David Buchanan stated July 7th:

Ron quoted William James:

" the difference is that the empiricists are less dazzled. Unity doesn't blind 
them to everything else, doesn't quench their curiousity for special facts 
whereas there is a kind of rationalist who is sure to interpret abstract unity 
mystically and to forget everything else, to treat it as a principle; to admire 
and worship it; and thereupon to come to a full stop intellectually." William 
James Pragmatism


Ron commented (to Ant):

The majority of "Pragmatism" is a response to Monism, Monism he states is 
useful in that it affords us a moral holiday. If MoQ is part and parcel of the 
tradition of Pragmatism, stating that it is a monism departs from this 
tradition.  ...For MoQ to be a Monism and yet follow Pragmatic tradition would 
require such a sophisticated explanation and a large re-working of both terms. 
Don't you think? They are just about contrary in meaning.  It would be better 
to classify, if we must classify, MoQ as a pluralism that asserts Value as its 
first abstract principle of explanation. Then it sits comfortably without 
contradiction in meaning.

Ant McWatt comments:

Ron,

Many thanks for the quotes by James.  For anyone else interested, they can be 
find in their original context (A lecture by James on the "One and Many" 
eventually published in - the simply titled - "Pragmatism") at:

http://www.brocku.ca/MeadProject/James/James_1907/James_1907_04.html


Your conclusion (i.e. the MOQ is only monist in the sense that it "asserts 
Value as its first abstract principle of explanation") did leave us a problem 
as this limited understanding of monism (as regards the MOQ) isn't shared by 
Pirsig's wider understanding of the latter's form of monism in ZMM or LILA.  
Fortunately, Dave Buchanan showed us how the Pragmatism of William James can be 
reconciled with Pirsig's statements about the MOQ's monism.
 
Ron replies:
Ant, Dave, thank you both for your time.  This conversation has prompted a 
re-reading of "Pragmatism" and I
would agree that the both square up within the context, I suppose I had a more 
pedestrian immediacy of
the term "monism" as it would mean to the layman and the loaded baggage 
associated that James attacks.
However James brings the psychological to the table in terms such as 
"temperment" which adds a richer
understanding about what "monism" means past the abstract generalization, the 
emotional value. I think
this is what Joe was trying to convey (thnx Joe).

dmb said:

It's not too tricky to untangle this, I think. You're right to characterize 
Pragmatism as an attack on Monism - but there are two important points that 
will make the apparent contradiction evaporate.

This first point is simply that James was attacking Hegelian monism, the 
Absolute Idealism of Bradley and Royce in particular. When Phaedrus first 
realized that Quality was "an absolute monism" wherein "Quality was the source 
and substance of everything," the narrator tells us, a "whole new flood of 
philosophic associations came to mind". "Hegel said the Absolute Mind was the 
source of everything," he admits, but, "Hegel's Absolute was completely 
classical, completely rational and completely orderly. Quality was not like 
that." 

Ant McWatt comments:

Dave, I had a another look at this quote (from ZMM) in context and it's because 
of Quality's essential MYSTICAL nature that Pirsig distances it from Hegel's 
"Absolute Mind".  Maybe that's unfair on Hegel but it's Pirsig's "completely 
classical, completely rational and completely orderly" understanding of Hegel's 
Absolute i.e. that is to say its supposed DEFINABLE nature which is critical 
for our purposes here.  

Otherwise, I wonder what James would make about Pirsig's comments on Bradley's 
Absolute - as seen in the Copleston Annotations? :

"The description 
                          of Bradley as an idealist is completely incorrect.  
                          Bradley’s fundamental assertion is that the reality 
                          of the world is intellectually unknowable, and that 
                          defines him as a mystic."



                        "So It has really 
                          been a shock to see how close Bradley is to the MOQ. 
                          Both he and the MOQ are expressing what Aldous Huxley 
                          called "The Perennial Philosophy," which is 
                          perennial, I believe, because it happens to be true. 
                          Bradley has given an excellent description of what 
the 
                          MOQ calls Dynamic Quality and an excellent rational 
                          justification for its intellectual acceptance.  It 
and 
                          the MOQ can be spliced together with no difficulty 
into 
                          a broader explanation of the same thing."
"A singular difference 
                          is that the MOQ says the Absolute is of value, a 
point 
                          Bradley may have thought so obvious it didn't need 
mentioning. 
                          The MOQ says that this value is not a property of the 
                          Absolute, it is the Absolute itself, and is a much 
better 
                          name for the Absolute than "Absolute."  Rhetorically, 
                          the word "absolute" conveys nothing except 
                          rigidity and permanence and authoritarianism and 
remoteness.  
                          "Quality," on the other hand conveys flexibility, 
                          impermanence, here-and-now-ness and freedom."

(http://robertpirsig.org/Copleston.htm)


dmb continued:

The second point is that Pragmatism is a theory of truth and as such fits into 
the MOQ as static intellectual quality. Pirsig and James agree that truth is a 
certain kind of good, static intellectual good. To address the main question - 
is Quality a monism? - we should be talking about James's Radical Empiricism 
and especially his notion of "pure experience". This is where it makes sense to 
compare Pirsig's monism (Quality) to James's monism (pure experience). John 
Dewey was a radical empiricist too. On this view, says John Stuhr, “experience 
is anactivity in which subject and object are unified and constituted as 
partial features and relations within this ongoing, unanalyzed unity”. Please 
notice that “unanalyzed unity” is another way to say that "pure experience" or 
"Quality" is an undifferentiated whole, an undivided continuum or 
pre-conceptual flux. All these phrases are descriptive labels and what they 
describe is undivided experience,
 experience prior to the intellectual distinctions or static patterns we use 
when talking about it or reflecting on it.

The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy puts it this way: “James’s fundamental 
idea is that mind and matter are both aspects of, or structures formed from, a 
more fundamental stuff — pure experience — that (despite being called 
“experience”) is neither mental nor physical. Pure experience, James explains, 
is “the immediate flux of life which furnishes the material to our later 
reflection with its conceptual categories” (Essays in Radical Empiricism). 

And then you hear this from Pirsig himself at the end of chapter 29  of Lila...

"The second of James' two main systems of philosophy, which he said was 
independent of pragmatism, was his radical empiricism. By this he meant that 
subjects and objects were not the starting point of experience. Subjects and 
objects are secondary. They are concepts derived from something more 
fundamental which he described as 'the immediate flux of life which furnishes 
the material to our later reflection with its conceptual categories'. In this 
basic flux of experience, the distinctions of reflective thought, such as those 
between consciousness and content, subject and object, mind and matter, have 
not yet emerged in the forms which we make them. Pure experience cannot be 
either physical or psychical: It logically precedes this distinction." 


So you see they both posit direct experience itself as what constitutes 
reality. Their primary empirical reality isn't a unified whole but rather an 
undivided stream of experience or, as Dewey puts it, an unanalyzed totality. 
They're not saying unity is the essence or final goal of experience but simply 
that experience itself is reality and that reality does not come divided into 
parts. Quality or pure experience is "one" in the sense that it hasn't yet been 
chopped up into words and concepts, definitions and distinctions. As Pirsig 
says, "Quality is a direct experience independent of and prior to intellectual 
abstractions". This is what Pirsig means when he quotes William James again at 
the end of chapter 29: "'There must always be a discrepancy between concepts 
and reality, because the former are static and discontinuous while the latter 
is dynamic and flowing.' Here James had chosen exactly the same words Phaedrus 
had used for the basic subdivision of
 the Metaphysics of Quality." 

How's that?

Ant McWatt comments:

That's great Dave.  Very helpful as usual though I'd be interested in knowing 
if Ron would agree with you here.  Either way, both of you have inspired me to 
re-read James' lecture on the One and Many.

Ron replies:
I had to repost the last exchange because of the high quality in which it 
answered the question of "how"
Quality is a monism. Of course I agree.
 
A fine example.
 
Thanks again.
 
Thank you to everyone that responded apologies for only being able to respond 
to a few.
.

 



                        
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