Re: MD Theism, Non-Theism, Anti-Theism, Nihilism

From: hampday@earthlink.net
Date: Sun Jul 17 2005 - 19:39:29 BST

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    Michael, MSH, Scott, Arlo, Matt, Reinier --

    I'm indebted to Michael and Scott for injecting some moderation into what
    has thus far been an unnecessarily heated debate concerning the "religious
    issue" vis-a-vis Pirsig's MoQ. Although I'm surprised by the intensity of
    the comments, I'm not at all offended. Actually, their emotional tone and
    hasty conclusions indicate that I've touched a sore spot that needs to be
    addressed.

    Since I bear responsibility for having sparked much of the controversy from
    the minority side, I'd like a final rebuttal to the comments made about my
    statements of 7/15 in the exchanges of Mark with Scott and Michael during
    the past week. (I may also want to comment briefly on some of Matt's
    comments in a later post.)

    MSH wrote on 7/16/95:
    > Gentlemen. You are all assuming the reality of a transcendent
    > Source, then bending over backward to wedge it into your metaphysics.
    > The interesting psychological question is why?

    Michael answered:
    > Perhaps they were persuded by Pirsig's argument for a transcendent
    > source in ZMM?

    Scott answered (in part):
    > And it is interesting to ask why you see it as a psychological question.
    > Are we back to the "religion is for wimps" business? You don't accept
    > the possibility that God, or Nothingness, or the Tao, or whatever, might
    > not serve one as an intellectual hypothesis?

    Scott expresses my reaction exactly. I think Mark's appraisal was a fair
    one, and his point that we may be "begging the question" of a transcendent
    source deserves a forthright answer. However, I agree with Scott that it is
    absurd to suggest that seeing the need for a transcendent source in
    the MoQ is the result of a psychological hangup.

    I think we all agree that Robert Pirsig has expressed a less than favorable
    opinion of metaphysics. One of the Lila paragraphs that struck me on first
    reading
    was this one from Chpt. 5:
    "Historically mystics have claimed that for a true understanding of reality
    metaphysics is too 'scientific'. Metaphysics is not reality. Metaphysics is
    *names* about reality. Metaphysics is a restaurant where they give you a
    thirty-thousand-page menu and no food."

    Well, some of us are hungry for that "food". More than that, we know that
    the
    food is there; we just don't know how to get at it. Before leaving the
    restaurant in disgust, maybe we should ask for another menu. Dagobert Runes
    defines metaphysics as "Any scheme of explanation which transcends the
    inadequacies or inaccuracies of ordinary thought." It is not easy reading,
    and it can often be intimidating; but if answers to what reality is are to
    be found anywhere, Metaphysics is the place to find them.

    Assuming a "transcendent source" isn't a religious belief any more than it's
    a scientific viewpoint. It's the bottom line on the philosophical account
    sheet. To get there requires a balance of reason, logic, and intuition.
    And I'll be the first to admit that we won't be able to prove it when we do.
    But some of us here feel that until we arrive at a theory that accounts for
    a transcendent reality, our philosophy is incomplete.

    Concerning what I called the challenge of a workable metaphysics,
    MSH responded on 7/15/05:
    > All of the the above assumes the reality of God

    Scott replied:
    > I would say that we also cannot attribute to it Unity or "Oneness".
    > It is not One, not Many, not One and Many, not neither One nor
    > Many.

    MSH replies:
    > This assumes the reality of God, then tries to provide a logical
    > basis for talking about God. BTW, as suggested above, this logical
    > theory of "otherness" is unintelligible to me. But let's just assume
    > I suffer from some sort of genetic mental deficiency which prevents
    > me from understanding something that Ham and Scott are able to grasp.

    Michael adds ("sympathetically"?):
    > The first few times I saw Ham and Scott using the logic of "not-other"
    > and of "contradictory identity", I too found it impenetrable. MSH, you
    > say it strikes you as "gibberish" - the point is, from the standpoint
    > of conventional logic, it is *complete* gibberish. It's the exact
    > equivalent of Pirsig's "definition" of Quality in ZMM:
    >
    > "Quality is a characteristic of thought and statement that is
    > recognized by a nonthinking process. Because definitions are a product
    > of rigid, formal thinking, quality cannot be defined."

    MSH continued:
    > If the theory of "otherness" or "contradictory identity" allows you
    > to incorporate an assumed primary source into your metaphysics, why
    > won't the same theory support Pirsig's assumption of Quality as the
    > primary source?

    The Cusan "Not-other" allows the concept of God to be logically defined
    without the usual "contradition" or assumption of contrariety. One might
    regard it as "essential logic" as opposed to Cartesian logic. If Mr. Pirsig
    assumes a primary source, and prefers to call it Quality, it will support
    that also. My point, however, is that the MoQ author has NOT DECLARED such
    an assumption. He has said only that "Quality is the primary empirical
    reality of the world". I submit that "empirical reality" is not
    transcendent reality. So, Mark, I'm totally with you in theory, but we
    simply don't have it in the MoQ.

    Michael says:
    > These theories, to me, pervert traditional logic so that logic can
    > deal with an ineffable entity such as Quality, God, Tao or whatever.
    > They don't "support" the assumption of the existence of such an
    > entity, they merely describe the entity. They are not arguments, but
    > analogies - analogies for any Western intellectual reader with a
    > grounding in formal logic (and an ability to understand rather strange
    > grammatical structures, I think!)

    Michael, if by "support" you mean "proof" for the assumption, you are
    correct. They do, however, provide logical support for belief in a
    transcendent source. They are not intended to "describe" that source,
    since, as was explained in my first paragraph, no such description is
    possible:

    "Any assertion about God would [then] be only metaphorical and would not
    serve as an established basis of knowledge." --Andrey Smirnov

    Again, my point was that by using Cusa's theory we are able to deal with the
    transcendent source as a logical premise. The question then becomes either:
    Why shouldn't we? or Why should we? -- depending on the metaphysical
    viewpoint we are expounding.

    In my philosophy of Essence, a transcendent source is a necessary
    assumption. In the MoQ it is assumed to be unnecessary and is discouraged.

    Thank you all for the chance to clarify my position.

    Regards,
    Ham

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