From: David MOREY (us@divadeus.freeserve.co.uk)
Date: Sun Sep 21 2003 - 15:37:37 BST
Hi all
Platt says:Plenty of objections. But first, would you mind describing what
you
mean by "equality," and how you propose to bring it about? I can't find
anything in the MOQ that says "equality" should be our highest moral
goal. In fact, I believe it says "freedom" is the highest goal.
DM says: I agree, I put freedom at the top, however I am pretty sure we
can only achieve if we reject evil levels of inequality.
Lila says: "Of all the contributions America has made to the history of the
world,
the idea of freedom from a social hierarchy has been the greatest...
Jefferson called this
doctrine of social equality 'self-evident'... ...the fight isn't over. It's
still the central
internal conflict in America today. ...He didn't like the way everything
gets more stratified here.
The rich start looking richer and the poor start looking poorer."
I think we can see where Pirsig is on this one.
dmb says:
> No, I think its pretty clear that these things only makes sense in a
> historical and evolutionary context. Nothing fixed or eternal about that.
It
> just keeps on going.
DM: We so need to know our history, the dumbing down, or continued
dumb standards of our education in the whole world, is very depressing.
But the internet offers things today it took me years to find when younger.
Platt: how is equality to be brought about.
DM: Not sure, gotta hope for it over barbarism though. It seems to me
the world is getting smaller, that equality is a world security issue and
a personal one when people start living in secured communities. Also
not sure that the poor of the world are going to keep putting up with it.
See the world trade talks last week. Capitlaims will have to go, its been
good, its shown us how to be productive in more powerful ways than we
could ever have imagined, but what next? We don't need to be more efficient.
We know how to be super-productive and organise and use machines.
Time to start sharing. Under capitalism companies have to make profits
to satisfy inequality ( i.e. to pay holders of equity) therefore its basis
is to
support inequality, making profits gets tougher every day. Can it go on?
Do we have the resources? How much can one person consume?
Capaitalism requires extra consumption and spending all the time. I'm
spent out. How about a rest and a chat, how about a two day working
week? Want to vote for my party? We are the freedom and lazy party.
Or the lets have a low cost dance-party party. Family values,
community values = being in the community more and at work less.
Making less crap that no one really wants and are very low quality crap too.
Regards
David M
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Buchanan" <DBuchanan@ClassicalRadio.org>
To: <moq_discuss@moq.org>
Sent: Sunday, September 21, 2003 3:01 AM
Subject: RE: MD MoQ platypuses
> Andy and all:
>
> In response to the Pirsig quote about human rights...
>
> Andy said:
> Well, I do see here a contradiction between Rorty and Pirsig. Rorty
> obviously doesn't believe there is a metaphysical basis for human rights.
> But I will say that Pirsig is just plain wrong in the above quotation.
> These "human
> rights" are NOT essential to the evolution of a higher level of life. In
> fact we have gotten where we are, through evolution, by nurturing a view
of
> individuals in groups outside of our own as something less than human.
>
> dmb says:
> Finally! Thank you. Yes, I think Rorty and Pirsig disagree about nearly
> everything that's important to them both. (As far as I can glean, anyway.)
> I'm not so sure that you actually disagree with Pirsig here. He's not
saying
> what you seem to think he's saying here. I think this is another case
where
> the distinction between social and intellectual values will clears it up.
> Elsewhere Pirsig points out that it is the social level, the giant, that
> doesn't mind losing a few bodies to protect itself. War and genocide and
> bigotry did serve an evolutionary purpose for the social level, but for
many
> reasons the principles of the intellectual level are trying to put the
> breaks on that sort of behaviour. Human rights are not a part of that
level
> of evolution, they are disigned to protect the freedom of intellect
itself.
> Its very nice that such a thing also has the added benefit of making
> genocide illegal and such, but Pirsig's point is that human rights are
> necessary for the intellect to continue its evolution.
>
> Andy continued:
> Society has advanced, evolved and grown by killing off ideas, humans, and
> biological adversaries opposed to our evolutionary trajectory. Through all
> of this the intellectual level has been growing and advancing. Evolution
> has rewarded individuals who are aggressive and competitive when dealing
> with unknown entities such as strangers in unknown groups. Evolution has
> also rewarded individuals who react with violence over rational responses
to
> fear and the unknown. Evolution has also rewarded individuals who
responded
> to authority unquestioningly. All these traits have been passed down to
us
> through our evolutionary history.
>
> dmb says:
> I'd only point out that evolution proceeds with completely different
rules,
> depending on which level we're talking about. The things that work at the
> biological level don't work at the social or intellectual levels. While
the
> whole thing is about betterness, I think the levels are in conflict about
> what constitutes betterness. I mean, there are different KINDS of
evolution.
>
> Andy says:
> We do not naturaly have a concept of "human rights" that is defined
through
> the evolution of a higher level of life. Rather we have to create this
> definition in order to reach a higher level of life, because our old
> views of human rights for insiders and a complete disrespect for all lives
> outside of our groups will no longer be feasible in our increasingly
smaller
> global world.
>
> dmb says:
> Right. Human rights are not a feature of biology or society, but let's not
> go so far as to say they are un-natural. As I understand it, human rights
> are a product of evolution everybit as much as are lungs and eyeballs, but
> at a level of reality that can't rightly be compared to such things. And I
> think you're quite right about our shrinking world. We can no longer
> afforded to be aggressive and bigoted tribalists. Such an approach is
> obsolete. It has so outgrown its usefulness that it has now become a real
> threat to survival. This is why the next level evolved, to solve a serios
> problem that can never be solved at the social level.
>
> Andy said:
> From the Pirsig quote above, this would seem to me to be exactly what
Pirsig
> is saying. (That democracy and human rights have an eternally fixed
> definition.)
>
> dmb says:
> No, I think its pretty clear that these things only makes sense in a
> historical and evolutionary context. Nothing fixed or eternal about that.
It
> just keeps on going.
>
> Andy:
> I was talking about a word like democracy and freedom though. I don't
want
> to just give these words away to others and invent a new term for treating
> people equally. I still hold these words sacred. It bugs the @*&# out of
me
> when I here what the American military is doing around the world in the
name
> of freedom and democracy. ...I might have a long way to go and perhaps an
> insurmountable current of opposition to contend with, but I am going to
bank
> my hope on democracy meaning this when I say it and I am going to fight to
> my last breath anyone who wishes to distort the meaning to some exact
> opposite one. So, yes language does hold power over us.
>
> dmb says:
> Exactly. I thank you. George Orwell, who just stopped spinning in his
grave
> for a moment, thanks you. The people at Webster's and Random House thank
> you. I'm currently reading a book call "WEAPON OF MASS DISTRACTION". It
> documents all the lies and misleading statements made by the Bush
> administration throughout the last year. And the most disturbing thing
about
> it is that most of the relevent quotes so far have come from the
advertising
> and public relations trade publications. Apparently these clowns have
spent
> literally millions of dollars in an effort to decieve the world. But there
> ain't enough spin in the world to make it right.
>
> Andy said:
> But, as artists, poets, screenwriters, novelists, philosophers and others
we
> have the power to create new uses for language and this power can change
the
> world. At least that's what I'm banking on.
>
> dmb says:
> Right. Only the myth makers stand a chance. It takes a certain kind of
> creative genuis, though. So I'm not exactly banking on it, but I have
> invested a modest amount of hope in the courage of artist. (My screenplay
is
> exactly about that; the artist as hero.)
>
> DMB: And its not enough to convince such a bigot that such terms are more
> useful because it is a MORAL issue. Such a person, I think, will only
change
> when he can be presuaded that its not just a matter of being nice or fair,
> but is a matter of his own moral status. Usefulness is about what is in
the
> hands, but morality is about what is in the heart and soul, if you know
what
> I mean.
>
> Andy said:
> I think I do, and I understand why you might think this. However, I would
> expand the term usefulness to also be about what is in the heart and soul
> if it would help us cope--or if it would lessen human suffering in the
> world.
> This is a barometer Rorty has proposed for usefulness. Maybe it isn't
> perfect, but I like it. If is lessens human suffering and cruelty in the
> world then we could call it useful.
>
> dmb says:
> This is a good example of why its important to explain ideas rather than
> just throw slogans and jargon around. I mean, without any explanation a
> person would never think of the alieviation of suffering and cruelty as
any
> kind of "usefulness". Its not a word we associate with the heart and soul.
I
> think that it goes way beyond imperfection. Even for an academic
> philosopher, this is a pretty damn poor choice of words. In fact, its
> downright misleading. And in that spirit, maybe I should think of Rorty
> himself as a useful tool. Or at least some kind of tool. :-)
>
> Thanks, Andy. I'll consider you my offical translator.
>
>
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