From: David MOREY (us@divadeus.freeserve.co.uk)
Date: Fri Oct 10 2003 - 21:26:47 BST
Rich
You've got the point I'm making.
Looks like the ball's got into a bit of a habit.
Looks like you can lose your DQ and never get over it.
Do dogs project the future path of the ball in their imagination?
Is visual imagination a form of non-verbal language?
Is all experience a form of language? (Matt what d'ya think?)
Does language speak Man?
regards
David (mad dog) Morey
----- Original Message -----
From: Richard Loggins
To: moq_discuss@moq.org
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2003 4:35 AM
Subject: Re: MD Intellectual level - New letter from Pirsig
David Morey,
May I jump in here? This could be a very important. I don't think dogs calculate when they catch a ball. Well, people don't either and I don't think dogs know about math. But it's something to consider in philosophy that hasn't been throught about much. And why does a ball that flies two seconds in the air and goes from your hand to the dogs mouth always take the same path? Do you think it minimizes action, agency, or contingency?
Rich
David MOREY <us@divadeus.freeserve.co.uk> wrote:
READ THIS IT MIGHT BE QUITE IMPORTANT!
So how do dogs catch balls so well. Do they calculate it?
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