Squonk said to dmb:
How does Ken Wilber know there is such a thing as?a pre/trans fallacy? It can 
be stated, but why is Ken Wilber such an expert on the subject? I don't find 
this remotely convincing simply because Ken Wilber says it is.

dmb replies:
You're objecting as if I were making an argument from authority, as the point 
depended on Ken Wilber's voice for all its weight. But actually his "pre/trans" 
fallacy could be removed entirely and the point would remain, which is simply 
that babies and mystics aren't the same. Ron DiSanto, co-author of "The 
Guidebook to Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" made the same point. 
I'd asked him about this very point long before I ever heard of Ken Wilber and 
he said, "Yea, sure. You have to have a mind before you can transcend it". 
Joseph Campbell makes the same point by way of Nietzsche. But I would hope that 
you'd be persuaded by the argument itself. These names do have a way of adding 
authority and comfort me as a kind of confirmation, but usually I like to say 
the same thing in several different ways just for the sake of clarity and using 
the terms of guys like these helps in that effort. In fact, it was Pirsig 
(Lila) who said that babies who fail to recognize patterns will be retarded. It 
is Pirsig who said that sq and DQ were both necessary.

The static levels and moral codes also have a bearing on this thought 
experiment and could even be used to make the same point, which is that infants 
are different than Zen Masters. Babies aren't even competent at the biological 
level while the latter have mastered all static patterns and then some. As I 
understand it, one simply can't go from pre-linguistic brains to mysticism 
without going through the developmental processes in between. That's like 
having a ground floor and a fifth floor magically floating several stories 
above, with no structure to hold it up. That's like going directly from 
kindergarden to the University. It's like a guy with two feet, a head and 
nothing but empty space in between. (See how I like to say the same thing in 
several ways, just to be clear?)

Squonk also said to dmb:
re. Crimes and ethical nightmares. This is your view. Thank you for stating it.

dmb says:
Really? You don't share this moral qualms? You think it would be ethical to 
thwart the normal developmental process of infants? That idea doesn't sound 
alarms in your conscience? I think children raised by wolves would stand a 
better chance of having a rich, full life. As far as crime goes, I imagine 
there would be no shortage of ways to charge a person for conducting such an 
experience. Neglect, abuse, reckless endangerment, medical malpractice, and 
some health codes just for starters. I'm sure the courts would order a 
psychiatric evaluation of the experimenter too, and rightly so. Its madness. 
You can't be serious.

Ooops, gotta go. The water in my baby's sensory deprivation tank needs changing.





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