[MD] Ham thinks the MOQ is a form of phenomenology
Squonkonguitar at aol.com
Squonkonguitar at aol.com
Fri Sep 1 15:39:00 PDT 2006
Hi Mark --
<snip>
Mark said:
The MoQ says there is one Substance and this is DQ.
All patterns of sq are aspects of DQ if you like.
Ham: I have given this ontology a lot of thought, Mark. Over several years,
in
fact. My conclusion is that the division of Quality into DQ and sq is a
duality in itself, replacing the subject/object duality that Prisig claims
to have done away with.
Mark: One substance, infinite aspects.
If there is a duality, it is that of The One and the many.
The dual nature of reality is between the Dynamic and the static.
Now may i ask you Ham: where is the Subject and the Object?
Ham: Your over-simplified analysis of the phenomenalist
view that there are two types of substances, material and mental, is not
quite what Runes was saying.
Mark: Please show us why this is so?
Ham: Nor is it how Pirsig outlined the problem
faced by Bohr and Heisenberg at their first quantum physics meeting with
Einstein.
Mark: This is not mentioned in your Runes quote, and it was your Runes quote
i was dealing with.
Ham quotes SODV: "Since the phenomena from the measurements are not about to
change, Bohr
concluded that the logic of science must change to accommodate them.
...This view, known as phenomenalism, says that what we really observe is
not the object. What we really observe is only data. ...Bohr's
Complementarity was accused of being subjectivistic. If the world is
composed of subjects and objects, and if Bohr says the properties of the
atom are not in the objects, then Bohr is saying that the properties of the
atom are in the subject. But if there is one thing science cannot be it is
subjective." -- [Pirsig: SODV presentation paper]
Mark: The MoQ eloquently solves the Subject/Object dilemma already under
threat from quantum mechanics.
Ham: Heisenberg, in the tradition of Kant and Spencer, took the position that
"the reality of things-in-themselves was unknowable". That doesn't
necessarily mean they are
"material".
Mark: 'Things-in-themselves' is an intellectual postulation. That intellect
cannot know, 'Things-in-themselves' is a bit like intellect stating: 'My SOM
epistemology is a cul de sac.' An expanded format is required, and the MoQ
performs this.
Ham: His colleague Bohr argued for "Complementarity", the view that
we do not observe objects at all, but only (statistical) data. His
inference was that we "objectify" the data values to create an image of the
phenomenon. This doesn't necessarily mean that phenomena are "mental".
Mark: Statistical data are intellectual postulations. That intellect limits
its epistemology to data is a bit like the intellect saying, 'My SOM
epistemology is in a cul de sac.' An expanded format is required, and the MoQ
performs this.
Ham: Pirsig went on to say: "Quality is not a thing. It is an event. It is
the
event at which the subject becomes aware of the object." While he has since
disavowed the subject/object distinction, I think his SODV statement was
spot on.
Mark: You are presenting a misreading of SODV. Naughty Ham.
Your cherry picking appears to suggest Subjects and Objects are the primary
ontological simples of reality from which Quality is deduced. This is not so:
'Quality is not just the result of a collision between subject and object.
The very existence of subject and object themselves is deduced from the Quality
event. The Quality event is the cause of the subjects and objects, which are
then mistakenly presumed to be the cause of the Quality!' (SODV p. 12)
Mark:
> Explanations are intellectual constructs. As such they are
> intellectual patterns of sq. As such they are aspects of DQ.
> As such they cannot account for that which is greater than
> themselves. Objects are patterns of sq.
Ham: That does not explain what the patterns are; it only explains what an
explanation is. "Aspects of DQ" is meaningless.
Mark: The MoQ states that intellectual patterns are values. I've just said
this: Mark: 'Explanations are intellectual constructs. As such they are
intellectual patterns of sq.'
This does a bit more than explain an explanation; it says all explanations
are intellectual values.
This expands the format of using intellectual patterns to explain
intellectual patterns in ever more convoluted terms.
Re: "Aspects of DQ" is meaningless. If DQ is the One and sq patterns are
infinite aspects of the One, then the One and sq are complimentary.
The MoQ states that life cannot exist without either aspect - DQ moves
evolution onward and sq latches progress.
'The most striking similarity between the Metaphysics of Quality and
Complementarity is that this Quality event corresponds to what Bohr means by
"observation." When the Copenhagen Interpretation "holds that the unmeasured atom is
not real, that its attributes are created or realized in the act of
measurement," (Herbert xiii) it is saying something very close to the Metaphysics of
Quality. The observation creates the reality.' (SODV p. 12)
Reality as sq patterns is created from the Dynamic flux of events.
Ham: All appearances are
aspects of something. The question I had asked was: What causes them, and
why do they take this particular form?
Mark: The term appearance implies an observer. But the observer is deduced
from the Dynamic flux of events. The Primary reality is unconditioned and has
no differentiation's. Northrop calls this the Undifferentiated Aesthetic
continuum, and Pirsig calls this DQ.
As i have tried hard to inform you Ham, the MoQ replaces causation with
value.
On a personal note, i have almost struck the word 'cause' out of my
vocabulary. It's become redundant for me.
Not for you though Ham, and i can't hold it against you, but when you ask me
what causes something i only have recourse to a new metaphysical approach
which places causation with empirical value.
Patterns are as they are because of your evolutionary history:
'Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance left one enormous metaphysical
problem unanswered that became the central driving reason for the expansion of
the Metaphysics of Quality into a second book called Lila. This problem was:
if Quality is a constant, why does it seem so variable? Why do people have
different opinions about it? The answer became: The quality that was referred to
in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance can be subdivided into Dynamic
Quality and static quality. Dynamic Quality is a stream of quality events
going on and on forever, always at the cutting edge of the present. But in the
wake of this cutting edge are static patterns of value. These are memories,
customs and patterns of nature. The reason there is a difference between
individual evaluations of quality is that although Dynamic Quality is a constant,
these static patterns are different for everyone because each person has a
different static pattern of life history. Both the Dynamic Quality and the
static patterns influence his final judgment. That is why there is some uniformity
among individual value judgments but not complete uniformity.' (SODV p.
12/3)
Mark:
> At the intellectual level, patterns are more or less beautiful.
> High level abstractions are deduced and aim toward beauty
> as Human artistic creations.
> Examples of mathematicians' and physicists' accounts of the
> aesthetic they experience are so common as to be taken as
> the norm within the field.
> You may take this to be the answer to your misunderstanding
> of MoQ epistemology: MoQ epistemology is of values.
Ham: Not all values are aesthetic, Mark. It may be poetic license to apply
the
word "Beauty" to mathematical equations, but it doesn't clarify the cause or
design of your assumed patterns. An original metaphysical theory must be
more than metaphors and euphemisms.
Mark: Take that up with any mathematicians you know.
Recall Northrop's undifferentiated Aesthetic continuum and DQ: sq pattern
emerge from this flux of events.
Ham said:
> Either the specific design of the universe is an accident
> of unknown forces -- perhaps the Einsteinian energy, mass,
> and velocity of light -- or it's the intent of a Creator.
> Pirsig does not posit a creator or any primary source other
> than Quality.
Mark:
> This is contradictory Ham. To say, Pirsig does not do x but
> does do x is a bit childish.
Ham: I didn't accused Pirsig of contradicting himself. My contention is
simply
that he didn't account for the source of his patterns.
Mark: See the last and lengthy SODV quote above.
The source of patterning is a relationship between what you are and DQ -
what you are becoming.
Mark:
> At the inorganic level, values are relatively unsophisticated,
> but at the intellectual level they are exquisitely sophisticated.
> So, you can see that intellect is not equated with consciousness
> in equal sense because intellect is exquisite in sophistication
> while social and biological patterns are less so.
> In other words, the intellect is high level consciousness.
Ham: Just because it is "sophisticated?
Mark: The point is it's all the same stuff. When intellect contemplates
matter it is highly evolved stuff contemplating lowly evolved stuff. It's all the
same.
All the same because it all shares the same Dynamic source.
But while the same, it is configured in ever more complex and coherent
structures.
Mark continues:
> High level conscious patterns like the intellect are embedded
> in lower level conscious patterns of the social, which in turn,
> like a Russian Doll, are embedded in even lower level conscious
> patterns like the biological, etc.
> Values, not turtles, all the way down.
> Objects, when aligned with the inorganic and biological do look
> like objects.
Ham: Since as we can only experience objects "aligned with the inorganic and
biological", in your opinion, does that make them inorganic, biological, or
intellectual?
Mark: A Human being is all of them. A Dog is all of them minus intellectual
patterns. An Amoeba is all of them minus social and intellectual patterns. A
stone is all of them minus biological, social and intellectual patterns.
> Subjects, when aligned with the social and intellect do look like
> subjects. But this arrangement has its roots and evolutionary
> history in ancient culture and is not written in stone.
Ham: What do "subjects" look like? I've never seen one, not have I any
reason to
believe that they underwent an evolutionary change in history.
Mark: They copy behaviour patterns, perform rituals and strive to stand out
in groups and achieve fame. The better ones appreciate the aesthetic nature of
reality as found in art, literature, science, philosophy.
Ham said:
> It is my opinion that the MoQ and Essentialism are both
> phenomenologies because they both theorize physical reality
> as "appearance".
Mark:
> If you are stating that Ham Priday's essentialism may be
> viewed as Idealism then i quite agree.
> This accords nicely with my assertion that essentialism is
> part of the rationalist tradition. I'm glad you agree Ham.
> Mark from above: The MoQ says there is one Substance
> and this is DQ. All patterns of sq are aspects of DQ.
> DQ - the essence of sq, is not an idea or material substance.
> DQ is pure experience prior to differentiation's.
Ham: I fail to see how there can be any experience prior to the
differentiation
of subject and object. Are you saying that Quality "experiences"? If so,
what does it experience?
Mark: When you say, 'I,' you have already set up differentiation's. You then
you go on to state that your differentiation's fail to, 'See,' which i take
to mean, 'adequately analyse,' prior undifferentiated experience. And yet,
many Human activities are best performed at this edge of immediate
undifferentiated experience, when static expectations and analysis are dropped.
I once wrote a paper called, 'The edge of chaos' which may be found on the
MOQ.org essay page which explores this a bit more.
Quality, as Northrop put it, is the undifferentiated aesthetic continuum.
'You' are a series of events within the continuum.
Quality is pure experience; It is not that Quality experiences something
else. The immediate here and now IS Quality, which becomes differentiated upon
reflection into fractured patterns of static differentiation's.
Ham:
> For me, the design of the universe is a metaphysical principle:
> it is the space/time appearance of reality that occurs when
> awareness is negated from Essence.
Mark:
> Jolly good. A nice idea. And as an idealist, we cannot expect
> any more than that.
Ham: Well, you've placed me in the "rationalist tradition", and defined me
as an
idealist.
Mark: You did this Ham. Look:
Ham from previous post: 'It is my opinion that the MoQ and Essentialism are
both phenomenologies because they both theorize physical reality as
"appearance".'
Ham from previous post: 'Yes, Platt; in either sense defined above,
Phenomenalism may be considered a form of Idealism.'
I presented an argument which attempted to show that you are correct
regarding essentialism but incorrect regarding the MoQ.
It is interesting to note that this has been removed from your current
response Ham.
And this has been a feature of many of your previous responses:
Instead of tackling everything step by step, you edit your responses to
remove problematic arguments and then carry on (the above is an example in point)
as if they had not been presented in the first place.
Ham: I don't know why this gives you the jollies, or why these labels
lower your expectations of what you can expect of me. I suppose Plato and
Plotinus, as idealists, didn't live up to your expectations either.
Mark: Let us call a spade a spade Ham?
If you are an idealist then so be it; i'm not knocking you for it. And as
you have just indicated, you are in good company.
I may have misread you? It may be that you are not an idealist at all?
>From what i have read, i have a suspicion you are more of an idealist than
you realise.
Ham: I wonder what label you would affix to Mr.Pirsig.
Regards,
Ham
Mark: Those who promote an undefined primary source are mystics.
You would be a mystic if you kept definitions out of your essence, but your
essence is loaded with definitions as far as i can tell.
I may be wrong.
So, if you commit yourself to a defined primary source you are teetering on
the edge of some sort of pigeon hole already there waiting for you to fall
into.
I think that is tragedy?
Love,
Mark
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