Re: MD Many Truths-Many Worlds

From: gmbbradford@netscape.net
Date: Wed Aug 23 2000 - 06:31:37 BST


Platt,

   PLATT:
   I hope you’re enjoying this exchange of views as much as I am.

I think this exchange of views is very important, but honestly,
being a naysayer is not all that enjoyable.

   GLENN:
   I say he has a personal vendetta because of the draconian
   methods (electro-shock treatment) medical science used to treat
   his mental illness, and because he and science disagree on the
   interpretation of mental illness.

   PLATT:
   I don’t think Pirsig’s argument is with science but with
   psychiatrists who aren’t in the same ballpark as physicists,
   biologists and neurosurgeons. If I may borrow a phrase, mental
   health doesn’t “fit into a petri dish.” There’s no meter that
   measures insanity. As for electro-shock treatment, it relieves
   depression where other methods fail and continues to be used
   today. It’s not considered “draconian” in modern medical practice.

It depends on who you ask. Pirsig wasn't very happy about the memory
loss he suffered with electro-convulsive therapy. He explains in ZMM
how he had to piece back together his ideas about quality since much
of it had been lost due to this treatment. Today the first line of
treatment for manic depression is lithium and Depakote, along with
psychotherapy. (I'm guessing he's bipolar and not just depressive
because he mentions being manic in Lila, but of course I'm not sure.)

   PIRSIG (ch. 8)
   *Should* reality be something that only a handful of the world's
   most advanced physicists understand? One would expect at least
   a majority of people to understand it. Should reality be expressible
   only in symbols that require university-level mathematics to
   manipulate? Should it be something that *changes* from year to
   year as new scientific theories are formulated? Should it be
   something about which different schools of physics can *quarrel*
   for years with no firm resolution on either side? If this is so then
   how is it fair to imprison a person in a mental hospital for life with
   no trial and no jury and no parole for "failing to understand
   reality"? By this criterion shouldn't all but a handful of the most
   advanced physicists be locked up for life? Who is crazy here and
   who is sane?

   GLENN:
   This quote is filled with such rhetoric that I can't believe he's all
   that serious, but people *do* talk like this when they're seriously
   angry. Note his disparaging remark about how science's version
   of reality *changes* from year to year and contrast this to the quote
   above, which lauds the provisional quality of science.

   PLATT:
   Aren’t you confusing reality with what scientists say is reality? As
   Pirsig put it: “ . . . science is a set of static intellectual patterns
   describing this reality, but the patterns are not the reality they
   describe.” If you make a distinction between reality and what is
   said about reality (as you do in admitting that science gives us a
   “version of reality”), then there’s no contradiction in Pirsig’s views
   as you suggest.

I disagree. I think in both cases he is talking about the static
intellectual patterns and not the reality they describe. He's lauding
science for improving the theories and criticising scientists for changing
them.

   PLATT:
   And wouldn’t you say that how people talk when
   they are “seriously angry” varies from person to person and that
   you’re guessing about Pirsig’s emotional state in order to beef up
   your own rhetoric?

Yes, I am guessing. If you don't think he's angry here, what's a fair
characterization of it? Sarcasm? I'm trying to develop a motive
for his attacks on science, since the attacks don't make sense to me.

   GLENN:
   He says science should be subservient to social morality, and
   unless you can find more examples in Lila, it is the only one he
   cites that goes against the grain of the moral hierarchy between
   the social and intellectual levels. This in itself is telling.

   PLATT:
   Happy to oblige. Here’s another example where Pirsig puts
   intellect above society:

No, I was asking for cases the other way round. Perhaps you misread
my paragraph above?

   PIRSIG:
   This soup of sentiments about logically nonexistent entities can
   be straightened out by the Metaphysics of Quality. It says that what
   is meant by "human rights" is usually the moral code of intellect-
   vs.-society, the moral right of intellect to be free of social control.
   Freedom of speech; freedom of assembly, of travel; trial by jury;
   habeas corpus; government by consent—these "human rights"
   are all intellect-vs.-society issues. According to the Metaphysics of
   Quality these "human rights" have not just a sentimental basis,
   but a rational, metaphysical basis. They are essential to the
   evolution of a higher level of life from a lower level of life. They are
   for real. (Lila, Chap. 24)

   PLATT:
   To claim that Pirsig believes science should be subservient to
   society is plainly wrong.

I disagree. He thinks science is undermining social morals, and according
to the MOQ, you can go against the grain of the moral hierarchy in cases
where a higher level undermines a lower level. I thought we agreed on this.

   PIRSIG:
   The Metaphysics of Quality suggests that the social chaos of the
   twentieth century can be relieved by going back to this point of
   departure and re-evaluating the path taken from it. It says it is
   immoral for intellect to be dominated by society for the same
   reasons it is immoral for children to be dominated by their
   parents. (Lila, Chap. 24)

   If that doesn’t convince you, how about this:

   PIRSIG:
   We must understand that when a society undermines intellectual
   freedom for its own purposes it is absolutely morally bad, but
   when it represses biological freedom for its own purposes it is
   absolutely morally good. (Lila, Chap. 24)

   That doesn’t sound like science should be subservient to society
   to me. Nor does this:

   PIRSIG:
   But there is no way to light that torch within a Victorian pattern of
   values. Once intellect has been let out of the bottle of social
   restraint, it is almost impossible to put it back in again. And it is
   immoral to try. A society that tries to restrain the truth for its own
   purposes is a lower form of evolution than a truth that restrains
   society for its own purposes. (Lila, Chap. 21)

   Finally, just to prove there are many places in Lila where Pirsig
   puts intellect above society:

   PIRSIG:
   Intellect is not an extension of society any more than society is an
   extension of biology. Intellect is going its own way, and in doing so
   is at war with society, seeking to subjugate society, to put society
   under lock and key. An evolutionary morality says it is moral for
   intellect to do so, but it also contains a warning: Just as a society
   that weakens its people's physical health endangers its own
   stability, so does an intellectual pattern that weakens and
   destroys the health of its social base also endanger its own
   stability. (Lila, Chap. 13)

   PLATT:
   I hope these examples convince you that Pirsig places intellect
   above society, just as society is above biology and biology above
   inorganic nature. What he objects to is the use of the scientific
   intellectual model (SOM) as the basis for determining morals. He
   says that model can’t handle morals (which most scientists freely
   admit but offer nothing to replace it) and proposes the MOQ
   intellectual model to explain what’s good and bad and why.

I don't need convincing about what Pirsig means here. I think you just
mis-read my post. If not, let me know.

   PLATT:
   To move on to another point, I agree with your description of how
   scientists should present the data they find when studying
   cultures like the Incas. “Just the facts, ma’m” is the proper
   scientific stance. (They do, however, sift their “facts” through a
   preconceived value screen.) But then you said something that
   puzzled me as you wrote about Margaret Mead:

   GLENN:
   Here is a scientist who speaks her mind morally, the very thing
   Pirsig would like to see more scientists do, and he lambastes her
   as one of those objective types. Well, which way does he want it?

   Pirsig wants scientists to speak their minds on moral issues?
   Seems to me he says their subject-object approach to morals is
   the cause of today’s societal decay. Have you a reference to back
   up your claim that Pirsig looks to science for moral
   pronouncements?

In ch. 4 he says that after Boas put his stamp on the field, all the
anthropology texts were filled with very dry, specific facts "about
what *their* particular savage happened to do on a Wednesday", and
any generalizations that would lead to statements about cultural values
were prohibited because of amoral science. Needless to say, Pirsig isn't
pleased with this. He never comes out and says "I wish scientists would
admit that morals exist just as much as rocks and trees and talk about them
in their scientific conclusions just like they would anything else that's
real", but certainly this is what he's after. I mean, when you base all
of reality on morals, like Pirsig has, it would be more than a little
strange if your MOQ-based science never came up with moral pronouncements.
Of course, he doesn't expect anything but facts from subject-object
science, "but that is the problem", he says.

Getting back to Margaret Mead - Pirsig isn't really blaming her as much as
the amoral science she stands for. He thinks she came to this conclusion
(free sex is OK here, so it's OK there) because she thought her scientific
facts proved it, but how could she have thought that? *Maybe* her facts
show free sex works in Samoa, but how can she say they work in America, a
completely different culture? If she bases her science on the precepts of
cultural relativism, she can't be making this statement with the authority
of her school of science. She must have known that she was speaking her own
beliefs here, not ones arrived at by objective evidence. So, if she were
acting like a proper amoral scientist, she would have kept her mouth shut
and kept her personal beliefs to herself. The blame falls on her, not
amoral science.

Pirsig doesn't say this, but maybe he thinks her amoral conclusion about
sex were driven by her own lack of morals, and maybe her own lack of morals
were influenced by the success of amoral science. It's possible. But
Mead showed in other ways that she held moral beliefs. She was outspoken
against the natives' practice of cannabalism, for example.
  
   PLATT:
   You say Pirsig jumps to conclusions when in fact he takes an
   entire book to build a case for his conclusions. You may not agree
   with his conclusions, but they’re hardly the “jumping” variety.

What I'm after are specific examples of how science and scientists are
responsible for the moral decay in the 20th century. The only one I
can find is the Margaret Mead citation. Usually an argument is based on
a preponderance of specific examples which are all in support of a general
conclusion.

   PLATT:
   No doubt there are many contradictory scientific studies. But that
   in itself doesn’t disprove my claim. The high priests of science,
   while they engage in fierce infighting the same as priests of the
   cloth, usually end up reaching a “consensus” which will then be
   taken by the public as gospel. The history of the dangers
   attributed to cigarettes is a case in point. There are indeed many
   issues science is unclear about today and “more studies are
   required,” usually at taxpayer expense.

Yes, I agree that once a consensus is reached it is taken as gospel, but I
don't see anything wrong with this, do you? That's progress. Your original
point was that all the high priests needed was one scientific study to gain
credibility, and I don't agree. There is a lot of scepticism of science by
the general public, and that's healthy.

   But few doubt that science,
   not metaphysics, will be the final arbiter of what is “real” and “true”
   in the areas you mention. The problem arises when the claim is
   made that only material things, such as fossils and breasts, are
   “real.”

Can you cite where scientists "claim" only material things are real? Do
scientists claim that logic, mathematics, art and music, cultural values,
pain, morals, love, patriotism, awe, jealousy, etc are not real? Scientists
don't study these things because they're too hard to study, not because
they're unreal.

   GLENN:
   Finally, how can you explain why so many people believe in God,
   guardian angels, creationist theory, ESP, alternative medicines,
   and astrology when science is either neutral or antagonistic
   toward these? So no, I don't think scientists are considered
   today's high priests.

   PLATT:
   Whoa. Let’s not lump ESP and alternative medicines, both of
   which carry some scientific credence, with guardian angels and
   astrology. Also, I don’t think you’ll find belief in creationist theory
   too prevalent among intellectuals. God is another matter.
   According to some polls I’ve read, about half of scientists say the
   believe in a God. So I don’t think your conclusion is justified by
   your premises.

I'm not lumping them together for the purpose of comparing them to each
other. I'm simply saying that people believe in them despite what
mainstream science's opinion of them is. And I was talking about what the
general public believes, not intellectuals. If half of scientists believe
in God, that supports my view, not yours. That says half of the high
priests believe in something not confirmed by the high priests.

   Throughout your criticism of Pirsig you keep mentioning his tone,
   his “rhetoric” and his emotional state, as if “how” he says
   something is as important as “what” he says. Such emphasis
   doesn’t jibe with the sort of emotionless scientific “objectivity” you
   champion. This disconnect puzzles me.

You are puzzled because you think my views insist a disconnect must exist.
You are puzzled because you believe SOM, as Pirsig defines it, accurately
models the current state of beliefs, including my own and those of
scientists. I'm arguing it doesn't. For the same reason you think it's
contradictory of me to use subjectivity as a champion of objectivity, you
and Pirsig think you've caught scientists, like Hawking, in a contradiction
when they freely acknowledge using intuition to form an hypothesis.
You don't have to grill them to get them to say this. They're not squirming
in their seats when they "admit it". But then *your* view's retort goes
like: "Aha! Gotcha! You can't use intuition without commiting
schizophrenia because you believe in SOM, which states that substance is
the only reality." Now the scientist has a quizzical look on his face
because he doesn't think he's committed schizophrenia. In the next breath
you're view is summing things up with "Don't fret. Using intuition is
allowed by the MOQ way of thinking, and with MOQ this contradiction melts
away because MOQ is more inclusive than SOM." I believe Pirsig
intentionally defined SOM with this flaw so he could later "discover it"
to puff up his MOQ as the savior from all this schizophrenic insanity.
But there is no insanity.

The most honest thing Pirsig could have written in Lila was that MOQ
stresses things differently than western culture, in much the same way the
psychological study cited in the NY Times concluded. I would have bought that.

   This statement also puzzles me:

   GLENN:
   He also wants people to take on faith the idea that Dynamic
   Quality is the basic stuff of the universe, and to do this he needs to
   raise doubts about science, since faith isn't scientific.

   PLATT:
   I’ve shown in previous posts that science is ultimately a faith-
   based approach to reality. Perhaps it’s also instructive to look at
   how science describes an abstract entity that it considers the
   basic stuff of the university—energy. It can neither be created nor
   destroyed, put together nor taken apart, and on the whole it is
   neither increasing nor decreasing, remaining always constant. It
   nevertheless undergoes transformations or manifestations, for all
   types of energy and matter, whether kinetic, thermal, or molecular,
   are spoken of as “forms of energy.” As a matter of fact, science
   claims that all phenomena in the universe are ultimately nothing
   but forms of energy so that this energy more or less underlies all
   material things.

   Perhaps you can explain what the difference is between saying all
   things are forms of energy and all things are forms of Quality. How
   does the data change?

Energy and dynamic quality are not comparable. Energy is a quantifiable
concept. It appears in equations of physical theory. It has properties
and types, as you say. Dynamic quality has none of these. It
is undefined. At the subatomic level it is not found. If my understanding
of MOQ is correct, it would say DQ is a precursor of energy and in fact
creates it. At the subatomic level DQ is faith, simple and pure.

Glenn

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