> [Marsha]
> I prefer to keep discussions very simple and *try* to probe deeper.  Is this 
> a problem?

[djh]
No, that's fine. But I'll be sure to respond to only certain points of yours in 
the future to avoid wasting time now that I know this is your preferred 
approach.

> [Marsha]
>  Is there no idea in my response worth pursuing?  If not, then maybe you have 
> a specific question to ask?   Or is there another statement you made that 
> you'd prefer to explore.  I'm interested in what we can know and how can we 
> know it.

[djh]
Me too. That, along with lots of other things of course :-)

> [Marsha]
>  Without dismissing the idea with some proclamation of 'absolute, amoral, 
> cultural relativism,' what does it mean when Nagarjuna states that all truth 
> is relative and conventional?   
> If Buddhism's conventional truth in some ways equates to the MoQ's static 
> quality, where is the agreement?  Is there disagreement?

[djh]
I think Buddhism's relation to the MOQ is nicely summarised by RMP in the 
following passage to McWatt:

"The MOQ sees the wheel of karma as attached to a cart that is going somewhere 
- from quantum forces through inorganic forces and biological patterns and 
social patterns to the intellectual patterns that perceive the quantum forces. 
In the sixth century B.C. in India there was no evidence of this kind of 
evolutionary progress, and Buddhism, accordingly, does not pay attention to it. 
Today it’s not possible to be so uninformed. The suffering which the Buddhists 
regard as only that which is to be escaped, is seen by the MOQ as merely the 
negative side of the progression toward Quality (or, just as accurately, the 
expansion of quality). Without the suffering to propel it, the cart would not 
move forward at all. "

When Nagarjuna states that all truth is relative and conventional he is merely 
pointing to the small self static patterns of Buddhism.  These patterns *are 
not the focus of Buddhism* (unlike the MOQ) as they cause suffering which is to 
be escaped.  Whereas in the MOQ this suffering is seen as a necessary part of 
the evolutionary process in order for things to get better...

Anyway, ideally some sort of response, even disagreement, to the words below 
would be nice too..

> [Marsha]

> With "Check the archives." given as evidence, I can only laugh at the use of 
> the word(logic), and I do laugh. Lots!   But yes, it is all about what we 
> value and checking it against experience.  

[djh]
It is all about what we value. But I think we need to do more than check 
something against our experience.  What if, as you say, our experience is 
different? Our 'personal life histories and circumstance' is different?  Can we 
then just never see the value in what someone else says?  The great thing about 
the intellectual level of the MOQ provides a way for us to test how good 
something is with the aid of logical consistency and economy of explanation as 
well.  What if I have never experienced hail before but I have experienced rain 
and I have experienced ice.  Then in this case I can know what hail is using 
logic and very rough explanation of Rain + Ice = Hail.  Then when other folks 
refer to hail - I'll know what it is, even if I've never experienced it before. 
 

Logic has its valuable use beyond our own personal experience and can point to 
us things which are valuable which we might not have experienced otherwise.  
This is why logic on this discussion board is good.  This is why explaining 
things and talking through things on this discussion board is good.  Because if 
we do these things then we can discover things which are good which we might 
not have experienced otherwise.

Thanks Marsha.

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