Thanks for taking a look at it. I guess I minimized the Lila based stuff
for clarity and time/length. It seems that I need to work on the Pirsig
stuff in general. I will have to be careful with my wording. I had a better
paper for another class going into the Lila stuff. Your first three points
show me I need to expand these parts. My ideas still need some work. The
fourth point concerning what I poorly called model shifting is just my
reaction to what I feel can be an aggressive tactic. The feeling I get from
k&m is like they are attempting to create a framework which goes further in
the direction they intend in order to balance out parts of the current
system they feel are skewed. Even Pirsig admits how moq is simply a better
lens through which to view reality. I still feel like you and I agree for
the most part, the issue seems to be in notions of knowing. I don't think
we will ever understand reality EXACTLY as it is, but through specifically
human eyes. In my opinion, Pirsig was concerned with the stagnant
mechanical view of things based on logic and quantifying. He created a new
model which solved the splits but it left quality as a replacement for that
center it removed. If my understanding of hemispheres checks out in the
end, intuitions relying on our unconscious dynamic judgements of values of
patterns and logic based on purely social norms we experience and take as
knowledge. These norms as you say are historically dependant, and I believe
they progress our understanding ever so slightly as they change form over
time. Dynamic q is that movement towards better static q patterns of all
levels, even if our human viewpoint will never be perfect or as objective
as we think it is. I'm just concerned about an over emphasis on any form of
'truth' as the only view of reality, it feels like a mistake to get too
grounded in any one set of ideas - I think human understanding can only
continue to evolve in order to help people lead more quality lives. So I
guess 'straw men' might be a poor choice of words as well. My own main
concern was the way western culture undervalued insight instinct and
intuition. K&m were concerned with popular understanding of l/r hemi's,
Pirsig was concerned about materialism and objectivity, and mine is no more
or less valid. its just important to make sure we all be careful of how our
voices are affected by our preconceived notions, because pure objectivity
is impossible but not useless. Its a work in progress, this reality of ours.

On Saturday, January 3, 2015, Dan Glover <[email protected]> wrote:

> Nikolas,
>
> On Fri, Dec 26, 2014 at 11:13 AM, Blodgett, Nikolas
> <[email protected] <javascript:;>> wrote:
> > NIK:
> > Dying is often times like being born. Naked, confused, and screaming in
> > discomfort. A natural part of the cycle, unfortunately; and I COULD say
> > something cheesy about 'without pain, how would we know joy?' I want to
> > wish you a merry christmas, and I understand the doldrums myself. Here's
> a
> > rough copy of my paper I was working so hard on. Its a little long, the
> > paragraphs are out of order, and the references are ugly - but I'd like
> you
> > to look at it and provide some constructive feedback if you wouldn't
> mind.
> > Anyone else can read it, its no secret or anything. Even if you don't
> have
> > much to say its OK, I just want to share. :) Thanks
> >  TargetPaper2-TwoVisualSystems.docx
> > <
> https://docs.google.com/a/worcester.edu/file/d/0B5XUBIum0Kv6VFVzOEdmS3VZVEw1NEdsMUY4QjE2dkloXzJF/edit?usp=drive_web
> >
> > I think thats the one
>
> Hi Nikolas,
> I've had a look at your paper. A few things jumped out at me. Overall,
> there seems to be an underlying assumption that what we see is really
> there... that the external world of objects actually exists. I think
> the MOQ might agree with that assumption up to a point, that point
> being that we are grounded in Western culture.
>
> You say:
>
> "The metaphysical models such as Pirsig's 'Quality', or Plato's
> 'Forms' put an undefinable or pure and invisible entity at the
> forefront of our experience."
>
> Dan:
> I'm not sure about Plato's Forms but from what I understand Dynamic
> Quality isn't an entity. In the MOQ, Dynamic Quality and experience
> become synonymous. We're constantly defining Dynamic Quality but once
> defined 'it' is no longer Dynamic Quality. It's static quality.
>
> You say:
> "For example, like molecules make up organic substances, or a tree
> grows up out of dirt from a seed; a bunch of cells can make a
> psychology student, or a completely social entity such as a city is
> composed of interchangeable “human” parts (Pirsig, 1991)."
>
> Dan:
> Is this a Robert Pirsig quote? If so, where is it from? I'm guessing
> it's not since it seems wrong. Social patterns are not made up of
> biological beings. That's a big mistake that's been repeated here ad
> nauseum over the years. Most people can't seem to get a grip on the
> concept. No matter how many times its explained to them, they fail to
> understand it.
>
> Look at it this way: a living being is made up of molecules but that
> isn't a definition of life. Same thing here... we look at a city and
> see all the people and we automatically think: oh... those people are
> social patterns. No! That isn't what the MOQ says at all. Those people
> are no more social patterns than the molecules are life.
>
> You say:
> "A CBC interview explains how this 'Quality' is at the “knife-edge” of
> our perceptual reality, according to Pirsig. It also sums up that
> “Pirsig argued passionately that it is actually possible to unify the
> cold rational world of science and technology with the warm, intuitive
> realm of art and the spirit. To bridge the chasm that has existed in
> Western thought since the time of Aristotle and the Ancient Greeks
> between reason and emotion, subjective and objective, romantic and
> classical ways of understanding.”
>
> Dan:
> I'm guessing this is an older interview? The reference to romantic and
> classical understanding is from ZMM. In Lila, that representation is
> done away with. Instead, we have the MOQ which is underpinned with
> Dynamic and static. It's important to understand these are not
> opposing points of view like romantic and classic.
>
> You say:
> "Unfortunately, Pirsig is, in all possibility, guilty of the same
> lateral model shifting
> Kosslyn & Miller perpetrated with 'the lateralization of hemispherical
> cognitive functioning of the human brain' models. Specifically, since
> much of his (& their) reasoning depends on 'straw men', they are
> attempting to counter-attack, and thus negate, an enemy which might or
> might not exist."
>
> Dan comments:
> I don't follow you here. Exactly what straw men does Robert Pirsig use
> in his philosophy? Are you saying that Western culture is not based
> upon subject-object interpretation? Are you saying the philosophical
> problems illuminated by the MOQ do not exist? After reading the paper
> I'm not at all sure what 'lateral model shifting' is, or that Kosslyn
> and Miller perpetrated it.
>
> I do know that Pirsig has been accused of using straw men before and
> no one has ever explained their reasoning on that assumption, at least
> not to my satisfaction. They've always missed the boat, so to speak.
> Perhaps you'll be the first.
>
> From what I've read, throughout your paper you are dealing basically
> with biological level patterns. You are furthermore assuming there is
> a 'real' external reality that everyone sees no matter their cultural
> backgrounds. If you take anything at all from the MOQ, you have to
> realize that we all perceive reality in accordance to our personal
> histories. We see what we are told to see.
>
> I hope this helps you a bit,
>
> Dan
>
> http://www.danglover.com
> Moq_Discuss mailing list
> Listinfo, Unsubscribing etc.
> http://lists.moqtalk.org/listinfo.cgi/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org
> Archives:
> http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/
> http://moq.org/md/archives.html
>
Moq_Discuss mailing list
Listinfo, Unsubscribing etc.
http://lists.moqtalk.org/listinfo.cgi/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org
Archives:
http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/
http://moq.org/md/archives.html

Reply via email to