From: August West (augustwestd@yahoo.com)
Date: Wed Jun 04 2003 - 21:53:26 BST
Johnny, Pi, All,
Pirsig says in Zen and the Art... that when you break
everything in the universe down to its simplest form
then you get mind, matter, and quality.
Human choice and the choices that lightning makes to
follow its path of least resistance are different....
very different. Humans have a choice to chose. That
is, an individual has a choice to decide what course
they chose. I can chose to be moral, I can chose to
think, I can chose to act on wim, I can chose to vote
for someone other than Bush, Bush can chose to ignore
the fact that he lost the election and be my president
anyway. Bush can chose to go to war, or that it is
not a good time. Humans have no automatic course of
action, this is a property (quality) of a human.
Johnny, here is an example:
1. People in the United States had to choose a
president, they did this by voting.
2. Some people voted for Gore, they thought this would
bring the best quality for the country.
3. Some people voted for Bush, they thought this would
bring the best quality for the country.
4. Gore won.
5. Bush .. I don't wanna say... (Leo Strauss.. the
GOP's philosopher, should check it out.. fricken
scary!)
Lightning, has a set "plan of action". It cannot
chose how it will chose, it can only chose what its
properties dictate it chose, the path of least
resistance.
Humans and Nature do interact with quality in differnt
ways.
Humans chose morality as a system to govern themselves
because of our choice to chose properties (quality),
which are not automatic, like lightning's, for
example. We, as individuals, and as humans chose to
obey or not to obey.
-August
--- johnny moral <johnnymoral@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Pi and August,
>
> >The point you bring up about "free will" deserves a
> new thread because it
> >is too much of a tangent. In short, as I understand
> it, under MOQ, human
> >choice and the choices a lightning makes are not
> very different. Just
> >because we can predict path of a lightining bolt
> with some accuracy does
> >not imply that it does not have a choice. A
> lightining bolt "chooses" a
> >path of highest quality and so do each of us. But
> let us start a new
> >thread if anyone would like to examine this tangent
> in more detail.
>
> While I don't think free will is tangential to a
> "man-made or natural?"
> thread at all, I'm very happy to start a thread
> about this. I think this
> topic is misunderstood a lot here, and that means
> morality is misunderstood
> and belittled. Understanding that what we choose to
> do is dependent on
> Quality (aka Morality, Reality) is key to properly
> respecting quality and
> morality. Believing in free will insults Quality
> and removes yourself from
> history.
>
> I think you are right Pi that lightning and human
> choices are not different.
> They both choose the path of highest perceived
> quality at the moment of
> choosing. Note though, that what they perceive is
> dependent on the quality,
> not on them (the quality creates the perceiver and
> the perceived). Thus, at
> the moment of choosing, they are both bound to
> choose the path that quality
> (morality) presents to them. Lightning can not
> choose any path but the one
> that appears best, and neither can we. We can
> deliberate longer than
> lightning, but in the final analysis, the action
> that we do is always what
> appears best, it is what we want to do most at that
> moment.
>
> I recommend Jonathan Edwards (or books about him) as
> he is the brightest
> light on the subject, and absolutely up to date and
> compatible with the MoQ.
> I'm going to type in some excerpts from some books
> about him (James
> Carse's in particular, Sang Hyun Lee's also) soon
> that ought to leave
> MoQ'ers mouths agape.
>
> BTW, it's Edwards 300th birthday this year! I think
> I will try to attend
> this symposium:
>
> http://www.yale.edu/wje/html/JE-300.html
>
> Johnny
>
> >Hi August,
> >
> >Thanks for bringing up that example. What I am
> trying to point out is that
> >the tree is *not* the same whether you see it or
> not! It is completely
> >dependent on the viewer. I believe it was in LILA
> where Pirsig mentioned
> >that when we blink, the reason we don't think that
> the world has ended is
> >because of the "continuation" static intellectual
> pattern that we have
> >adopted. Your tree example is very similar. One
> other example I would like
> >to point out from Pirsig is from zmm. Recall his
> rant about gravity not
> >existing before Newton coined the term and
> developed the theory. I would
> >like to invite you to explain this example using
> your theory of
> >perception.
> >
> >The point you bring up about "free will" deserves a
> new thread because it
> >is too much of a tangent. In short, as I understand
> it, under MOQ, human
> >choice and the choices a lightning makes are not
> very different. Just
> >because we can predict path of a lightining bolt
> with some accuracy does
> >not imply that it does not have a choice. A
> lightining bolt "chooses" a
> >path of highest quality and so do each of us. But
> let us start a new
> >thread if anyone would like to examine this tangent
> in more detail.
> >
> >Take care,
> >
> >- Pi
> >
> >
> >On Tue, 3 Jun 2003, August West wrote:
> >
> > > Pi
> > >
> > > Even if I have never seen a tree; its shape and
> > > structure is the same whether I personally, as
> an
> > > individual have seen it or not. Perception is
> > > relative to an individual, just as choices are.
> As a
> > > human I have a choice, a conscience
> > > choice about what I do next, nature doesn't.
> While
> > > lightning may "jump" rain drops to get to the
> ground
> > > following the path of least resistance; it has
> no
> > > choice about this property (quality) of
> lightning (and
> > > electricity in general). It works the same
> everytime.
> > >
> > > Does this example help?
> > > -August
> > >
> > > P.S. Anyone read "Faster than the Speed of
> Light"? I
> > > can't remember the author's name, I remember he
> is
> > > Portugese though. Speed of Light was variable to
> > > overcome the Horizon Problem in the Big Bang
> Theory;
> > > it is strictly theortical, but very, very
> interesting.
> > >
> > > --- Pi <pi@mideel.ath.cx> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Hi August,
> > > >
> > > > I would have to disagree. I don't think there
> is any
> > > > thing called
> > > > "absolute perfection". A tree is not a tree
> (as we
> > > > usually define it) to a
> > > > person who has never seen one. The tree is
> different
> > > > for this person.
> > > > Perhaps this person is blind and only knows a
> tree
> > > > by the way it sounds
> > > > (during a windy night) or the way it feels. It
> is a
> > > > perfect tree for this
> > > > person; Just like how it is a perfect tree for
> you.
> > > > But it is *not*
> > > > absolute.
> > > >
> > > > Similarly, 'a' is just a bunch of squigly
> lines to a
> > > > person who doesn't
> > > > read english (or any syntactically similar
> > > > language). Perhaps it is not
> > > > even a bunch of lines for this person if they
> do not
> > > > know the concept
> > > > of lines! 'a' is still "perfect" for this
> person.
> > > >
> > > > Anyway, the real point I want to stress with
> these
> > > > examples is that
> > > > absolute perfection does not exist because we
> all do
> > > > not share
> > > > intellectual patterns. If we did, there would
> be no
> > > > need for a discussion
> > > > forum. ;) An object you
> touch/see/feel/smell/taste
> > > > is only there as a
> > > > static intellectual pattern.
> > > >
> > > > And, yes, I do agree with the later part about
> > > > "relative perfection". I
> > > > think I have reinstated that point with the
> examples
> > > > above.
> > > >
> > > > Take care,
>
=== message truncated ===
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