Ham to dmb:

If the subjective self is the problem that the MoQ has allegedly "solved", I 
deny that it ever was a "problem".  We all participate in a subject/object 
world that is the source of all our knowledge.  The conscious experience of 
that world has its locus in the individual sel


dmb says:
That's exactly what I was talking about. The MOQ is a solution to a problem and 
you are denying that there is a problem. So the solution is quite meaningless 
to you. It's worse than that, actually. As you see it, the solution is the 
problem. As you see it, the MOQ....

Ham continued:
... would have us pretend that we are living an illusion, that there are no 
subjects and objects, no freedom to choose, no role for mankind other than to 
go with the flow to "betterness" that ... reduces the human being to little 
more than an automaton of Nature with no will or purpose of his own.


dmb says:
See, that view of the MOQ is very far from accurate. I'd even say it's pretty 
darn slanderous. The MOQ is profoundly humanistic, in fact. Man is the measure 
of all things, a participant in the creation of all things and thou art that. 
It is scientific materialism that reduces humans to little more than automatons 
and Absolutism that denies free will. The MOQ opposes both of these things. And 
both of those things grow out of the very problem you are denying. 


Ham said:
In ZMM Pirsig says ""When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called 
insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion it is called a Religion."  In 
the Copleston Annotations, Pirsig notes: "The MOQ is atheistic".  Is this not a 
rejection of religion?  And what supports your conclusion that one can be 
religious and reject "faith and supernaturalism"?


dmb says:

There is a distinction between theism and religion and that's true regardless 
of what Pirsig says. Buddhism and Taoism are non-theistic religions, for 
example. Philosophical mysticism is a non-theistic form of religion too. The 
MOQ is compatible with non-theistic religions, with non-theistic forms of 
mysticism. The Stanford Encyclopedia has a substantial article on "Mysticism" 
so you certainly don't have to take my word for it. A few sentences from the 
opening paragraphs is enough to show this. 
"Typically, mystics, theistic or not, see their mystical experience as part of 
a larger undertaking aimed at human transformation and not as the terminus of 
their efforts. Thus, in general, ‘mysticism’ would best be thought of as a 
constellation of distinctive practices, discourses, texts, institutions, 
traditions, and experiences aimed at human transformation, variously defined in 
different traditions.
Under the influence of William James' The Varieties of Religious Experience, 
heavily centered on people's conversion experiences, most philosophers' 
interest in mysticism has been in distinctive, allegedly knowledge-granting 
“mystical experiences.” Philosophers have focused on such topics as the 
classification of mystical experiences, their nature in different religions and 
mystical traditions, to what extent mystical experiences are conditioned by a 
mystic's language and culture, and whether mystical experiences furnish 
evidence for the truth of their contents."


Ham said:

Metaphysics deals with the theoretical fundamentals of philosophy, so I'm 
neither surprised nor discouraged by the fact that other authors have denounced 
certain concepts that I've posited.  I fully suspect that Pirsig's concepts 
would also have been rejected or attacked by visionaries of the past. That's 
'par for the course' for anyone attempting to advance an original philosophy.


dmb says:

Well, yes, history shows that visionaries are often rejected as heretics, 
blasphemers or nut cases. But you're not understanding my criticism, Ham. There 
is nothing innovative about your essentialism. In this postmodern era, that 
kind of metaphysics is dead. You're asserting modern ideas and even some 
pre-modern views in a postmodern world. The things you're saying have been said 
many times already in the history of philosophy and the only scholars who still 
cling to such things are the most conservative of theologians. They are 
considered to be old fashioned and out of touch even among other theologians.



Ham said:
If the points I have disputed in this forum are sufficient to "undermine the 
MOQ," then I would have to suggest that the MOQ is founded on quicksand.  As 
you see, Horse has assured me that being "at odds with aspects of the MoQ" does 
not constitute a reason for rejection.  I'll stand by the administrator's 
decision, not yours, David.

dmb says:
I'm not calling for your removal and I don't think the MOQ is in any danger 
because of your essentialism. I'm just saying that you've failed to understand 
how wildly incompatible it is. I'm just saying that you don't understand the 
MOQ or even the problem it addresses.


Ham said:
Your gratuitous comments about joining the Catholic church and selling magic to 
scientists are too churlish to merit a serious response.


dmb says:

That was just an analogy, Ham. The Catholic church is related to atheism as 
magic is related to science. The idea here is simply to characterize the 
relation between the MOQ and your essentialism. If the MOQ sees SOM as the 
problem to be solved and essentialism sees that same thing as the main 
principle to be protected, then there are opposed to each other in a very 
fundamental way. Do you really not understand this simple point? The Catholics 
also want to protect the very thing that atheism opposes. Magical thinking is 
approximately the opposite of scientific thinking. I'm not really talking about 
churches or magic. I'm just about the RELATIONS between those opposed views. I 
could simply say that Pirsig is trying to cool things down and you're trying to 
heat them up but I'm not talking about temperature. I'm talking about your 
opposition to the MOQ.




                                          
Moq_Discuss mailing list
Listinfo, Unsubscribing etc.
http://lists.moqtalk.org/listinfo.cgi/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org
Archives:
http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/
http://moq.org/md/archives.html

Reply via email to