ind.: Hackett, 1990.
Ockham, William of. Quodlibetal Questions. Trans. Alfred J. Freddoso and Francis E. Kelley.
New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1991.

Pasnau, Robert. Theories of Cognition in the Later Middle Ages. Cambridge, UK:
Cambridge University Press, 1997.

Stump, Eleonore. The Mechanisms of Cognition: Ockham on Mediating Species. The


Cambridge Companion to Ockham. Ed. Paul Vincent Spade. Cambridge
University Press, 1999. 168-195.
Zourabichvili, Franois. Deleuze. Une philosophie de lvnement. Deleuze and
Rationalism conference, Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy,
Middlesex University. 1415 May 2007.

You might also like