Dan:

I know nothing of Royce. From the quote you offer, it appears he
> thought it was convenient to regard other folk as independent beings.
> However, it doesn't appear from this reading that he regarded realism
> (and whether or not that is the same as SOM is debatable) as being in
> charge of society.
>
>
J:  "In charge of" is tricky when it so often seems that social needs are
in charge of everything these days.
The perpetual social choice of SOM to guide turns society into everything.
SOM is, if you think about it, the reification of social patterns.  We
relate to each other as discrete individuals and from this deduce the
absolute reality of subject and object.  It's the lowest common denominator
of metaphysics and brings everybody into the same tent.

But Royce is long-winded and I sometimes cut short the full explanation of
his argumentative points... but since you asked for it ;)



" We find it socially convenient to view the common objects of our human
and social knowledge as independent both of my fellow and myself, even
while we still view these objects as the same for both of us, and for all
other actual and possible human observers.
And so, in the end, we conceive these common objects, abstractly, as
independent of all knowing processes whatever.

There is a deeper and a very general motive at the heart of Realism,--a
motive which we shall only later learn to appreciate. This is the interest
in viewing the Real as the absolutely and finally Determinate or Individual
fact. But this motive is present for Realism in a very abstract and
problematic form. And even this motive, as we shall later see, is a
practical one. We believe in the determinate individuality of things
because we need and love individuality. We can justify this belief, in the
end, only upon other than realistic grounds.

In consequence we may say that Realism is, in its special contrast with
other views, an interpretation of the folk-lore of being in the interests
of a social conservatism.
Accordingly, in the history of thought, Realism is the metaphysic of the
party of good order, when good order is viewed merely as something to be
preserved.
Hence the typical conservatives, the extreme Right wing of any elaborate
social order, will generally be realistic in their metaphysics.  So too are
the conservative theologians, so long as they teach the people. Amongst
themselves, these conservatives, if deeply religious souls, may use quite
other, namely, mystical speech. Realistic, too, are those plain men, whose
only metaphysic is the blind belief in "established facts." Realistic also
are the tyrants. Realism has lighted the fires for the martyrs, and has set
up the scaffolds for the reformers. As to its most familiar cases of real
objects, Realism is fond of socially important objects. Property in
general, technical objects, money, mechanism, instruments, whatever can be
passed from hand to hand, the solid earth on which we all alike appear to
walk,--these are the typical and exemplary instances of realistic
metaphysics. If you question Realism, the realist asks you whether you do
not believe in these objects, as facts independent of your ideas. With
these instances, then, the realist is ready to confute the objector. The
realist is fond of insisting upon the "sanity" of his views. By sanity he
means social convenience. Now reflective thinking is often socially
inconvenient. When it is, the realist loves to talk of "wholesome" belief
in reality, and to hurl pathological epithets at opponents. It is thus
often amusing to find the same thinker who declares that reality is quite
independent of all merely human or mental interests, in the next breath
offering as proof of his thesis the practical and interesting
"wholesomeness " of this very conviction."




Dan:



> I think Robert Pirsig makes the same point in Lila.

However, I think
> he uses the term subject/object metaphysics much more broadly as a
> collection of intellectual quality patterns representative of a
> reality composed only of subjects and objects.
>
>
J:  yes, and as a special point of interest, the independence of subjects
and objects.  The mind is completely separate from it's object, according
to SOM.  Value being "merely" in your head.



Dan:

> I think every person on earth has both good qualities and bad
> qualities. For the most part, the good generally outweighs the bad but
> not always.
>
> Dan:
> Everything we discuss here is static quality.
>
>
J:  But sometimes we get good ideas which add to our quality constructs.
It takes a diversity of blind men to get a good picture of an elephant.
With just one guy, it's probably gonna be described as simply a rope and
anybody arguing differently will be told "you don't understand the MOQ".
>


> J:  I've enjoyed a lively dialog with Ham.  I don't understand why a
> discussion of Quality (Caring) should be so demonizing and rancorous.
> That's a mystery I'd like to understand.   But then I don't know why
Marsha
> was so hated either.  You either respect another person's words enough to
> take them seriously or you don't.  Why get mad about it?

Dan:
> I'm not mad and I don't hate anyone. As I stated before, I was all for
> giving Marsha the benefit of the doubt. I like Marsha. I always have.
> She did have an irritating way of luring people into a discussion only
> to pull the rug out from under them, however. She wasn't called Lucy
> for nothing.
>

J:  I don't think being a lucy is an insult -  charlie brown is the stupid
guy who keeps going for the ball.
At least in the strip charlie brown didn't get up yelling at Lucy - "you
did it again!"  He just lay there looking up at the sky and blaming his own
gullibility.


Dan:


> I merely mentioned that him (Ham)  agreeing with you is not necessarily a
> good thing IF you are genuinely interested in (learning about) the
> MOQ. By comparing his contributions to Dave Buchanan's, I had hoped to
> show the difference between someone who knows what they're talking
> about and someone who doesn't. I apologize if that bothers you.
>
> If you already know everything about the MOQ, then that's fine too.
> I'm more than happy to drop it. Know any good stories?
>
>

Yes.  There's a big one that's been fermenting for a long time.  Since you
ask, I'll tell.  I'll start it anyway...

John
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