Hello everyone
Richard Edgar wrote:
>
> Hi Dan
> Hi everyone
>
> Dan:
> One person cannot rule alone; they must forge powerful allies. I am not sure how you can say new intellectual values don't oppose old ones... of course they do! Not only must they oppose old social values, but new intellectual values must destroy them entirely.
>
> Richard
> I do see your point, and it got me thinking about the word “oppose”. I do admit that the intellects’ opinions oppose those of societies, but the examples you give suggest a willing opposition, as if the intellect goes out to oppose the society. I don’t think this is true. My view is that the intellect ignores society, but I do concede that the new rulings the intellect DO oppose society, but via a less confrontational route than your language suggests. However, this could just be the way I interpret what you say(?).
Hi Richard
The intellect (and though we are talking of intellect as if it is
separate from us it's not) seeks freedom from social patterns of value;
of being told how things are and what to do. There is no ignoring
society for any of us who are part of it and our being here in this
discussion group in the first place assures we are all part of society.
>
> > Richard:
> > Society still has some power as we are in a transitional period, in a few generations, there will be no society to hang me up by my thumbs, and since the intellect doesn’t stomp it just ignores, society will not be able to stop the process.
>
> Dan:
> Come on now, who's kidding who here? Society has all the power. And that is not going to change in a few generations or a few hundred. It is an ever regenerating cycle... new ideas arise, flourish while they may then pass away to make way for new ideas. Society latches onto new ideas from time to time but there is a deep undercurrent that WILL hang you by your thumbs if you get out of line (figuratively, perhaps, yet one never knows).
>
> Richard:
> Society only has CERTAIN power. It has power over parts of the economy, it has power at election time (well, it still has SOME power, it would seem that the intellectual courts are stomping all over that too now!! :o) ) but aside from that, society has very little power (at least compared to 50, 100, 200 years ago. The balance of power is shifting from society to intellect (law courts, politics and trade) so while I concede that society has SOME power, I seriously doubt it’s as much as you seem to think.
Dan:
When Phaedrus says intellect came into dominance around the beginning of
WWI it would be my interpretation that he is speaking of science more so
than courts, politics or trade.
>
> Richard:
> Question: Many of those on this group seem to think society and intellect are at war, and intellect is trying to forcefully gain ground on society. If this is the case, then since there are so many people in society, why aren’t they using their power?
>
> Dan:
> Well, it's not that intellect is trying gain ground... intellect opposes society in any fashion. Evolutionary forces of value push intellect in an entirely different direction.
>
> Richard:
> But this once again takes us back to the old debate of “Does intellect ACTIVELY seek a stance that is in direct opposition of society?” If evolutionary forces ARE simply pushing the two apart, I think it suggests the intellect opposes society via an indirect route (which is what I’ve been saying all along – sorry, I know that’s after the bell but had to get that one in :o) )
Dan:
I would suggest there is a sort of inverse complementarity between
social and intellectual patterns of value. Oppose may not be exactly
right as a descriptive term, no.
>
> Dan:
> MOQ states intellect is at war with society, not the politicians or lawyers.
>
> Richard:
> Are lawyers and politians part of society??? IMO they belong to the intellect as they do not work for the good of society, they work for the good of the intellect! Or am I misunderstanding what you mean?
Dan:
What I meant was that lawyers and politicians (unless they are very
astute) probably do not hold the same metaphysical beliefs that the MOQ
espouses. But the answer to your question is, of course they are part of
society. We all are! Remember, all four levels operate discretely and
yet simultaneously.
>
> Dan:
> And again, intellect cares nothing about gaining ground on society. Intellect opposes society.
>
> Richard
> Yes, but does it seek to oppose society? Are they really at war?
Dan:
Well, the intellect says, f-ck you, I'm not going to do what you tell me
to. So you tell me. Is that war? Or is it just being unique?
>
> Dan:
> […] Should a criminal have access to education? I believe this moves up a ratchet leap to conflicting social/intellect patterns of value. Society provides an education in the hope of rehabilitating the criminal.
>
> Richard:
> Society provides at the bequest of the intellect. Who is in charge, the puppet or the puppeteer??
Dan:
Oh no. The intellect provides at the bequest of society! Now if society
wishes to provide a free education for every citizen, then...
>
> Dan:
> Personally I question why society should entitle a criminal with an education while not providing one to all it's citizens, but perhaps that is just me.
>
> Richard:
> It DOES provide an education for the citizens it’s just the citizens use the democratic right not to attend classes, not to do evening studies, not to further themselves. The options are there, people just don’t use them!! What would society say if people were FORCED to take up extra education classes as you seem to suggest here?
Dan:
I am only saying that society should provide a free education to all
citizens who desire one and not only to convicted criminals. In fact, if
such a program were available perhaps there would be fewer criminals to
begin with?
> Dan:
> In poor rural areas throughout the country here in the States, rich city folk have been steadily moving in over the last two or three decades. Invariably the poorer neighbors steal from them at first, but as time goes by the money the rich folk bring in gradually becomes diffused, raising everyone's standards of living, and the stealing stops. Wealth never stays in a vacuum. It spreads around.
>
> Richard:
> Oh come on Dan, you can’t be so niave as to believe that the spreading of wealth in this way fights crime. I think the real process is that the rich city folk suddenly discover the higher crime rate and start to complain, or stop moving whilst blaming crime, so the mayors or governors of the town are suddenly faced with 2 options. 1, do nothing and have all the tax paying, spending city folk leave or 2, concentrate on crime prevention and deterents! It’s not that the spreading wealth cuts crime, it’s that crime becomes a focus of the local government! IMO, of course!
Dan:
Spoken as a true city folk. Here in the country when one misses items
time and again they don't call the police. They take the third option
you forgot to mention. They wait in the dark with a gun, and the first
time they shoot over the perpetrators heads. Most times there is not a
second occurrence though I've heard stories...
>
> > Richard:
> how can a newly released criminal have the chance to lead a normal life if he has $50,000 debt from his incarceration? Isn’t he more likely to reoffend in this case?
>
> Dan:
> Well I envisioned a pay as one goes plan... work release, chain gangs, etc.
>
> Richard:
> So in your view, you should not educate or train criminals, and at the end of their sentence, you expect them to pay for their incarceration despite the fact that IF they can get a job, it will be unskilled labour paying little, thus inviting the criminal to reoffend simply to pay for his incarceration?
Dan:
Why don't we go ahead and build them a house and give them a car too?
That way perhaps they won't be tempted to steal or break into ours?
>
> Dan:
>
> I still do not see why society should give to a criminal that which it
> doesn't give to every citizen.
>
> Richard:
> The citizens have more rights and opportunities, they simply CHOOSE not to use their options, favouring spending nights in bars and restaurants on top of extra education. You can show a fish where the river is, you can even give it means to get there, but you can’t make it jump in, and you can’t make it drink. We have lots of opportunity to better ourselves to a far greater extent than criminals ever will, we’re just too lazy to do anything (speaking from societies point of view of course, I know the people on this list aren’t lazy!)
Dan:
The criminal under my own hat...
>
> > Richard:
> > What if they don’t follow them because they have no choice not to? Because they don’t understand why they do wrong? Sense of decency is only a good fundament if you assume everyone has one. What if there are medical reasons for a lack of this sense? Lock them up and throw away the key just because they are Ill?
>
> Dan:
> In that case it seems we are now addressing inorganic/biological level function and no longer biological/social function and it would fall to society to care for these individuals.
>
> Richard:
> But before society can care for them, they need to be accessed within prison, and so far, you have been arguing that they should not be allowed access to personal help.
Dan:
No. It depends on the situation, as I stated. There is no blanket
statement that can be made concerning crime. The MOQ gives us a way of
seeing crime as conflicting patterns of values on different levels. A
person with bipolar imbalance falls under the inorganic-biological level
and deserves medical treatment, not incarceration.
>
> > Richard:
> > Assaults and that kind of thing I agree with you on the stupidity thing. But why do people steal? Is the driving force of this poverty or stupidity? Is poverty treatable?
>
> Dan:
>
> And is being stupid a treatable condition? We seem to be falling into the nurture vs nature argument here...
>
> Richard:
> Stupid is not necessarily a straight sourse of crime. There are lots of stupid people out there that don’t commit crimes so where’s the difference? Perhaps it’s alcohol? Here in the UK, a large number of personal assaults are committed by people under the effects of alcohol. Stupid people don’t commit crimes BECAUSE they are stupid, they commit them because they are stupid and poor, or stupid and drunk etc. I don’t think you need to treat stupidity, you need to tackle the other driving problems of crime.
Dan:
You made my point for me. Poverty isn't necessarily a straight source of
crime either. There are lots of poor people who don't commit crimes here
in the States. Lots of drunks too. In fact, there are a lot of poor
stupid drunks who never commit crimes; most of my friends would qualify
for that according to my ex. :)
>
> Dan:
> in the States the revenge factor overrides. Take Ted Bundy, for instance. Rather than studying this man to try and determine why he was like he was, society executed him summarily. Richard Speck... another example, only he was left to his own recourses in prison where he quote "had the time of my life." Granted, these men are extreme cases, but in neither case was society served in the best possible way; by performing psychological studies perhaps some commonality could be derived and a rehabilitation program that really works may have resulted? Who can say?
>
> Richard:
> Better to try than to assume you’re going to fail!
>
> > Richard:
> > I’m surprised you said this, Dan. How is viewing ourselves as animals a step down?
>
> Dan:
>
> Daniel Dennett mentions the Hutterites in his book "Darwin's Dangerous Idea" and it seems to me their culture is just what you are advocating. The Hutterites live in colonies which split in half when they reach a certain size, one half staying and the other half leaving and creating a new colony.
>
> Dan:
> Dennett writes:
>
> "Wilson and Sober are right to present the Hutterite ideals as the essence of an organismic organization, but the big difference is that for people -- unlike the cells in our bodies, or the bees in a colony -- there is always the option of opting out. And that, I would think, is the last thing we want to destroy in our social engineering. The Hutterites disagree, apparently, and so, I gather, do the hosts of many non-Western memes. Do you *like* the idea of turning ourselves and our children into slaves to the 'summum bonum' of our group? This is the direction the Hutterites have always been headed..." (Darwin's Dangerous Idea, pg. 474)
>
> Hope that helps you see where I'm coming from.
>
> Richard:
> It certainly does, I’ve never seen that before, it’s interesting! Of course, I completely agree with the hutterites! question: are the majority of us not already slaves to our bank balances, and what the media presents as “the perfect world” with it’s big, well decorated houses, it’s cobbled drive ways and 4x4 off road vehicles etc.? I think We just THINK we’re free, those that reject the ideal, are usually considered “insane” and either locked up or put out of harms way.
Dan:
Society has the power.
>
> Dan:
> It is a misunderstanding to say Darwin replaced God with evolution. Just asking, but have you read Darwin's "The Origins of Species"?
>
> Richard:
> I haven’t read it so, perhaps I am misunderstanding the few quotes and representations of Darwin’s work that I have heard. I will say in my defense though, that even if Darwin never SAID evolution moved us away from the idea of devine creation, I think it is implied. I.E. it’s hard to imagine how God could have created a race that evolved over millions of years.
Dan:
You really should read it. Darwin was a true genius and his work is
mostly misrepresented. I.E. spontaneously is the word you are searching
for...
Thank you for your comments.
Dan
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