> [Platt]
> I hope you are not dismissing the human endeavors involved in the arts as
> being of little value.
> 
> [Krimel]
> I hope I have not given that impression. To every thing there is a season.

[Platt]
Glad to be reassured of your worldview. Your enthusiastic description above
seemed to contradict Pirsig's conclusion about how science has negatively 
affected the human condition:

"Each individual in his cell of isolation was told that no matter how hard 
he tried, no matter how hard he worked, his whole life is that of an animal 
that lives and thinks like any other animal. He could invent moral goals 
for himself, but they are just artificial inventions. Scientifically 
speaking he has no goals." (Lila, 22)

[Krimel]
While I don't wish to give the impression that I devalue the contributions
from other areas of human endeavor. I actually would like to contradict this
statement from Pirsig's. I think we are animals and have much in common with
them. They can and do teach us much about ourselves. But this portrait of
science seems derived from Fritz Lang's Metropolis. It is as through we
would all be better off starving in our caves waiting for the next plague to
take out half the village. We could all chant Kumbia while young mothers die
in childbirth.

I just don't see science as in conflict with art and the humanities. But I
might have been casting spells in Norrath when they came by my cell of
isolation with the memo on hard work and futility. That or I trashed it,
thinking that it was spam.

[Platt]
Thank goodness for aesthetic "seasoning." :-)

[Krimel]
Thank goodness indeed!

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