>
>
> Hi John
>
> I think the confusion is thinking that having a choice is freedom.
> Conventionally, that is so. But we are not talking conventionally
> here. We are using the framework of the MOQ. To have a choice is
> follow  intellectual patterns of value and when we are dealing with
> static quality, we are without choice.
>
>
Quite a corner you've got yourself painted into there Dan.  One is only free
to the extent that one follows DQ, but since all experience is immediately
translated into sq, the only time one is truly free is in that tiny slice of
time which is the pet of existence to Radical Empiricism.  Personally, I'd
like a bit more freedom than that.  You need to reformulate, I think.



> Dan:
>
> Yes that seems right. I dislike the term "spiritual leading" but I
> understand what you're saying. And if you understand, then you can see
> where I am coming from.
>
>
I believe I do.



> >
> > Freedom IS Quality and Quality is Freedom of choice.  You can't have
> > betterness if there is no choice.  This seems so obvious to me that if I
> was
> > a half-ass philosopher I'd put together some sort of ontological proof,
> but
> > I ain't, so I won't.
>
> Dan:
> If that is so, there is no choice but what is better.


John:

"Better" means an option between it and something worse.  Option implies a
choice.  Therefore betterness implies choice, logically inevitable choice.
 There is always a choice when there is better.  There is the choice of
worse.  People say "that's no choice at all" but it actually is a choice and
sometimes you don't know whether the choice you make is better, or worse,
until some time has passed.  In fact, this passage of time to determine
betterness, is the heart of pragmatism, right?

Dan:


> I think the term
> Quality might be misleading. If you're using it as a synonym for
> Dynamic Quality, then to the extent we follow "it" we are free.



Ok so far.  "Following it" implies making it your goal, having it as your
ultimate value.  I agree, only when DQ is your ultimate value, is one truly
free.

Dan:


> But
> they way you are using the term it seems you are defining choice, in
> which case you are following static quality.



John:

I define Choice by DQ, and DQ by Choice.  Neither is definable on its own.
This is what is meant by "co-dependent arising"

Dan:

And though it may seem as
> if there is a choice, there isn't. It is predetermined by the static
> choices you make.
>
>
By the same argument, Dan, I could say you mean that there is no Quality
either - that it is also predetermined by the environmental inputs and thus
completely static.  The only way Quality gets in the door, is if you have
free choice able to open the lock.


Quality is a given, so also then, is free choice.


>
> Dan:
> Quality can be defined... we define it all the time. And in the
> defining we lose the freedom of Dynamic Quality. When we think there
> is a choice, there isn't. We've effectively ruled out freedom by
> defining the choices we have.
>
> You say, wait... I have a choice to care or not to care. But that
> doesn't translate into freedom. You've set up parameters,
> preconditions upon which to act. By following Dynamic Quality there
> are no preconditions. We are free.
>

John:

 NO preconditions can only occur in a condition of NO patterns.  If there
are no patterns, then there is no choice and there is no Quality.

It seems to me that you equate being free with being in a chaotic state of
indeterminancy.  Hmmpphh.  What's the pragmatic value in that?   It
certainly doesn't make any sense to me.  I see it differently.  The
existence of Quality implies a pre-condition.  There is a value, therefore
there is a condition upon which to decide, a map-point by which to orient.



> Dan:
> Freedom isn't impossible. It just can't be defined in a static quality
> way. Once we start intellectualizing, freedom is lost. That is what I
> see the MOQ telling us.



John:  Well I certainly agree with that.  I think I've mentioned before that
by co-equating freedom and quality, I agree fundamentally with the MoQ
insight that such is ultimately indefinable.




Dan:


> Take the hot stove example...


John:

Oh, please, not again.  Can't you people come up with any new analogistic
cliches?  I don't think authority was meant to be construed thus.  I think
you should figure out what the meaning of the parable is, then hash out new
metaphoric parallels, for goodness sake.  But never mind that, I think this
point about pre-intellectual is so inane, only a professor would find it
profound to hop off a stove, ok?  There's all kinds of neural network that
makes us humans jump, and it's not all centered in our cortex or whatevers.
 Even our feet got brains enough to know that.




> there is no
> intellectual choice made getting off the stove. That comes later,
> along with the oaths and pain. And an intellectually oriented person
> will have the hardest time understanding that. A more mystically
> oriented person just acts.
>
>

Sorry, but you don't have to be all that mystically oriented neither, to get
off a hot stove.  All you gotta have is a really hot stove.

I have the hardest time understanding how anybody could have a hard time
understanding this... no matter how intellectual.


But hey, thanks as always Dan,  I enjoy our little chats.

John
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