hey matt,
i like the holism idea in reln to language: language is def a holistic affair - 
a word doesn't make sense except in relation to all other words...the 
definitional train can go on for ever - an infinite overlapping circuit.
but we are in the static realm here surely. what of DQ? this is central to the 
MOQ and pirsig and radical empiricism. how does the self-sufficient holistic 
world of language deal with this...i don't get how, do you?
do you mean that we are entrapped within language when we talk of any 
philosophy, metaphysical or otherwise? when we talk, think, fullstop? if so i 
get this and agree. 
this point brings the degenerate or at least contradictory nature of 
metaphysics to light, as bob says in lila.
talking about the ineffable? possible? pointless?
depends on how we talk i think.... the passion of dave and myself will 
hopefully be excused in this context. it's got to be real - existential rather 
than abstract. or more precisely the abstract must always be measured against 
the existential.
and what is the existential? the predecessor of linguistic essence...the here 
and now, the aesthetic continuum, etc etc...
life comes first.....i think that psychological nominalism or holistic theories 
of language/culture are very useful given this caveat is understood and heeded.
but maybe i am missing something?

all the best
uncouth gav




--- On Wed, 8/4/09, Matt Kundert <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Matt Kundert <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [MD] FW:  Quine and the Linguistic Turn
To: [email protected]
Received: Wednesday, 8 April, 2009, 10:08 AM


> Date: Tue, 7 Apr 2009 14:58:22 -0700
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [MD] FW:  Quine and the Linguistic Turn
> 
> 
> you guys are funny.
> straight guy and funny guy eh..?
> how about less of the melodrama and get to the point...us amateurs need some 
> clarity
> so is psychological nominalism saying that all awareness is linguistic?
> if so then this is not radically empirical or moqish to my mind...seems quite 
> simple. how can you guys spend so many electrons not understanding this?
> i think a lot of awareness is linguistically filtered, most of it even, but 
> what of novelty then? what of aesthetic arrest? what of meditative states, 
> epiphanies, beauty! what about music!
> how can people get paid to write such fucking rubbish.......

Well, in deference to DMB, you're speaking his language.  That's been his point.



My point has been that, though psychological nominalism's slogan is
"all awareness is a linguistic affair," it doesn't quite mean the
counter-intuitive things it suggests.  It has to be understood in the
context of various kinds of atomism, particularly the kinds that
surfaced in early analytic philosophy.



My suggestion about the parallel qualities of radical empiricism and
psychological nominalism is that both are kinds of holism, and that the
only difference between the two is a difference in jargon, in the state
of the philosophical dialogue that each arose out of and responded to. 
But to move this beyond a suggestion is not a small task, requiring an
exposition of both contexts (particularly the stranger and more arid
context of analytic philosophy which us amateurs have a more difficult
time making sense out of), exposition of both positions, and
explication of just what atomism and holism are (such that they
function as larger paradigms that the others sit in).  This extended
task I'm not yet prepared to do (though I've been working on it for
some time).  I don't have all my ducks in a row.  I think all of your prima 
facie counter-examples, Gav, fit in fine with a proper understanding of 
psychological nominalism, it's just beyond my present capacities to explain 
how. 



One indicator of symmetry: James was at pains to point out that _relations_, 
which in those days was to say "ideas," were as real and experienced as 
_things_.  His enemy was an atomism that thought that the universe came 
pre-packaged in little atoms called "things," and that what people did was add 
on relationships between them.  And, on the other hand, in Rorty's most 
accessible introduction to his philosophical viewpoint (in Philosophy and 
Social Hope), he describes it as a kind of panrelationalism, that there is no 
"thing" outside of its relationships to other things.  I take the latter, in 
particular, to be strikingly similar to Pirsig's notion of static patterns of 
Quality.

I, personally, don't see the melodrama (outside whatever exists between DMB and 
me personally) because I don't think it's important for amateur philosophers 
like ourselves to have to be into everything other amateur philosophers are 
into.  I'm into the history of philosophy and Richard Rorty (among other 
things).  I relate Pirsig to that.  But I don't think a "proper" understanding 
of Pirsig requires anything of the kind--"properness" isn't really a proper 
category for amateur philosophy.

Matt

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