Hi Dan,

sheesh!  This is jumping in the wayback machine.  I see "ten days ago"
marking this message so I hope you have patience enough for the slowly
developing.


>
> Dan:
> I have to agree with Robert Pirsig. It is nonsense. Spirits becoming
> subjects? How on earth does a spirit construct itself objectively to
> itself? Do you honestly agree with this?
>
>

John:

The problem is their use of the word "spirit".  I think some translation of
that term is necessary to make sense of where they were coming from when
they were using it.  The term as I best translate it in MoQ terms is
"ghosts" the way RMP used it in ZAMM.  If you remember, he used it two
ways!  First, as a rejection as a silly superstition when Chris offered that
he had a friend who believed in them.  Then he realized Chris's friend used
the term differently and he adapted and accepted.  Yes, THOSE ghosts are
real.  They're real because they are constructs of thought in that culture.
You have to interpolate.

Another analogy for spirit is wind.  When Pirsig talked about the wind and
Goethe, he reminded us that the ancient Greeks didn't use the intellect for
understanding truth, they listened to the wind.  That is a good analogy too,
for what the romantic period idealists meant by "spirit" and they were on to
something.

An analogy I've used myself a lot, in my own thinking, is translate it as
"software".  Spiritual realities are intellectual patterns.  Having to do
with programatic relation or meaning on an ultimate scale.  The ancients
were most concerned with the spirit world, but we seemingly have left all
that behind, and now we use the term to mean what we think we're lacking in
our "spiritually empty" existence.  I'd say, Quality is spiritual and has to
do with ideas.  Anything that has to do with the idea of ideas, is in some
sense a spiritual concern.  That's my definition and use of the word
"spirit" and when I read their works with that idea and from within an MoQ
framework, I look at "spritual reality" as a way of describing 4th-level
phenomena, that's on the sq end of the scale, and true spirit is more of a
DQ thing.



> >>
> > John:
> >
> > Actually dan, I don't think any interpretation of the MoQ is a "wasted
> time"
> > but I do think there is a tendency to refuse to think about things that
> are
> > assumed.
>
> Dan:
> We disagree. I do think some (supposed) interpretations of the MOQ are
> incorrect and therefore a waste of time. There are certain assumptions
> that make up the context of the MOQ and without those assumptions the
> MOQ ceases to be.
>
>

John:

Well, you're probably right.  What you say seems right to me.  I do think
that, at times, but perhaps I over-construe.  It happens.



> Dan:
> The way I understand it, the Copleston annotations were an attempt by
> RMP to answer Ant's question pertaining to Victorian values and how
> they compare to the MOQ. They are filled with religious notions
> prevalent during Victorian times... notions like spirit and soul. The
> MOQ sees this as nonsense.
>


John:

Now, you're over-reaching.  For just like the example with Chris, the MoQ is
also very much concerned with a rapproachment with Indian thinking and
consciousness and "notions like spirit and soul" are very much part of that
thinking and consciousness, and shouldn't be treated like nonsense anymore
than the theory of gravity.  You're expressing an inappropriate prejudice
bequeathed by a reaction to christian indoctrination.

Free yourself my son!



>
> Yes there is value there, I agree. And if you're serious about
> discussing ideas presented therein, perhaps a less flippant and
> derogatory attitude might work wonders.
>
>

Well.  I am.  I'm willing to be patient.  It appears we have enough
discussion on our hands at the moment, just with your basic and fundamental
MoQ principles.  But they await in my drafts box and I would like to take up
that discussion some day.  The Idealist of that period were a big influence
to me, coming as they did to me, at the same time I was studying Sessions
and Gary Snyder's approaches to Deep Ecology which is how I found about ZAMM
in the first place.  I like revisiting the studies of my youth, heh-heh.
Spoken like a true old fart.




> Dan:
> We both have a choice and have no choice, at the same time. That is
> what the MOQ is telling us.



John:

That doesn't satisfy me at all.  Logical contradictions are not very
useful.  Philosophically -wise.

Dan:


> To cling to the notion that only free will
> offers quality is to fundamentally misunderstand the nature of
> experience, which is what I told Ham last time we spoke.
>
>
John:

I admit, sometimes it feels like I'm arguing along Hammian lines.  But
really, I'm not.  For one thing, Ham thinks free will resides in humanity
alone, and I disagree.  I say free will is co-fundamental with Quality as
the basic stuff of the whole enchilada.  That the levels, are demonstrably
ratchets in choice.  I feel that the MoQ is entirely in agreement with my
formulation.


Dan:


> To move from a low-quality situation to a high-quality situation isn't
> a choice. The hot stove experiment illustrates that nicely. It just
> happens. No choice involved.
>
>
JOhn:

Well, I've argued against this adequately.  Sometimes it's a valid choice to
sit on a hot stove.  Like when your butt is freezing.  And the surprised
reaction involves a bunch of pre-selected choices that are acted upon
quickly because they were all thought out ahead of time.  IF there was
absolutely no pre-conception of heat or stove, then there wouldn't be an
instantaneous reaction.  And some of this is built-in on the biological
level, but I believe choice is really a fundament of that level too!  Thus
we say "he has no choice" because his cells are "choosing" without benefit
of his intellect!  That doesn't obviate choice, just transfers it to a lower
level.


Thanks for your patience, Dan.

John
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