Dwai on 3/10/08 wrote:

> The last lines intrigued me - if not in world of finite experience,
> where should one look for that esthetic or enhancing experience.
> And maybe desire in the world of finite is not so good but desire
> for THAT..., so a redirecting or in psychological terms
> sublimation is a better idea.

I assume the lines you refer to are these directed to Marsha:

> I don't subscribe to the Buddhist idea that desire is the root
> of all evil.  Quite the contrary, what we desire expresses our
> sense of value and is the driving force of human progress.
> Without desire, human beings would be devoid of feelings or
> motivation.  Unable to discriminate between good and bad,
> mankind would have no morality, and civilization would stagnate.
> If there is an undifferentiated aesthetic continuum of Quality,
> it is not to be found in the mundane world of finite experience.

Yes, I believe this to be true.  Human action follows choice, and choice is 
an expression of one's value sensibility.  Hence, all voluntary actions are 
motivated by Value, and what we do in life as free agents reflects those 
values we choose to pursue for ourselves.  When emotional choices are 
mediated by reason, behavior is made "moral" (in the collective sense of 
that word).  Therefore, unless our actions are obligatory, or imposed on us 
by some external authority, we are driven by  selfish values.  But since we 
are also rational beings, most of us will temper our behavior to some degree 
by reason.  That's why (borrowing from Ayn Rand's philosophy) I came up with 
the maxim "rational self-directed value".

You ask where we must look for "that aesthetic or enhancing experience" 
which transcends the relational world.  Where else, indeed, but in 
experience itself?

Human beings are endowed with an exquisite sense of value, ranging from an 
appreciation of the arts, the beauty and order of nature, the dignity and 
intellectual perspective of man, and the insight that comes from 
understanding that each of us is an individualized microcosm of our absolute 
source.  We can only experience reality finitely, as subjective beings 
negated (or divided) from the essential source.  Because the locus of our 
existence is separated from this Essence, we are free and autonomous agents, 
capable of making our being in the world a reflection of our chosen values.

Human beings are the "choicemakers" of this world.  By realizing that 
value-sensibility is our existential reality, we can shape the world as a 
rational system in which all mankind will be free to optimize their 
individual value-sensibilities without fear of imposing their wants on 
others.  The potential for such an ideal world exists here in existence, but 
we must have both the wisdom and the will to implement it.

Thanks for your response, Dwai.

Essentially yours,
Ham

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