Hey Guys,

Thanks for your responses. I've been busy and don't have much time now.

Let me start with Ian's post. Keep in mind that Sheldrakes's quote was
speaking to the understanding of scientific law as understood in mechanistic
science. This came the model for understanding all law in the modern era,
which is what P refers to when speaking of classical thought.

It is true that Ian's idea corresponds more to the new understanding of
scientific law, or truth generally, in the post modern era. This notion
parallels and was in fact derived from what P refers to as romanticism.
Both understandings of science and reality are grounded, or have roots, in
theological thought. That's what I will try to show as we go.

But Ian P's idea of quality was developed precisely to overcome the idea
that all things are energy, in whatever form. That's the whole point of moq,
that this definition is insufficient.

Matt, I agree with your comments about an open mind. Every view is closed to
some view. I agree that Jung was a platonist, really a neoplatonist and his
thought is very similar to P's. I do not mean Jungian or Platonic
archetypes. I simply mean that there are certain fundamental ideas at work
in every age, and that those ideas have a kind of primary category from
which they all are descended. Let's call them heaven and earth, or as we go,
I want to share with you my thoughts on solar and lunar mythic systems and
the philosophies they spawn.

But to start with I am arguing that there exist certain ages in history. I'm
in agreement with P on this. There are certain knowable, characterizable,
definable ages in the history of the West. I agree we are leaving one age
and going into another, along with P. I disagree with his characterizations
and solutions.

The age we are now in defies paradigms, metaphysics or absolute knowledge of
any kind. It is a non-paradigmatic paradigm, so to speak as it has negation
and paradox built into it. This is largely what is meant by a lunar mythic
or philosophical system. So it does not surprise me that you don't like
facts or definitions. Let me ask you, do believe there are absolute facts?
But all of this is understandable and predictable and even called for by our
current paradigm. We've seen it before in history whenever Eastern thought,
or neoplatonic religion and philosophy are dominant-whenever the
Creator-creation distinction is ignored.

Beyond that Ham, I didn't really understand your criticism or what you mean
by historicism. I'm usually accused of historcism.

And don't confuse my own ideas with Dooyeweerd's philosophy, although I
think them compatible. I'd like to discuss Newton, Sorokin and DW more as we
progress in relation to P.

And Ham to answer your question, the transcendental principle that is
tripping you up is the nature-freedom ground motive of the Renaissance,
which is where P looked for inspiration. And it is traceable back to ancient
Greece (another place P looked for inspiration) and their matter-form ground
motive, and is but another expression of it. You are on the freedom, or
matter pole of these gm's, I believe, and ignoring the nature, form aspect
that allows you to see or be satisfied with one, uniform explanation. You
are lost in the land of the many. Sorry I don't have time to develop the
gm's in more detail now.

Also, regarding ages, or any definition, there are levels on which they
appear different. Think of a rainbow. Up close with a rainbow, or history,
you can't see where one color or age blends into another. But with a longer
broader view you can see distinct pattern, and order,  in a rainbow and in
history.

And not to leave out X Acto. Every time I read one of your posts, I'm
reminded of the Bible verse in the Proverbs that says:
"A fool hath no desire in learning, but to express his own heart"

Thanks to everyone,
Jon


On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 7:26 AM, Ian Glendinning
<[email protected]>wrote:

> Beg to differ Platt,
>
> All things consist of energy or its fossilized remains ... we call it
> Quality (Dynamic and static)
>
> Ian
>
> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 3:56 PM,  <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Excellent quote from Sheldrake. The scientific theory that all consists
> of
> > matter and energy consists of neither matter nor energy.
> >
> >
> > On 27 Apr 2010 at 20:18, Jon Bennett wrote:
> >
> >> Rupert Sheldrake puts it like this,
> >>
> >> "Although many people no longer believe in such a God, his universal
> laws
> >> have survived him to this day. But when we pause to consider the nature
> of
> >> these laws, they rapidly become mysterious. They govern matter and
> motion,
> >> but they are not themselves material nor do they move. They cannot be
> seen
> >> or weighed or touched; they lie beyond the realm of sense experience.
> They
> >> are potentially present everywhere and always. They have no physical
> source
> >> of origin. Indeed, even in the absence of God, they still share many of
> his
> >> traditional attributes. They are omnipresent, immutable, universal, and
> >> self-subsistent. Nothing can be hidden from them, nor lie beyond their
> >> power."
> >
> >
> >
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