[Platt to Case]
Here's actually what Pirsig said about Sidis and the influence of Indians:

[Arlo]
There is an interesting article on Sidis and Indians titled "Did the Indians
Teach the Pilgrims Democracy?" (http://www.sidis.net/indian-pilgrim.htm)

"In contrast to many other Indian cultures, among the dozen tribes that made up
the local Penacook federation "there was nothing known which could remotely
correspond to, or give any inkling of, any division of caste, class, or
rank―probably the only completely democratic governments that ever existed in
the history of the world." This was a true democracy and equality which might
well prepare their country (now known as New England) for being, "at all times
down to the present, the cradle of the spirit or liberty," wrote Sidis."

...

"Mahony interprets Sidis "not as saying the white men deliberately copied the
red, but as saying there was an absorption of the values around them. Sidis is
showing that the American political system is a blend of two influences, the
European. with an emphasis on hierarchy and property, and the New England
Indian culture, which was one of great political insight and democratization."
(This is a rather exact paraphrasing of Pirsig's discussion in LILA!)

You can also view the entire book "Forgotten Founders: Benjamin Franklin, the
Iroquois and the Rationale for the American Revolution" online
(http://www.ratical.org/many_worlds/6Nations/FF.html)

In addition to the Sidis bit, Pirsig also had this to say.

"And yet, although Jefferson called this doctrine of social equality
"self-evident," it is not at all self-evident. Scientific evidence and the
social evidence of history indicate the opposite is self-evident. There is no
"self-evidence" in European history that all men are created equal. There's no
nation in Europe that doesn't trace its history to a time when it was
"self-evident" that all men are created unequal. Jean Jacques Rousseau, who is
sometimes given credit for this doctrine, certainly didn't get it from the
history of Europe or Asia or Africa. He got it from the impact of the New World
upon Europe and from contemplation of one particular kind of individual who
lived in the New World, the person he called the "Noble Savage."

The idea that "all men are created equal" is a gift to the world from the
American Indian. Europeans who settled here only transmitted it as a doctrine
that they sometimes followed and sometimes did not. The real source was someone
for whom social equality was no mere doctrine, who had equality built into his
bones. To him it was inconceivable that the world could be any other way. For
him there was no other way of life. That's what Ten Bears was trying to tell
them." (Pirsig, LILA).


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.uk/pipermail/moq_discuss_archive/

Reply via email to