Matt and all MOQers:

Matt said:
...if we are both in agreement on the collapse of SOM (which as Pirsigians we 
always have; the new part is that we've agreed that whoever does so 
successfully counts as a "radical empiricist," which I consider a significant 
stride in bridge-building) and that knowledge is a linguistic tool (where there 
is no language, there is no thing called "knowledge"; I'm mainly restating the 
points to regain your assent on variations I would accept), then as I see it, 
we've accepted much, if not all, of what goes into Pirsig's concept of Quality 
and Rorty's "linguistified" version of Deweyan pragmatism.

dmb says:
I'm afraid the bridge has yet to be built on these points. Its pretty clear 
that Rorty is not a radical empiricist. Hildebrand answered some questions on 
this point for me the other day. I asked, "So that means Rorty has to dump 
James's radical empiricism and Dewey's theory of inquiry and the like?" Yep, he 
said in reply. As I understand it, Rorty is rejecting SOM based on its failure 
in logical positivism in particular and generally its failure throughout 
history to obtain what it sought. As he puts it, he reads the history of 
philosophy and draws a moral from it. And the moral he draws is that we should 
forget the whole mess and talk about something else. James and Dewey see that 
history too, but they formulated things like radical empiricism as a specific 
alternative to SOM. That's very different from simply changing the subject. And 
one of the most important implications of this classical approach is that 
linguistic or conceptual knowledge is not the only kind of knowing. In fact, 
Dewey's theory of inquiry spells out the realtionship between the various kinds 
of knowing and the pre-intellectual aspect is what gets the whole thing started 
and guides the entire process, including the intellectual aspects. Rorty 
doesn't mind just pulling stuff out from James and Dewey. He finds much to like 
there. But its not a coincidence that we disagree on these particular points 
because pure experience would be among the things Rorty wants to leave behind 
too. 

Matt continued:
...I'm wondering what role "pure" plays in describing the concept of 
experience.  I don't know how to identify "pure experience," which is why I 
have difficulty getting a grasp on it, which is what I would need to first to 
affirm _or_ reject.  ...The way I read them, I'm not sure how you unpack them 
without the notion of "directness" that seems to me Platonic.  You went back to 
Dewey to unpack the analogies, and I can agree with the Deweyan spin, the 
distinction between having and knowing.  I consider this distinction to be the 
same as the one Rorty deploys between being caused to think something and 
having a reason to think something....

dmb says:
Rorty's distinction between "caused to think" and "reason to think" can't be 
relevant to the pre-intellectual experience insofar as it designates something 
that precisely is not thinking. And if the directness or immediacy of this 
experience were Platonic, then it would entail some kind of claim about the 
subject having perfect access to objective or ultimate reality. But as we all 
know, classical pragmatists are making these claims about pure experience as 
part of their rejection of exactly that. In fact, the rejection of SOM and 
Platonism (SOM's grandfather) is something all pragmatist share. I realize that 
you're suspicious that there is some inadvertent Platonism going on in the MOQ 
and that pure experience is the most likely place, but I'd ask you to suspend 
that suspicion for a while. Give Bob, John and Jim the benefit of the doubt 
just long enough to ponder what a non-Platonic version of the concept looks 
like.

Matt said:
So my view is this: you have two requirements in play to determine whether 
Rorty is a radical empiricist or not—1) reject SOM and 2) have a place for 
“pure experience.”  We finally agree that Rorty rejects SOM, but you think this 
leaves us floating free without “pure experience” (you and many other 
professionals; professionals, I should add, that I have no doubt you can find 
many to back you up—I could even, and have on occasion, point the way to some 
of them—it is just that I have disagreements with them, too).  However, on the 
construal of “pure experience” I’m seeing you use, I doubt that Rorty lacks 
such a component. If it counts as pure experience to think that there is a 
difference between causal chains and inferential chains, then Rorty has such a 
component.  The way Rorty puts the point is that we could never become 
unanchored from experience/the world/reality because the distinction between 
anchored/unanchored is a Cartesian distinction—created when Descartes said that 
we might be radically wrong about the world because of the radical disconnect 
between subject and object.

dmb says:
Causal chains and inferential chains? Unanchored from experience? I also doubt 
that these concepts are relevant to the debate, but feel free to explain. As I 
understand it, Rorty would reject any kind of empiricism as Platonic and 
radical empiricism didn't impress him enough to make an exception. But I'd also 
like to point out that for every professional backer I could find, you could 
find 10 or 20 or maybe more. Hildebrand is saddened that people tend to read 
Rorty and simply take his word for it. His pragmatism is usually considered 
theee pragmatism. Many people know about James and Dewey only through Rorty's 
work.  

Matt said:
In other words, I have no doubt that you protested when you read earlier that 
we agree that to reject SOM makes you count as a radical empiricist.  It is 
more than that, I suspect you thinking.  And you’d be right, but I think that 
after a thorough rejection of SOM, everything else falls into place.  I think a 
thorough pragmatism is a thorough rejection, which makes for a radical 
empiricist, and you are right, a thorough rejection would require a place for 
the distinction between causal and inferential chains.  Some philosophers have 
conflated the two, but Rorty has spent some time untying them.

dmb says:
Again, you'd have to explains what these chains are and what relevance they 
hold for this discussion. I honestly have no idea. But of course rejecting SOM 
can mean lots of different things. Hegel, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer and others 
have done so with wildly different results. I didn't realize this until 
recently, but rejecting SOM has been a fairly regular feature of philosophy for 
a while.

Matt said:
The gist is that, once you reject the distinction between experience and 
reality, as Dewey did, you get to say that you could never be out of touch with 
reality as Descartes thought, and saying that has the force of meaning you 
never could swing free from the world and what’s in it.  And that means that 
Rorty’s slogan of solidarity has the virtues of rejecting Objectivity while 
reaffirming the fact that every person themselves has their own connection to 
reality—and calling something true is what falls out when we mix everybody’s 
opinion together: no opinion is _dis_connected, as the Cartesian/realist 
tradition thinks, it’s just that not all opinions are true.

dmb says:
One can't swing free from the world? Not even with a really, really big swing? 
No? Darn! That sounds like great fun. More seriously, it seems to me that 
Rorty's emphasis on solidarity and intersubjective agreement is a relatively 
tepid form of what the classical pragmatists were shooting for, namely inquiry 
as active engagement. He's going to say that the claims we make are only 
constrained by language, in a community of people who know what they're talking 
about while the classical pragmatists will say our claims are constrained by 
experience more generally.

On the role played by pure experience or Quality, Matt said:
Again, it depends.  If “pure experience” means “causally independent,” then it 
plays that role.  It refers to how we can’t think the tiger from hurting us, at 
least without getting our hands into it.  And in this case, I question the use 
of “pure.”  Why not just “experience”?  In the case of what role is played by 
Pirsig’s concept of Quality, that’s a much larger question because it plays 
many roles in Pirsig’s philosophy.  But how about this: Quality is reality, 
there’s no difference, we couldn’t swing free of it if we tried, and we are 
constantly involved in valuing some parts more or less than others.

dmb says:
That's just it. Quality plays such a central role in the MOQ. That's what its 
all about. I guess that's why I'm so interested in getting you to see what role 
pure experience plays. Without that, Pirsig is only saying we like some thing 
more than others, which we already knew. Again, I really think that you need to 
suspend your suspicions about Platonic this and Cartesian that. Pure experience 
does not refer to raw sensory data from an external reality. This came up in 
class the other day, possibly because I brought it up. I asked Hildebrand if 
Dewey's descriptions of this primary experience in terms of an organism and its 
enviroment didn't just put him back into SOM. Isn't that just a subject and in 
objective reality dressed up in naturalistic terms? That's a problem with our 
language and conceptual equipment, he explained. The Germans who tried to write 
philosophy without SOM ended up with all sorts of weird hyphenated strings of 
words, or words with lines through them and other strange tatics to work around 
the difficulty. And so your complaints about the word "pure", as if that usage 
undoes all the anti-Platonic, anti-Cartesian, anti-SOM things that were spelled 
out in ZAMM and LILA, strike me as unfounded and even a little unfair. In any 
case, this way of looking at the idea is keeping you from seeing the idea. 

I looked at the blog entry where you express these suspicions of Platonism with 
respect to DQ. In every case you treat the idea as if it were Platonic and then 
condemn it for being Platonic. So much so that you take Pirsig to be saying we 
should become babies and give up the fruits of civilzation, that 
"pre-intellectual experience is better than intellectual experience" and 
"eating hot dogs is better than reading Proust". Dude, that is so not true and 
so not the point. 

Think of it this way. Moyers asks Campbell about the meaning of life. Right 
away, Campbell says something like...  I don't think "meaning" is what people 
really want, even if they think they do. What they really want is to feel like 
they're alive, you know, really in it.  ...And then he told a little story 
about a race he ran at a track meet. He'd been involved in the sport for years, 
he was well trained, experienced and feeling real good that day. Everything was 
working for him and he had that feeling. He felt totally alive because there 
was a certain quality of engagment with that activity such that it was 
excellent beyond words. I supposed he won the race too, but that's beside the 
point. The thing that he points to here is a certain quality of engaged 
activity, of really gooving on it, being deeply interested in the outcome and 
the process. Think motorcycle repair or sailing or writing or whatever. 
Intellectual activities are not excluded from this level of engagement. This 
roughly what Dewey means by an aesthetic experience and it figures into his 
theory of inquiry too. I imagine that conversations could be conducted with 
this quality of engagement too, but I suspect that's not exactly what Rorty's 
solidarity is all about.

Later, 
dmb




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