Hi Magnus, > Platt Holden wrote: > >> Chris said: > >> ...There can be no question in anyone's mind that the > consumer-culture > >> that drives both individuals and entire nations to take the most rash > >> actions in order to sustain it, is a system that is totally, and > >> fundamentally a product of what the MOQ identifies as social level. > >> > >> Platt replied with a quote: > >> "A free market is a Dynamic institution. What people buy and what > people > >> sell, in other words what people value, can never be contained by any > >> intellectual formula." > >> > >> dmb says: > >> The trick is to see that both things are true. Money is the measure > of > >> social value AND the free market is a dynamic institution. Not only > that, > >> but it's also true that the MOQ says an intellectually guided society > is > >> more moral than one guided by social value. Platt reads "selectively" > and > >> that's the part he always leaves out. And that's exactly the problem > with > >> today's free market advocates; they think the market is the answer to > >> everything and that means social values rule. > >> > >> In any case, it's wrong to imply that the MOQ supports these > >> anti-intellectual attitudes. I really don't see how an honest reader > could > >> come anywhere near that conclusion. > > > > "It is not that Victorian social economic patterns are more moral than > > socialist intellectual economic patterns. Quite the opposite. They are > less > > moral as static patterns go. What makes the free-enterprise system > superior > > is that the socialists, reasoning intelligently and objectively, have > > inadvertently closed the door to Dynamic Quality in the buying and > selling > > of things. They closed it because the metaphysical structure of their > > objectivity never told them Dynamic Quality exists." (Lila, 17) > > > > "Phaedrus thought that a Metaphysics of Quality could be a replacement > for > > the paralyzing intellectual system that is allowing all this destruction > to > > go unchecked. The paralysis of America is a paralysis of moral patterns. > > Morals can't function normally because morals have been declared > > intellectually illegal by the subject-object metaphysics that dominates > > present social thought. These subject-object patterns were never > designed > > for the job of governing society. They're not doing it. When they're put > in > > the position of controlling society, of setting moral standards and > > declaring values, and when they then declare that there are no values > and > > no morals, the result isn't progress. The result is social catastrophe." > > (Lila, 24) > > Then perhaps Platt could explain to us how the free market should make it > through the current "credit crunch" without the intellectual interventions > being > set up by the same right-wing government that usually hate such > measures. > > To me, it seems the "free market" has been more short-sighted than usual. > I > mean, I can understand that they don't care about our environment because > that > won't strike back very soon, they might even elude it during their life > time. > But to start eating off the very branch they're sitting on is pretty > stupid even > for their standards. And now, as that free market is clinging to the > half-eaten > branch for its life it screams to the ground, "Hey, if you don't save us, > we'll > come crashing down on you, and that would hurt!" > > Do you really think it's moral for the free market to cause so much pain > to both > itself and the society it's a part of? > > Another thing. Have you ever considered the possibility that the > intellectual > "brain" of the society is *also* dynamic? Newsflash Platt, it IS! > > This means that it's moral for the government to rule the free market, to > occasionally change the rules. And the thing is, the free market is ok > with > that. It might change course a bit to make as much profit it can using the > new > rules, but from the market's point of view, the new rules are simply DQ, > as in: > > "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." > > When a higher level intervenes with a lower, the lower level doesn't have > a clue > what happened. It just adapts and goes on. > > As we discussed a few months ago, and as both DMB and Chris said, you're > abusing > quotes from Lila to suit your own agenda. Please start thinking for your > own > instead.
"The New Deal was many things, but at the center of it all was the belief that intellectual planning by the government was necessary for society to regain its health." (Lila, 22) "Fannie Mae was founded as a government agency in 1938 as part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal to provide liquidity to the mortgage market." (Wikipedia) Need I say more? Platt Moq_Discuss mailing list Listinfo, Unsubscribing etc. http://lists.moqtalk.org/listinfo.cgi/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org Archives: http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/ http://moq.org.uk/pipermail/moq_discuss_archive/
