[MD] moq thought experiement 1.
Marsha
marshalz at charter.net
Tue Jul 1 15:33:21 PDT 2008
Hi David,
I was hoping you were just being funny. I love reading your posts. You are
humorous and creative, and intelligent. Squonk's thought experiment never
made any sense to me, but it seemed right for him to try it. But I was a
little concerned that you might be objecting to the unpleasantness of the
experiment itself, which was stated to be just a mental exercise. Squonk's
a creative guy too.
Nobody wants to be there or enjoys it. It's called a descent into hell, not
a trip to happy hour. Hopefully it's a short visit, and there's not much
blood. Actually, it's a horrible job, but somebody has got to do it.
Metaphorically... Maybe I'm wrong. What did Joseph Campbell have to say?
Am I lecturing? Doesn't sound very Zen. Sorry.
Marsha
----- Original Message -----
From: "david buchanan" <dmbuchanan at hotmail.com>
To: <moq_discuss at moqtalk.org>
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2008 5:58 PM
Subject: Re: [MD] moq thought experiement 1.
>
> Marsha sais to dmb:
> I don't get much from Squonk's mental exercise, but I do not understand
> your objection to his thought experiment. I would think the mind would
> be the perfect place to perform such a controlled experiment. One could
> imagine the problems, test different solutions, and thoroughly explore all
> aspects without doing harm to anyone. (As has been pointed out by stating
> the difference between an infant and an enlightened Buddha.) The question
> for me is, if you would object to such a philosophical thought experiment,
> would you also want to inhibit the artist's imagination?
>
> dmb replies:
> Well, first of all let me say that I understand a thought experiment is
> something we think about rather than put into practice. And I have to ask
> in all seriousness, who doesn't understand that?
>
> The reason I object is very simple. I think its a bad idea. Don't you know
> me by now? Expressing disagreement with folks around here is my favorite
> hobby. Been doing it for years. And most of the time mysticism will be
> involved in that disagreement. Hard to imagine how any MOQer could be
> surprized or fail to understand why I'd engage in this current round of
> disagreements. Basically, I think it all hinges on a flawed premise. By
> equating those who have transcended static patterns with those who never
> acquired them in the first place, static patterns have been construed as
> irrelevant or even as something negative. Even though its just an "idea",
> preventing human minds from developing is still objectionable on moral
> grounds. If one is going to include any kind of cruelty or deprivation as
> part of a thought experiment, I reckon there ought to be a very good
> reason for it. But in this case, the reason for it, to maximize DQ, is
> based on the fallacious equation of babies and mysti
> cs. In the case of infants, there is no possibility of getting consent
> from the subject. Of course, if I thought it was an actual proposal I'd do
> more than complain about it in cyberspace. I'd call Scotland Yard or the
> FBI. But so far I'm just saying the experiment is poorly designed, that it
> is based on a misunderstanding of the MOQ, as well as infants and mystics.
> But now I'm just repeating myself.
>
> The original "brain in a vat", or at least the one I know of, is a good
> example of a thought experiment. If memory serves, it can be found in "The
> Mind's Eye". This asks us to imagine that a brain can be kept alive and
> healthy in a lab. (The owner volunteered and would otherwise be dead of
> natural causes.) What would happen if another researcher wanted to take
> half the brain to his lab and they figured out a way to do that while
> keeping the whole mind in tact via electronic connections, even though the
> two halves would be very far away from each other physically. Then
> interest in this divided brain grew and grew so that 10,000 researchers
> each had a small section of this single brain and it was all still
> connected via electronics, etc. What if each lab had just a single brain
> cell? This thought experiment asks us to think about the mind/body problem
> in a novel way. If the brain is scattered in billions of locations - all
> over the planet, under the ocean and in orbit too - the
> n where is the mind? In what sense is it in the brain at this point? This
> illustrates the issue so that one really gets a sense of what the
> mind/body problem is all about. Doesn't have much to do with the MOQ, but
> that's how I remember the brain in the vat experiment and I think its
> pretty cool. It doesn't provide any answers but it paints a clear picture
> of the question. It helps us grapple with the question.
>
> So far, my objections have been met with explicit and implicit accusations
> of censorship, philosophological thinking, unoriginal thinking, of having
> no argument, of arguing from authority, of using twisted rhetoric, of
> using humor and emotion, of relying too much on Pirsig's thought, of
> straying outside Pirsig's thought and now with a wish to inhibit the
> creative imagination. But I don't think my objections are out of bounds or
> unfounded in the least and so all those accusations seems quite
> unwarranted to me, even a bit over the top. Like everybody else here, I'm
> just talking and trying to make sense of the MOQ. Obviously, I do not have
> the power to censor anyone and really wouldn't know how to inhibit the
> imagination of an artist. What the heck? Let's just say I object because I
> hate freedom and apple pie. Let's say I belong to a cult that worships
> highly educated babies and I'm secretly trying to convert all the MOQers.
> The other accusations are a little less silly, but not
> by much.
>
> I'm saying that a mystical experience occurs within the context of a
> person's developmental process. Squonk's experiment is all about arresting
> that development from the start, so this would be a pretty major
> objection. Frankly, I don't think there is much doubt that Squonk is
> mistaken on this point. Here's one of the bigger planks that form the
> basis of my objection...
>
> "...From the baby's point of view, something, he knows not what, compels
> attention, This generalized 'something', Whitehead's 'dim apprehension',
> is Dynamic Quality. When he is a few months old the baby studies his hand
> or a rattle, not knowing it is a hand or a rattle, with the same sense of
> wonder and mystery and excitement created by the music and heart attack in
> the previous examples. If the baby ignores this force of Dynamic Quality
> it can be speculated that he will become mentally retarded, but if he is
> normally attentive to DQ he will soon begin to notice differences and then
> correlations between the differences and then repetitive patterns of the
> correlations. But it is not until the baby is several months old that he
> will begin to really understand enough about that enormously complex
> correlation of sensations and boundaries and desires called an 'object' to
> be able to reach for one. This object will not be a primary experience. It
> will be a complex pattern of static
> values 'derived' from primary experience. ...In this way static patterns
> of value become the universe of distinguishable things. Elementary static
> distinctions between such entities as 'before' and 'after' and between
> 'like' and 'unlike' grow into enormously complex patterns of knowledge
> that are transmitted from generation to generation as the mythos, the
> culture in which we live. ...In the past Phaedrus' own radical bias caused
> him to think of Dynamic Quality alone and neglect static patterns of
> quality. ..But now he was beginning to see that this radical bias weakened
> his own case. Life can't exist on Dynamic Quality alone. It has no staying
> power. To cling to Dynamic Quality alone apart from any static patterns is
> to cling to chaos. ...Static quality patterns are dead when they are
> exclusive, when they demand blind obedience and suppress Dynamic change,
> But static patterns, nevertheless, provide a necessary stabilizing force
> to protect Dynamic progress from degeneration
> . Although Dynamic Quality, the Quality of freedom, creates this world in
> which we live, these patterns of static quality, the quality of order,
> preserve our world, Neither static nor Dynamic Quality can survive without
> the other." (Lila, pages 119-121, near the end of chapter 9)
>
> I think the worry that our culture will degenerate by slipping back to the
> social level, as opposed to being led by intellectual values, is
> consistent with the basic idea that static patterns "provide a necessary
> stabilizing force to protect Dynamic progress". The idea of evolution as a
> kind of static latching applies this same idea to the widest possible
> context. If I'm correct on this point and it shuts down the experiment,
> that still doesn't make me a censor. It just makes me a guy who pointed
> out a big mistake, who disagreed with a bad idea, who still enjoys his
> favorite hobby.
>
> Thanks,
> dmb
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Use video conversation to talk face-to-face with Windows Live Messenger.
> http://www.windowslive.com/messenger/connect_your_way.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_Refresh_messenger_video_072008
> 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/
More information about the Moq_Discuss
mailing list