[MD] [Bulk] Re: MOQ and Completeness Theories (Sorry, Godel.)
MarshaV
valkyr at att.net
Thu Mar 31 01:08:19 PDT 2011
Hi Mark,
I might have disagreed with you once too. I'm happy to say I've
come to realize that ones understanding of the MoQ may evolve
over time. Because the MoQ, as presented in ZMM and LILA, is
static quality each interpretation may be influences by an individuals
personal static history and their dynamic experiences. For me, the
MoQ is a process rather than a reified, ossified entity. It is more than
mere words on a page, but an experience to be lived.
Marsha
On Mar 30, 2011, at 11:58 PM, 118 wrote:
> Hi Marsha,
> Thanks for the Atwood quote. I said the same thing about Pirsig's
> book a year or so ago. That is, that he had no control over the
> protagonist once the book was released. In fact, he was no longer an
> expert on the subject, we all were. As you can imagine, there were
> some in the forum that thought I should do penance...
>
> Cheers,
> Mark
>
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 12:53 AM, MarshaV <valkyr at att.net> wrote:
>>
>> On Mar 24, 2011, at 4:08 PM, Andre Broersen wrote:
>>
>>> What's your beef Ham? Why do you hang around here? As far as I am concerned you can hang around on your own site. Get discussions going about your essentially proprioceptive agents but, for goodness sake (!) go away...you remind me of Marsha...only your objections are patterned and Marsha's are un-patterned. Yours are irrelevant and Marsha's are bull.
>>
>>
>> Andre,
>>
>> I've been reading some non-fiction by Margaret Atwood, and found this:
>>
>> "A book may outlive its author, and it moves too, and can be said to change -- but not in the manner of the telling. It changes in the manner of the reading. As many commentators have remarked, works of literature are recreated by each generation of readers, who make them new by finding fresh meaning in them. The printed text of a book is thus like a musical score, which is not itself music, but becomes music when played by musicians, or "interpreted" by them, as we say. The act of reading a text is like playing music and listening to it at the same time, and the reader becomes his own interpreter."
>>
>>
>> Marsha
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