Krimel said:
I take Craig and possibly Pirsig to be saying, that there are relationships,
processes, distinctions that exist independently of any conceptual patterns
of them.

Dan replied:
If there are relationships, processes, etc. that exist independently, how
would we know? It's possible, sure. But it is a moot point so far as I can
see.    ...The levels aren't reality; they're a way of ordering reality.
Again, a person can order reality any way they wish, but it will not be the
MOQ.

dmb says:
I think Dan's point is an important one. Seems like a lot of
misunderstanding follows from missing that point. It's probably the main
reason why Bo thinks the primary empirical reality (DQ) can be equated with
objective reality. It's probably the main reason why Krimel thinks pure
experience (DQ) is something like the transduction of energy through the
sense organs. 

[Krimel]
Just to clarify I said that experience is a process that begins with the
transduction of energy into neural impulses.

[dmb]
It's probably why people expect to find some version of Kant's
things-in-themselves in the MOQ. But this is just the metaphysics of
substance talking. 

[Krimel]
As Dan points out since TiTs cannot be directly experienced it is a moot
point. Whether one takes them seriously or not is a matter of preference.

[dmb]
In the MOQ, our ideas don't correspond to any kind of pre-existing structure
of reality. Of all the things one could say about DQ or undifferentiated
aesthetic continuum, "structured" is NOT of them. In the MOQ, all our static
analogues exist in relation to "reality", which is understood AS experience
itself and not the "things" supposedly experienced. Put another way, the MOQ
says that the idea of an external reality is a good idea, but it's just an
idea, an analogue. Like all analogues, they exist in relation to pure
experience, which is neither mental or physical, again, because "mental" and
"physical" are among the analogues that follow from experience.

[Krimel]
I agree but would join James in pointing out that experience synthesis of
percepts and concepts. You can't throw either one out as a way of achieving
balance.

[dmb]
It boils down to the difference between static quality and Dynamic Quality,
between concepts and reality. "Reification" means taking an abstract concept
and making it into a reality. When that happens, we say there ARE
"distinctions that exist independently of any conceptual patterns of them".
In the MOQ, concepts and distinctions are always static while the primary
empirical reality is an undivided, undifferentiated continuum. 

[Krimel]
Say you know a really great way to understand undifferentiated continua?
That's right as probability distributions.

[dmb]
It's a radically different picture of things. We live in a static reality of
our own making so that conventional reality is one big intricate set of
reifications. 

[Krimel]
It is indeed a set of conception in a conceptual framework that has an
intricate fractal structure. It is infinitely complex at every level of
detail. Concepts are only problematic when they are calcified and become
inflexible to the point they are mistaken as perception itself. Not all of
us live in such a world.

[dmb]
Not that it's all just a dream or whatever. These static patterns aren't
hallucinations, they exist in relation to experience, the primary empirical
reality and they work, more or less. But the MOQ is one way to see through
that reality, to see our concepts of reality AS concepts.

[Krimel]
I take Dan's position to be more like it's just a dream. I think he
understands that outside of our perception there is nothing. Or if there is
something it is not worth talking about since it is outside of perception.
For me both faith and rationalism bridge the gap to an external world. But
that might not work for everyone. You seem confused about which way you are
going.

[dmb]
This is more or less what "Maya" means. It comes from Hinduism and means
"illusion" but also "the power by which the universe becomes manifest". It's
liberating to realize there is more than one way to "compose" a reality.
Creative freedom becomes a profound thing in this picture. 

[Krimel]
I've been through this before with both Dan and Ron and I think an illusion
is just one way of organizing perception. It is not true or false it is just
a pattern of organizing input. That point is that all perception is
illusion. It is a particular way of organizing experience. Some of our ways
of perception are learned and some are biologically programmed but they are
all ways of organizing input.





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