Krimel said to dmb:
As to your response below I was a touch disappointed that you needed to hide 
behind Taylor and Wozniak but that is chiefly because I am interested in what 
you think not so much what you have read.

dmb says:
Can you seriously think that the purpose of quoting an academic paper on the 
topic is to "hide" behind it? Oh, excuse me for being relevant and for 
introducing professional voices into the debate. I must be crazy for wanting to 
use academic sources and for being on topic. Obviously, I should instead use 
unfair and ungenerous characterizations of what you say based on nothing at 
all. That's the only intellectually respectable way to go, eh? 

Krimel said:
Perhaps it might go better if I try to state what I think you are getting at. I 
think you hope to find in James an ally in your quest for the perennial 
philosophy.

dmb says:
Yea, actually that's pretty close to true. Last semester I did a term paper for 
a class with the chair of the department in which I tied James and others to 
the perennial philosophy. I used the same paper as a writing sample for my 
application into the program. It worked too. (Got an A on the paper and was 
admitted into the program.) I mean, its not entirely unreasonable for me to 
believe that I'm reading James well enough. Perfect understanding is not 
something I ever expect of anyone, least of all myself, but there is a real 
basis for a certain level of confidence on these topics.

Krimel said:
You believe that there exists in the grand scheme a higher consciousness or an 
implicit order in the universe out of which the world of appearances emanates.

dmb says:
That's pretty much the opposite of what I believe. As I understand radical 
empiricism (or Dewey's Immediate Empiricism), the difference between appearance 
and reality only makes sense on a practical, experiential level. In that sense, 
it is perfectly reasonable to say that plastic fruit only looks like the real 
thing. In that sense, a real rolex really is worth more than a fake one. But 
plastic and cheap knock-offs are still real. They real fakes. But when this 
distinction is expanded to cosmic proportions, it just creates a bunch of 
nonsense. 

Krimel said:
You believe, like so many others here, that the world ultimately has order 
meaning and purpose.

dmb says:
Radical empiricism is set up to, among other things, defy the positivist notion 
that the world is a completely purposeless and meaningless place. However, this 
is not done by merely asserting the opposite. Instead, it says that if an event 
is experienced as meaningful, then its unempirical to reject the meaningful 
quality of that experience. Radical empiricism refuses to dismiss such things 
as "merely" subjective. Even if later developments supercede the original 
experience, both are considered equally real so long as they are both actually 
experienced. In other words, it is not that the world is ultimately meaningful 
or meaningless. Purpose and meaning are not pre-existing realities that we 
discover at some point. They are qualities of experience.   

Krimel said:
You believe that thorough certain practices or mystical experiences you can be 
shed of the transitory nature of appearance and understand directly the 
ultimate nature of reality and commune with or become one with it.

dmb says:
Again, in radical empiricism the difference between undivided experience and 
the conventional experience or cognitive knowing is experiential and not 
ontological. Neither one is more real than the other.

Krimel said:
You believe that I have some kind of 18th century materialistic view of the 
world that is soul sucking and sterile.

dmb says:
I don't find anything particularly antiquated about your view. It looks like 
contemporary common sense to me. It looks like today's standard scientific 
worldview. That's just how most educated Westerners see things so its no big 
surprise to me when I encounter it.

Krimel said
You believe that Dynamic Quality is Pirsig's name for the purposive order found 
in the perennial philosophy.

dmb says:
As I understand it, the perennial philosophy only asserts that people from all 
times and places have reported a certain type or category of experience and 
that these are expresses in the various cultural manifestations, including the 
world's great religions. As I see it, this assertion is about as radical as 
saying that people in all times and places have ten fingers or love their 
mothers. These are just natural facts. 

Krimel said:
Just one gloss on what you have been presenting though. Of it one might repeat 
Poincare's question, 'Why is the reality most acceptable to science one that no 
small child can be expected to understand?'

dmb says:
I'm not sure what you're getting at. Radical empiricism says reality and 
experience are the same thing. According to this idea, the child knows reality 
just as well as the quantum mechanic even if quantum mechanic understands 
physics better than the kid. In other words, having an intellectual 
understanding of the physical universe is not equated with knowing reality per 
se. 

Krimel said:
It is though you want to substitute the knotty but precise language of math and 
science for the merely knotty language of philosophy.

dmb says:
I have no problem with the language of math or science but rather their use in 
inappropriate contexts. That sort of language tends to be imperialistic, 
reaching out into foreign domains and forcing them into quantitative and 
technical clothes they were never meant to wear. Reductionism is the problem, 
not math or science.  I mean, does it make any sense to try to quantify quality 
of all things? Does brain chemistry really teach us anything about the meaning 
of experience? As I see it, talking about mystical experience in terms of 
chemical and organs is simply a matter of dismissing one topic in favor of 
another. Its not just a different way to talk about the meaning of experience. 
Its just a matter of changing the subject to something "physical" and or 
explaining it away as such. It is a way to AVOID talking about the experience 
and its meaning. Radical empiricism is aimed at solving philosophical problems 
and in that sense it is not something that little kids are going to appreciate, 
but radical empiricism is not reality and kids don't need it in order to be in 
touch with reality. But it does explain how small children already understand 
what reality is and in what sense we all do.





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