Krimel said:
Ok, we have one person impressed by one person on the list. That's very special.

dmb says:
Your objections, based the "unimpressiveness" of these philosophers, strikes me 
as irrelevant or shallow at best. Again, my point in posting the quote was to 
provide a clear and simple statement about the beliefs common to philosophical 
mystics. Notice that the list includes Plotinus, who heavily influenced earl 
christianity and William James. There's Swedenborg, who influenced William 
James. Wasn't Loyola the founder of the Jesuit order? Gotta admit that a big 
deal even if you don't like catholics. It seems to me that these names were 
selected for their diversity as well as their importance and influence. A 
couple dozen centuries and a continent or two stand between these figures and 
yet they share a common belief. That is the thing that should impress a guy. 
That's what my aim was, anyway. You'd asked where Pirsig said anything about 
knowledge versus the mystical reality and this was part of my answer...

"Some of the most honored philosophers in history have been mystics: Plotinus, 
Swedenborg, Loyola, Shankaracharya and many others. They share a common belief 
that the fundamental nature of reality is outside language: that language 
splits things up into parts while the true nature of reality is undivided. Zen, 
which is a mystic religion, argues that the illusion of dividedness can be 
overcome by meditation" (LILA, page 63).

Krimel responded with an apparently altogether different topic:
Seriously that list of "most honored philosophers" has to be a joke. Third 
string bench warmers, does anyone here find it impressive?

Dwaipayan then said to Krimel:
I hope you know what you just said. I don't really know whether it is 
appropriate to club Adi Shankaracharya in the same group as Loyola and the 
others. Shankaracharya is definitely not a third-string benchwarmer by any 
definition of the word when it comes to Indic traditions and classical Indian 
Darshana. If you think he is, you don't know what you're talking about...

dmb says:
According to my old pal Ken Wilber, Shankaracharya is the Vedanta's greatest 
philosopher-sage. Also, every non-dual tradition in the West can be traced to 
Plotinus. That seems like a pretty big deal. I don't think Pirsig's aim was to 
flatter "some of the most honored philosophers" and I don't think his point 
rests on the status of these figures, but calling them "third string bench 
warmers" is just a meaningless ad hominem attack. Somehow, its silly and mean 
at the same time.


 
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