Ham said:
... It's frustrating to hear complaints that I "fail to understand" the MoQ; 
much more vexing is a message from one who comprehends Essentialism 
sufficiently to cite those issues that make it "fundamentally at odds" with 
what I do understand of Pirsig's thesis. .. Of course this comes as no surprise 
to me.  Indeed, it should be obvious to most of you that my ontology has 
fundamental differences with the "official doctrine".  ... As an individualist, 
I'm also opposed to authoritarian obeisance. ... Before I am ejected from this 
forum for noncompliance, however, let me stress (in Dan's words) what being a 
Pirsigian requires you to believe, and how this is viewed by an Essentialist.


dmb says:

Official doctrine? Authoritarian obeisance? Ejected for non-compliance?

Do you really see no difference between submission and comprehension? Do you 
really think that people should be allowed to misunderstand an idea in the name 
of individualism and liberty? 

When we talk about the rejection of SOM, we are not JUST talking about what 
Pirsig thinks. We're also talking about the history of Modern philosophy. The 
"observer" that you insist upon has been rejected by whole schools of thought 
within the West and the rejection of that notion is even more common in the 
East. More specifically, the pragmatic tradition is predicated on rejecting the 
very thing you insist upon. And to be very, very, specific, William James 
rejected that notion more than a hundred years ago in an essay titled "Does 
Consciousness Exist?".

Now, Ham, it would be one thing if you understood the reasons for this 
rejection SOM. Then you'd be in a position to dispute it and attack it and 
maybe to put that "observer" back into the picture. Or at least you could try. 
But you seem quite oblivious to the arguments against SOM, and you act as if 
nobody had ever tried to tell you this. You see, Pirsig identifies SOM as the 
root of a serious cultural problem and both of his books are meant to offer an 
alternative, one that addresses this cultural crisis. 

>From a MOQers' point of view, you are offering the original root of the 
>problem as an alternative to Pirsig's solution. If Pirsig were a surgeon who 
>had just finished cutting all the cancer out of a patient, you are the 
>confused nurse who puts the cancer back into the patient. I realize that you 
>don't see it that way. Nobody actually wants to do harm. But it does show that 
>you've failed to understand the problem AS a problem. And because the MOQ is a 
>solution to that unseen problem, you don't see the point or purpose of the MOQ.

This is not a matter of freedom or determinism. It's not about obedience or 
conformity or denying anyone's right to have their own point of view. It's 
about coming to grips with an artificial conception of the relations between 
knower and known, a conception that has caused all kinds of fake problems 
throughout the history of philosophy. It's about the flaws in the basic 
assumptions behind value-free objectivity and amoral rationality. If you 
understood this, you certainly wouldn't be trying to re-assert those flawed 
assumptions, at least not without first criticizing the rejection of those 
assumptions. 

What you're doing here is analogous to criticizing the Protestants because 
they're such bad Catholics. The Protestant is just going to scratch his head in 
bewilderment. He'll say yea, of course I'm not a good Catholic. That's the 
whole point of being Protestant. If you try to re-assert Catholicism without 
first understanding the Protestant's reasons for rejecting it, then you haven't 
even entered into the debate at all and from his point of view you have no 
reasons for this re-assertion, let alone good and convincing reasons.



                                          
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