Ham:
The "angle" that you claim I'm not considering is simply the influence of 
parents, teachers, peers, books, and social experience on thinking.  I do not 
dismiss the fact that we are all exposed to external influences.  My railing 
against blind trust in political and philosophical "authorities" clearly 
reveals it.

What I do reject is the notion that thoughts originate from tradition, "the 
social norms and structure which we think within."  If that were true, there 
could never be a new thought or idea, and society would be irretrievably tied 
to the past.  Civilization would never have advanced culturally, morally, 
esthetically or scientifically to its present state.  Without an original 
thought, you and I wouldn't even be having this discussion.

Ron:
Missing the point, society provides the pieces, the board and the rules, the 
stratagum
is all yours. just because the rules are supplied and boundaries designated 
does not
mean there is no room for creativity. Most of this sort of creativity is about 
totally unique
arrangement not totally unique ideas. Most all original thought entails totally 
original
arrangements of old ideas. 


Ham:
Yes, I know.  It's the old "growing up on a deserted island" ploy.  But it's 
not a valid argument.  First of all, the assumption that all thinking is in 
word-language just isn't true.  Composers, artists, and architects often 
express themes and designs in non-verbal form.  Is this not thinking? Secondly, 
a human being in isolation is perfectly capable of inventing his own symbols, 
such as musical notation, sign language, mathematical equations, as well as 
coming up with a new language if necessary.  How else could these conventions 
have been created in the first place?

Ron:
You honostly think an isolated human from birth could develop
a language single handed, as well as a mathematic? Really?why would they
need to? who would they be communicating with?
They were created in the first place by socities of humans communicating
with one another which came from subspecies of humans and homonides
societies communicating with one another and so on..


Ham:
Pure intellect does not involve empirical observation.  Does the biologist 
verify his research data on the basis of intellect or biological evidence? What 
Pirsig is saying is that because sensible experience is more direct or acute 
than intellectual reflection it is closer to the "truth".  He uses the "hot 
stove" analogy to  prove it.  (All it really "proves" is that the sense of pain 
is a more significant value than the concept of freedom, which is nonsensical.)

Ron:
o.k. you can contemplate what "freedom" means while your ass
burns on that hot stove, and we'll compare notes on which one
has more "value".



________________________________
From: Ham Priday <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, May 18, 2009 1:55:57 PM
Subject: Re: [MD] Arlo's Rant and 3rd levels

Ron --


> Ham,
> You claim not to understand yet reaffirm the statements by re-stating
> them in your own words. Fair enough. However there is one angle
> you are not considering.  When maintaining that individuals are the
> originators of thought not society, you forget that each one of us
> were taught the structure of social norms from birth, the structure
> in which we think within.  This tradition is where thoughts originate
> from.

The "angle" that you claim I'm not considering is simply the influence of 
parents, teachers, peers, books, and social experience on thinking.  I do not 
dismiss the fact that we are all exposed to external influences.  My railing 
against blind trust in political and philosophical "authorities" clearly 
reveals it.

What I do reject is the notion that thoughts originate from tradition, "the 
social norms and structure which we think within."  If that were true, there 
could never be a new thought or idea, and society would be irretrievably tied 
to the past.  Civilization would never have advanced culturally, morally, 
esthetically or scientifically to its present state.  Without an original 
thought, you and I wouldn't even be having this discussion.

> Pirsig once asked, if a human were born isolated from all
> human contact and expereince would they have a thought
> in their head?  Quine, I think had said one chimpanzee is no
> chimpanzee, that what is recognized as the normal behavior
> of individuals only arises in the context of a society. ...

Yes, I know.  It's the old "growing up on a deserted island" ploy.  But it's 
not a valid argument.  First of all, the assumption that all thinking is in 
word-language just isn't true.  Composers, artists, and architects often 
express themes and designs in non-verbal form.  Is this not thinking? Secondly, 
a human being in isolation is perfectly capable of inventing his own symbols, 
such as musical notation, sign language, mathematical equations, as well as 
coming up with a new language if necessary.  How else could these conventions 
have been created in the first place?

> Reading up on what defines a Psychosis one understands
> how social standards of agreement define "rational" from
> "irrational" thought and behaviour, which is why when Pirsig
> states that pre-intellect is more "empirical" he means that
> expereinces hold more "truth" value when they are verified
> biologically rather than intellectually which answers your
> question as to why MoQists simply will not agree, or hold
> an intellectual static standard regarding the meaning of the four
> levels, for the four levels refer to our own unique experience.


> You rant against collective thought yet utilize it and hold to
> its standards to define truth in meaning.  Empirical, logical,
> rational standards of thought are collective standards of
> agreements of meaning or "truth" as we recognize it.
> Now, one may reflect on past experience and one may
> project future experience drawn from it, this may be
> considered thought of a "true" individual nature but how
> we distinguish uniquely human "thinking" is primarily by
> virtue of social standards of meaning.


Sorry, Ron, but I don't buy into the notion of a collective intellect or 
societal thought.  Most of what I've seen of the latter falls into the category 
of "thought control".

Regards,
Ham

________________________________
From: Ham Priday <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, May 18, 2009 2:48:44 AM
Subject: Re: [MD] Arlo's Rant and 3rd levels

Greetings Willblake2 --


> Arlo is talking about the peripheral mind, that behavior above
> ground, and claiming that the subconscious thinking is also
> societal, control by language. This cannot be true, it is the
> other way around. A society has a completely different
> consciousness which we are not privy to, in the same way
> each individual nerve is not privy to our thoughts.

You're absolutely right Willblake, and I'm sure Arlo and Krimel realize that 
too, but in deference to Pirsig they prefer not to notice that "the emperor 
wears no clothes." Craig recently suggested that had Pirsig "... called 
[Society] the 'institutional level', he could have made his point without 
getting it mistaken for the biological activities of bees & ants." But even 
Craig misses the point.

Activity, behavior, and expression are terms designating objectively observed 
events or processes. Awareness, thinking, and cognizance (intellection) are 
subjective functions of the conscious self. The behaviors exhibited by bees or 
ants or people reveal nothing of their thoughts or feelings. Conciousness is 
proprietary to the individual and is non-transferable, or, as Ayn Rand once 
said, "No man can think for another." Of course one's thoughts and attitudes 
are influenced by society. But what is loosely referred to as "the social 
intelligence" can only be a collective reflection of thoughts and ideas that 
originate with the individual subject.

Why are the MoQists so reluctant to concede this? Obviously, because the author 
needed to do away with subjects and objects (SOM) in order to "overcome" 
duality. Instead of the duality we all know, he posited a four-level Quality 
hierarchy which can be interpreted in so many ways that even the charter 
members of this forum can't agree on which is "correct".

> If all we are are our thoughts, what are we when we are
> listening to music without thought? I believe Arlo brought up
> a similar example with food.
> I suppose the argument would go that is: we are with thoughts,
> the music is the social level, and we are appreciating it through
> language. However, one does not have to understand music
> to appreciate it. It interacts with the inner self, that is separate
> (in a continuous) manner from the outer (ego) self. I can ski
> down a slope thoughtlessly, but I am still there.

The locus of awareness is the knowing 'I' of each individual. It's hard to 
define because it is not an existent; that is, it can't be measured, 
quantified, or localized objectively.

If it's any help, I refer to any kind of value response as "sensibility". The 
stimulus or trigger can be physiological (e.g., pain, taste, pressure, 
balance), psycho-emotional (joy, sorrow, fear, love, excitement), esthetic 
(music, art, poetry, beauty), or intellectual (freedom, morality, justice).

I reserve the term "experience" for interactive or relational awareness, such 
as meeting other people, working in the garden, or skiing down a slope.

In addition, there is recall of past experience (memory), learning (acquiring 
factual knowledge), and conceptualizing (figuring, comparing, abstracting, 
organizing, defining, etc.)

In all cases, awareness is proprietary to the individual subject.

> We are the sum total of our awareness thoughts, our
> subconscious thoughts, our interaction with the environment,
> the beating of our hearts, the intelligence of our immune
> system, the thoughtless passions, emotions, feelings that
> arise to form thoughts. We are so much more than our
> thoughts (or ego as I believe you state).

True, but not all of these processes are conscious. For example, we're not 
normally aware of our heart or respiration rate, blood pressure, and other 
autonomic activities.

> The problem with the notion that society dictates thought
> is that individuals arise (especially in politics), that argue
> they have a social solution to correct our inner selves.
> This is dangerous indeed, and leads to the polarization of
> people through the abuse of social ideas (fairness, security,
> compassion), who are each trying to fulfill their ideas.
> Such things lead to wars based on ideology, which can
> never be won, because the ideology is made up and
> doesn't really exist. There is no tangible winning,
> only a subjective sense of one.

I'm in general agreement, but would prefer to leave politics out of this 
discussion.

Nice to chat with you again, Willblake.

Best regards,
Ham


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