Adrie,
On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 10:49 AM, Adrie Kintziger <[email protected]> wrote: But this aside, and adopting the term for metaforical purposes ,Pirsig > is a beachcomber in the intellectual landscape ,beachcombing the giant, > and the world in wich we live, to show wat was laid bare by the storm so to > speak. > So you agree with Auxier that Pirsig derived his MoQ entirely from Whitehead? To tell you the truth, I don't mind at all, it's just a shock to find out after all these years. Here is our conversation (mine and Auxier's) up to date. ----------- my email to Auxier: Randy, On Wed, Nov 2, 2016 at 12:15 PM, Randall Auxier <[email protected]> wrote: > Zero. Chicago wasn't analytical at that time, and McKeon despised > analytical philosophy. That day and age at U Chicago was 100% process > philosophy, both in the Phil. dept and in every committee, including the > Divinity School. The list of process-professors is endless. Zero. > > RA > There are some pertinent biographical facts you're ignoring, Randy. You're thinking "he'd have to be crazy to be in Chicago and not have heard of Whitehead" What you're forgetting is that he was crazy, and got so crazy he had to be locked up and given electroshock therapy where he had to reconstruct his earlier work by looking at notes he'd kept. His story isn't made up although his story isn't so much a biography as it is a novel - it's a novel about a man trying to reconstruct himself, which is hard to wrap your mind around (is this first person or third?) Paranoid schizophrenics can't be judged on the basis of what a normal person or student would do. Pirsig passed over American Theistic philosophers (or inasmuch as he'd heard) like Whitehead and James. His goal was blending eastern philosophy with western, as the title of his best selling book illustrates. THAT was the direction at which the old zen archer aimed his intellect. But whatever he was aiming at, he completely forgot in the aftermath of electro-convulsive therapy. I offer a few pertinent comments from Pirsig, to illustrate my point that he wasn't much of a philosophy student. Taken from Robert Pirsig's commentary on Frederick Copleston's 'History of Philosophy', in a personal note to Anthony McWatt, who has a Ph.D in the MoQ, from Oxford (although ant isn't much of a philosophologist either - he was an art major) January 2000 *Dear Anthony McWatt,* *You asked in one of your letters how the MOQ compares with late 19th Century idealism. The answer that follows copies part of Frederick Copleston’s summary of that group in Volume 8 of his “History of Philosophy” and inserts comparisons the MOQ. As I’ve said before, philosophology isn’t my field, and I assume that Copleston’s understanding of the positions of the various idealists is correct. Certainly it’s better than mine, and using it and trusting it filters out a lot of red herring.* Ok, right there. The only thing he knows about British Idealism is what he reads by another man. How could this happen? Furthermore, he expresses absolute surprise at what Coppleston describes of Bradley, but then, how many philosophers read Bradley? So understandable to an extent. But in Lila he discovers William James(!) Like, for the first time? Sort of. LIke with his blinders taken off by his own intellectual evolution. Which makes it more interesting to me. he explains his overall attitude in Lila, describing a boat trip, via the old Eerie Lackawanna canal system to the Hudson and New York City: "One of the disadvantages of this boat life is you don't get to use public libraries. But he had found a bookstore with an old two-volume biography of William James that should hold him for a while. Nothing like some good old "philosophology" to put someone to sleep. He took the top volume out of the canvas bag, climbed into the sleeping bag and looked at the book's cover for a while. -26- He liked that word "philosophology." It was just right. It had a nice dull, cumbersome, superfluous appearance that exactly fitted its subject matter, and he'd been using it for some time now. Philosophology is to philosophy as musicology is to music, or as art history and art appreciation are to art, or as literary criticism is to creative writing. It's a derivative, secondary field, a sometimes parasitic growth that likes to think it controls its host by analyzing and intellectualizing its host's behavior. Literature people are sometimes puzzled by the hatred many creative writers have for them. Art historians can't understand the venom either. He supposed the same was true with musicologists but he didn't know enough about them. But philosophologists don't have this problem at all because the philosophers who would normally condemn them are a null-class. They don't exist. Philosophologists, calling themselves philosophers, are just about all there are. You can imagine the ridiculousness of an art historian taking his students to museums, having them write a thesis on some historical or technical aspect of what they see there, and after a few years of this giving them degrees that say they are accomplished artists. They've never held a brush or a mallet and chisel in their hands. All they know is art history. Yet, ridiculous as it sounds, this is exactly what happens in the philosophology that calls itself philosophy. Students aren't expected to philosophize. Their instructors would hardly know what to say if they did. They'd probably compare the student's writing to Mill or Kant or somebody like that, find the student's work grossly inferior, and tell him to abandon it. As a student Phædrus had been warned that he would "come a cropper" if he got too attached to any philosophical ideas of his own. Literature, musicology, art history and philosophology thrive in academic institutions because they are easy to teach. You just Xerox something some philosopher has said and make the students discuss it, make them memorize it, and then flunk them at the end of the quarter if they forget it. Actual painting, music composition and creative writing are almost impossible to teach and so they barely get in the academic door. True philosophy doesn't get in at all. Philosophologists often have an interest in creating philosophy but, as philosophologists, they subordinate it, much as a literary scholar might subordinate his own interest in creative writing. Unless they are exceptional they don't consider the creation of philosophy their real line of work. As an author, Phædrus had been putting off the philosophology, partly because he didn't like it, and partly to avoid putting a philosophological cart before the philosophical horse. Philosophologists not only start by putting the cart first; they usually forget the horse entirely. They say first you should read what all the great philosophers of history have said and then you should decide what you want to say. The catch here is that by the time you've read what all the great philosophers of history have said you'll be at least two hundred years old. A second catch is that these great philosophers are very persuasive people and if you read them innocently you may be carried away by what they say and never see what they missed." Lila - page 26 jc: So Professor, are you still sure there is a ZERO chance that Pirsig didn't understand or read Whitehead? If he did, then he's perpetrating one of the most elaborate frauds I've ever known. I don't know if this subject greatly interests you, but it sure does me. --------Auxier's reply: Zero. You don't understand what actually happens in graduate seminars in philosophy, such as McKeon's. I have spent a lifetime both doing this and listening to it. You don't understand how students talk on their way into and out of class, or what they discuss on the days between. The entire heady scene of graduate school, which Pirsig describes quite nicely in Zen, includes all kinds of things that won't show up in books and letters. I assure you, he knew and heard about and probably read Whitehead while at Chicago. If his memory was wiped out, that is hardly evidence against what I'm saying. It helps my case. He relieved these ideas from the recesses of a damaged cerebral cortex. Nothing unusual about that. -------- So, he beachcombed Whitehead's ideas and presented them in novel form, that's your claim Adrie? I'm not trying to pin you down or "nail" you in any way. But it's just such a revelation to me. thanks, John C. 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
