Matt said to dmb:
I've admitted over and over that I don't understand what "pure experience" is.  
I've said for years, over and over, that if my criticisms of Pirsigian 
rhetorical maneuvers, ...are not what Pirsig meant, or should mean, then ignore 
them and tell me what they do mean. But when you give me the same stuff, what 
am I to do? ...I'm just trying to get it spelled out.  And every time I think I 
understand it, and try and hook it up to how I see the world working, you slap 
me down.  Maybe I'm inherently missing something from my own outlook.  That 
would seem to be it.  I'm an anti-realist free floating in a conversation.  
Except that we both know that that's not an actual possibility, but only a 
philosophical fantasy created by a Platonic language.  But if we both know 
that, then what else is there to know?  What is pure experience?

dmb says:
I was hoping that you'd noticed my new explanations. The stuff on James, Dewey 
and Mead, for example. I'd hoped you felt a sense of relief at the absence of 
any talk about mysticism in relation to pure experience. I've been reading 
stuff that illuminates the concept for me quite a bit and I'd hoped it would 
show. Here's one that you may have heard but I have some fresh eyes on it by 
way of Nietzsche. Think of the way Pirsig traces the problem of SOM back to 
Plato, specifically the attempt to abstract the good out of actual lived 
experience and transform it into the good-in-itself, a permanent fixed form. 
And its part of a picture of reality such that the Good, the True and the 
Beautiful are elsewhere, in some transcendent realm. And its easy to see how 
this is just philosophy as a rationalism that refuses to get its hands dirty. 
It detests all that dirty, messy empirical sort of knowledge, the knowledge of 
slaves and women. You know, its world-hating elitist bullshit. That's the kind 
of anti-Platonism you see in the MOQ. Radical empiricism is a mighty fine 
antidote for such otherworldly snobbery. It deliberately grounds itself in the 
messiness of everyday life. And the sociology works too. Dewey, just for one, 
made no bones about connecting liberal democracy to his philosoply. Anyway, the 
doctrine of pure experience comes just a few paragraphs after radical 
empiricism is explained within the same essay. There is a separate piece 
devoted the latter, but the point is simply that the two go together. Pure 
experience serves as a name for the starting point of radical empiricism. 
Primary empirical reality is also a good name for that reason. You've heard 
them all by now; undivided reality, undifferentiated aesthetic continuum, etc, 
Thanks to my recently reading I can now add terms like original impetus, the 
felt situation, the primordial field of experience. As you can see, these terms 
convey a sense of what sort of experience they're refering to, each giving a 
slightly different connotation but all suggesting a vague sense, a general 
feeling, a basic impression. This starting point is then the first phase in a 
series of processes that transform the original quality into our ordinary 
conceptual understanding. Don't forget that James was a psychologists and there 
is also very recent science that backs this picture. I mean, this isn't a 
philosophical theory so much as an description of what is observed. The 
philosophical part comes in the decision to take this messy sort of experience 
as important to a coherent philosophical picture, as important to our 
descriptions of what goes on in life.

Matt said
My complaints about "pure" right now are that 1) it is rhetorically unwise 
given the weight of the history of philosophy and 2) why "pure experience" and 
not "experience"? That's the question I've kept forwarding that you have not 
stepped up to answer directly, though I've not said anything until now about 
that strange lack: Why "pure experience" and not just "experience"?  What is 
the "pure" doing that needs to done?

dmb says:
I'm not very sensitive to the weight of history on this or that word. I 
generally just use the conventional meanings in trying to explain terms like 
"pure experience". I could make an educated guess that James used the term to 
distinguish it from the traditional meanings of experience, namely sensory 
experience or subjective experience, both of which were predictated on the 
subject-object dualism. In fact, in his description James says that pure 
experience is prior to the distinction between subject and object and the like. 
I suppose "pure" also connotes the undivided or undifferentiated charteristic 
found in those other terms. James says the content of this experience is "only 
virtually classifiable" into words, concepts, and definitions such as we need 
for dualisms even as basic as ass and stove. So "pure" designates this 
generally unnoticed and neglected experience and distinquishes it from SOMists 
definitions of experience. Its not exactly correct to think of this pure 
experience in terms of raw sensory data or some other biological level 
"cognition" but that would really put one back into an SOM framework. It serves 
to explain a counter-intuitive idea, but I think ultimately these classical 
pragmatists are saying something radical. I see Nietzsche's will to power in 
it. He and James, with the latter's emphasis on the temperment of the 
philosopher in determining his vision, seem to be saying that even the greatest 
artistic and intellectual achievements are ultimately an expression of those 
basic and primordial feelings about the world. They're the ones who 
successfully take that original impetus and let it guide them through all the 
subsequent phases of working out that creation so that the original somehow 
fiqure into the final products. And this happens in a thousand tiny ways to all 
of us every day.

I'm just trying to orient you here and I'm too tired to be more careful anyway. 
I don't think its too tough to see how pure experience is an anti-dote to 
Platonic infection. Its certainly a thorough going rejection of cartesianism or 
SOM. At this point, showing you what its not seems about as important as 
showing you what it is, so I tried a little of both.

Oh, and radical empiricism would rule out anything like the pure forms or 
thing-in-itself insofar as they are not known in experience. So if the "pure" 
bothers you for that reason, I think you can rest easy. Pure experience is more 
like formless and it is known in experience, constantly. There's nothing 
otherworldly or supernatural about it. Direct everyday experience and all that. 







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