Hi Mark,
Please tell more?

-Tuukka



26.3.2012 4:11, 118 wrote:
Hi Tuukka,
I think this is a silly question.  All we do is provide posts for
others to read.  If such readers find themselves wasting their time,
then that is their problem.  A conversation takes two people, each
side is responsible.  Just keep on posting, I learn something from
what you write.  Stop this victim nonsense, you are unique and grand.
This is not a forum for feeling justified; it is not a forum for old
static men.

I started working on my project, again, which is an analysis of parts
of Lila using reverse cryptology.  This is similar to how Kabalah
analyzes the old testament and other documents.  Some may say that
such scholars are out of their minds, but I have found otherwise.
Language is the use of symbols, and such symbols can be analyzed in
many ways.  Contextual meaning is just a superficial manner in which
to do this.  The use of an appropriate cypher is required to decrypt
passages, which is the difficult part (and has occupied me for several
years now).  However, I am now suddenly making headway.  You would not
believe what such an analysis shows Lila as presenting!  It is indeed
an age old and Perennial Philosophy.

To those of you who have no interest in this, this post is not for
you, so please do not complain; carry on with your own projects
whatever they may be.

Cheers,
Mark

On Sun, Mar 25, 2012 at 1:47 PM, Tuukka Virtaperko
<m...@tuukkavirtaperko.net>  wrote:
Everyone,
I asked DMB, who on this mailing list does he like or consider a good
conversationalist. He didn't answer. I'm curious... so now I'll ask
everyone, who likes DMB or considers him a good conversationalist?

Also, I have never meant to be a burden. Is DMB right that I'm wasting
everyone's time? Should I consider ceasing to post in this forum? What do
you think?

-Tuukka



25.3.2012 23:34, david buchanan wrote:
If you don't want to play along, that's fine. But now you've posted more
than anyone else in this thread and yet you are not playing. You are
interfering with the game, changing the subject to the wonderfulness of you
and otherwise wasting everybody's time. If you don't care to play, then
don't post on this thread. Or in this forum.
It's like the drivel masters are hell bent on making sure that quality
conversations can never happen. Every decent conversation is murdered in its
crib.



Date: Sun, 25 Mar 2012 23:21:47 +0300
From: m...@tuukkavirtaperko.net
To: moq_disc...@moqtalk.org
Subject: Re: [MD] Dewey's Zen

DMB,
see, I've been playing this same game for a couple of years already -
reading more mainstream philosophy (I agree that "Dewey's Zen" is not a
pure example of "mainstream"), finding concepts that are intended to be
something the MOQ expresses better, and replacing them - writing pages
and pages of notes for myself. So no, I don't play games with that,
because it's already something I do systematically. If I want to do that
to "Dewey's Zen", I'm more likely to borrow the entire book and read at
least fifty pages. I don't mean to put you down by not playing your
game. I do understand your game, and playing games is how this more
serious approach got started.

-Tuukka



25.3.2012 23:13, Tuukka Virtaperko wrote:
Look, DMB,
I don't have time for this bullshit. You posted an useful article, I
wanted to thank you for that. I guess I just couldn't believe you
actually do think it's good to reject positive things other people
give, such as respect. I'm not interested in playing your game,
because it is not relevant practice for my work. I was interested in
the article you posted. You were useful for me, but in a way which you
did not intend, and now you seem to say this implies that I'm stupid.
Talk about drivel.

-Tuukka



25.3.2012 21:55, david buchanan wrote:
dmb says:
Thanks for playing along, Dan. I'm going to withhold comment and hope
others take a shot at it to too. (Since Tuukka doesn't seem to
understand the core concept of this game, you're the only one to
participate so far.)



------------------------------------------------------------------
On Sat, Mar 24, 2012 at 10:37 PM, david
buchanan<dmbucha...@hotmail.com>     wrote:
This might be fun but it's also a kind of experiment. I was reading
a paper and saw many parallels to Pirsig, which wasn't very
surprising because it's titled "Dewey's Zen". But I wonder if
others read it the same way I do. In certain passages it seems like
one could plug Pirsig's terms into the sentences and they'd still
mean the same thing - almost exactly. Telling you more than that -
like which terms I had in mind - it would ruin the experiment. How
about if I just post a bit of it and let everyone take a shot at
it? Maybe it would be fun to put in Pirsig's terms wherever you
think they would fit. Take your pick or play with them all, but
please be explicit enough to let me know if you're seeing the same
thing that I'm seeing.
Hi David
Been editing one of my books most of the evening... I love the
writing... the editing, not so much... but since I cannot afford to
pay someone to do it, it falls to me. Anyway, I thought I'd throw out
a few ideas to chew on...

...experiences come whole, pervaded by unifying qualities that
demarcate them within the flux of our lives. If we want to find
meaning, or the basis for meaning, we must therefore start with the
qualitative unity that Dewey describes. The demarcating pervasive
quality is, at first, unanalyzed, but it is the basis for
subsequent analysis, thought, and development. Thought starts from
this experienced whole, and only then does it introduce
distinctions that carry it forward as inquiry.
Dan:
The author seems to be saying the same thing that RMP says when he
talks about Quality coming first, and how ideas arise from 'it'. The
qualifiers the author uses seem contradictory on the surface though it
is possible I'm not seeing things properly.

             It is not wrong to say that we experience objects,
properties, and relations, but it is wrong to say that these are
primary in experience. What are primary are pervasive qualities of
situations, within which we subsequently discriminate objects,
properties, and relations.
Dan:
See... the author subtly shifts here into saying these qualities are
pervasive and the demarcation only happens later.

   Dewey took great pains to remind us that the primary locus of
human experience is not atomistic sense impressions, but rather
what he called a "situation," by which he meant, not just our
physical setting, but the whole complex of physical, biological,
social, and cultural conditions that constitute any given
experience—experience taken in its fullest, deepest, richest,
broadest sense.
Dan:
A minor quibble here... in the MOQ, experience is synonymous with
Dynamic Quality. Static quality comes later... inorganic, biological,
social, intellectual.

Mind, on this view, is neither a willful creator of experience, nor
is it a mere window to objective mind-independent reality. Mind is
a functional aspect of experience that emerges when it becomes
possible for us to share meanings, to inquire into the meaning of a
situation, and to initiate action that transforms, or remakes, that
situation.
Dan:
To respond to Dynamic Quality, in other words...

The pervasive quality of a situation is not limited merely to
sensible perception or motor interactions. Thinking is action, and
so "acts of thought" also constitute situations that must have
pervasive qualities. Even our best scientific thinking stems from
the grasp of qualities.
Dan:
"Acts of thought" are ideas? Is that what I'm understanding here? And
yes, the MOQ would seem to agree that ideas are as 'real' as inorganic
and biological patterns... they exist on different evolutionary
levels, however.

And perhaps my favorite....

             The crux of Dewey's entire argument is that what we
call thinking, or reasoning, or logical inference could not even
exist without the felt qualities of situations: "The underlying
unity of qualitativeness regulates pertinence or relevancy and
force of every distinction and relation; it guides selection and
rejection and the manner of utilization of all explicit terms."
Dan:
I should think that in the MOQ, culture is the regulating force of
distinctions and relations... remember how Phaedrus read about the sun
flashing green before he actually looked up and 'saw' it?

Thank you,

Dan

http://www.danglover.com
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