On Friday 22 February 2008 Ham questions Joe:

<snip>
> In the writings of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky I read more
> about the mechanical "I" which can evolve to a conscious "I".
 
What is the "mechanical I", and how is it different from the conscious "I"?
I can't conceive of an "I" or a "self" that is not conscious.  Indeed, I
find such a notion paradoxical by definition.
 
Hi Ham and all,
 
I think you are being disingenuous with what you can¹t conceive of.  With
the growth of psychoanalysis, and a deeper appreciation of the complexity of
"grey matter" the ills that beset me are not all attributable to outside
influences. My lifestyle teaches and obeys me.
It is questionable many times what it seems I want it to teach me.  I go
along and react.  Such behavior is mechanical.  Indeed, I think undirected
unconscious behavior may require much more of my attention than that
directed by conscious attention. ³They know not what they do² has echoed
through the ages.  So what!  At 75 as my memory lapses, I go along with it.
When I was a childŠŠŠdoes not leave me.
 
Joe  

On 2/22/08 3:11 PM, "Ham Priday" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
>  Joe --
> 
>> Horse makes possible this discussion, for which I thank him
>> very much!  I do not think a cavalier attitude "hang the rules"
>> to be a good start.  If this is a part of your ontology,
>> I fear the worst.
> 
> I, too, am grateful for this forum, and am certainly bound by its rules.
> You suggested (in what I believed to be an off-line message) that "our
> confusion may not sit well with others," asking: "what rules apply?"  I was
> referring above to our rules of engagement, not those of Horse and the MD.
> I have already "offended" many here by my assertions, and expect that the
> introduction of any concept that is inconsistent with the MoQ doctrine will
> annoy the loyalists.  So far, that hasn't stopped Bo, Platt, Matt, Ron, and
> others from taking a critical view of Pirsig's philosophy and offering
> alternative perspectives.  I think Horse would agree that such exchange is
> not only beneficial for the forum but keeps Pirsig's philosophy alive and
> well.
> 
>> My own background is 6 years formal study of Thomistic
>> philosophy in a monastery.  I was also taken with "The City of God"
>> by Augustine.  I have studied the thought of Gurdjieff and
>> Ouspensky in a group for 4 years, and on my own for 20 years.
>> I have posted on MOQ discuss for the last 6 years. I am impressed
>> with the openness and "smarts" of the posters.  I am a retired
>> self-employed plumber by trade.
> 
> That's a fascinating background, Joseph, and it helps explain why you might
> have a different take on the MoQ.  I would think Gurdjieff's theories would
> be as inimical to the Thomists as it is to the Pirsigians, but I was
> surprised to learn that Marsha, among others, has expressed interest in New
> Ageism.  I'm no authority on this philosophy, and it's been awhile since I
> read Ouspensky, so perhaps I'm out of touch with it.  How do you think it
> relates to the MoQ, and do you feel it is at all compatible with Pirsig's
> Quality hierarchy?
> 
> [Ham, previously]:
>> I think the terms "inner" and "outer" equate to "subject"
>> and :object" in the MoQ, except that Pirsig does not regard
>> them as dual "realities" or entities, but as "patterns" of Quality.
>> This effectively eliminates self-consciousness as a "second
>> reality" in his ontology.  In other words, Pirsig does not
>> acknowledge thoughts, feelings, sensations, etc., as
>> proprietary to a self.  They are merely social or intellectual
>> patterns of Quality experienced (latched onto?) by the
>> biological organism, while the observing self is also only
>> an abstracted pattern.
> 
> [Joe]:
>> I disagree that in Pirsig's thought "patterns" and "realities" are
>> disparate entities inasmuch as Qualities are values in existence.
>> IMO as I read Pirsig I find self-consciousness, proprietary-
>> awareness of thoughts, feelings, sensations as the structure of
>> the social level.  SOL is the structure of the intellectual level.
> 
> You see, this ideology has never "sat well" with me.  It's one thing to say
> that thoughts and ideas are influenced by the social environment, but quite
> another to regard them as "created" by society.  Again, we are all
> "thinking" creatures, regardless of our contact with society.  We all have a
> sense of our own values, despite what we learn from intellectuals,
> scientists, and self-styled "moralists".  Aristotle believed that
> Rationality was the essence of man, Schopenhauer called it Will, to Spinoza
> it was Desire.  My own view is that the self is essentially
> value-sensibility.  Our values can and do change over time, for many
> reasons, but they are proprietary to the self and not transferrable
> 
>> In the writings of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky I read more
>> about the mechanical "I" which can evolve to a conscious "I".
> 
> What is the "mechanical I", and how is it different from the conscious "I"?
> I can't conceive of an "I" or a "self" that is not conscious.  Indeed, I
> find such a notion paradoxical by definition.
> 
>> IMO you misread Pirsig by attributing to him a dismissal
>> of selfness.  His struggle is self.
> 
> He certainly struggled as a teacher and philosopher, but his hierarchy
> rejects selfness as anything but an abstraction, and he demeans
> individualism at every turn, as do the MoQists here.  They see egoism as
> unhealthy, unenlightened, even dangerous.  If this isn't dismissing
> selfness, their pronouncements deceive me.
> 
>> IMO your description of physical reality being based in
>> awareness has no foundation and is not real. I do not agree
>> with your concept that "conscious awareness" is a sensible
>> contingent.  IMO "conscious awareness" is the quality of
>> evolution to the social level.  Oops Evolution!  A value in existence.
> 
> The phrase "value in existence" is meaningless to me, Joe, as is "the
> quality of evolution".  What quality or value does evolution have apart from
> man's perception of it?  Do you not believe awareness to be "sensible", or
> is your disagreement my positing of sensibility as one of two primary
> "contingencies"?
> 
> Also, could you briefly outline your understanding of creation, that is, how
> the universe emerged as a self-sustaining, differentiated system and what
> your believe to be man's role in existence.  That would give me some some
> basis on which to compare your philosophy with what I know about other
> ontologies.
> 
> Thanks, Joe.  This could be interesting, once I get on-board with your
> thoughts.
> 
> Regards,
> Ham
> 


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