"G.N.M. Tyrell has put forward the terms “divergent” and “convergent” to distinguish problems which cannot be solved by logical reasoning from those that can. Life is being kept going by divergent problems which have to be “lived” and are solved only in death. Convergent problems on the other hand are man’s most useful invention; they do not, as such, exist in reality, but are created by a process of abstraction. When they have been solved, the solution can be written down and passed on to others, who can apply it without needing to reproduce the mental effort necessary to find it. If this were the case with human relations - in family life, economics, politics, education, and so forth - well, I am at a loss how to finish the sentence. There would be no more human relations but only mechanical reactions; life would be a living death. Divergent problems, as it were, force a man to strain himself to a level above himself; they demand, and thus provide the supply of, forces from a higher level, thus bringing love, beauty, goodness, and truth into our lives. It is only with the help of these higher forces that the opposites can be reconciled in the living situation.” (Small is Beautiful, chapter 6, The Greatest Resource - Education)
“There is no need to interpret classical laws concretely. They can be statements of elements in abstract system where (1) the abstract system is constituted by implicitly defined relations and terms, (2) the abstract system is connected with data not directly but through the mediation of a complementary set of descriptive concepts, and (3) the laws of the abstract system are said to be verified inasmuch as they assign limits on which, other things being equal, vast varieties of data converge.” (Insight, chapter 4, section 3.4, 2008/159)
“The physical sciences and mathematics are concerned exclusively with convergent problems. That is why they can progress cumulatively, and each new generation can begin just where their forbears left off. The price however, is a heavy one. Dealing exclusively with convergent problems does not lead into life but away from it.” (Small is Beautiful, chapter 6, The Greatest Resource - Education)
“There is progress in knowledge from primitives to moderns only because successive generations began where their predecessors left off. But successive generations could do so, only because they were ready to believe. Without belief, solely relying on their own individual experience, their own insights, their own judgements, they would have ever been beginning afresh, and either the attainments of primitives would never be surpassed or, if they were, then the benefits would not be transmitted.” (MiT, chapter 2, section 5, 4th paragraph)
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"It may be that just as Boltzmann built a bridge from our incomplete knowledge of a system to classical observations such as temperature and pressure,[1] so Lonergan built a bridge between economics and the deeper implications of intellectual, psychic, moral, and religious conversions[2] to which we add the implications and need of economic and environmental conversions. It is In view of this that we analyze and integrate Lonergan’s seminal, twin contributions in the fields of method and economics. Both of these contributions rely on and develop a twofold approach to ongoing transformations, be it in economics or in GEM-FS healing-creating approaches. We aim to integrate so as reinforce the transformative properties needed to make this world more ethically responsible.
A note on E. F. Schumacher on Convergence and Divergence
As Boltzman and Lonergan have built bridges, so has Schumacher in his Small is Beautiful. He writes that G. N.M. Tyrell has put forward the terms “divergent” and “convergent” to distinguish problems which cannot be solved by logical reason. Schumacher argues that physics and mathematics do not recognize divergent problems:
The physical sciences and mathematics are concerned exclusively with convergent problems. That is why they can progress cumulatively, and each new generation can begin just where their forbears left off. The price however, is a heavy one. Dealing exclusively with convergent problems does not lead into life but away from it.[3]
For his part, Lonergan does deal with divergence. He writes:
There is no need to interpret classical laws concretely. They can be statements of elements in abstract system where (1) the abstract system is constituted by implicitly defined relations and terms, (2) the abstract system is connected with data not directly but through the mediation of a complementary set of descriptive concepts, and (3) the laws of the abstract system are said to be verified inasmuch as they assign limits on which, other things being equal, vast varieties of data converge.[4]
Note 1) the similarity between Schumacher’s convergent problems ("they do not,
as such, exist in reality") and the abstract nature of Lonergan’s classical laws. 2) Lonergan's different meaning attached to data converging.
Lonergan’s Critical Realism Clarifies the Mistaken Presuppositions of Philosophers and Economists.......
[1] The mathematician, David Bibby, advised us that it is likely that Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics requires both kinds of heuristic structure depending on the situation; scientists working in the field decide which is appropriate.
[2] To truly and fully understand Lonergan’s method one must advert to the spiritual, mystic, apophatic which are all integral components of a religious conversion. Our GEM-FS approach explicitly or implicitly integrates these components.
[3] Schumacher, Small is Beautiful, Chapter 6. We thank David Bibby for this reference.
[4] Insight, 159. Lonergan is here addressing the problem of indeterminism. He notes “Indeterminism is true as a negation of the old determinisms. But it cannot escape the necessity of methodological assumptions and precepts; it cannot prevent their conjunction in thought with laws and frequencies that are regarded as verified; and so it cannot succeed even in delaying the day when, from a new viewpoint, scientific anticipations once more will envisage a determinate to be known… I have offered a unified view that anticipates both the systematic and the non-systematic without excluding in particular cases insight into concrete non-schematic situations” such as the “subatomic order.” END quoting our text: John
“To have to grapple with divergent problems tends to be exhausting, worrying, and wearisome. Hence people tend to avoid it and to run away from it. A busy executive who has been dealing with divergent problems all day long will read a detective story or solve a crossword puzzle on his journey home. He has been using his brain all day; why does he go on using it? The answer is that the detective story and the crossword puzzle present convergent problems, and that is the relaxation...” (Small is Beautiful, chapter 6, The Greatest Resource - Education)
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