From: Matthew Poot (mattpoot@hotmail.com)
Date: Thu Feb 26 2004 - 05:12:18 GMT
Hello,
This is certainly an interesting post Matt. I have some comments/questions.
Same for Wim.
I would just like to comment on the Vocabulary issue. Language does depend
on where you are from, and what you do, etc, etc. Certain words are
sometimes associated with previous experience, due to sometimes simple
mentioning during the past occurence. Whatever the reason, or cause of
this, it is evident that the word "super" or "lugubrious" mean different
things to me, than to you. They might be very similar, but never quite the
same. This is why we have certain people who get along and understand us
more fluently than others. But it is the vocabulary which is a direct
reflection of mindset, rather than determing it (besides the affects your
words have on what is going to happen).
Concerning the 'practical application' of Quality into a sort of social
teaching, is a big misconception of how things are, and/or should be handled
(IMO, of course;)
Often people think that when you have political and social vision
(socialists, democrats, what-not). You see things as having the same
out0come as previous attempts to instate a certain belief or view upon
people. This outcome (not IMO) is that things just end up getting worse, or
degrading themselves. Or if they don't get worse, than they dont really get
better, but just change.
One of the great things about Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, is
that it is so practical. It is easy to relate things, easy to see what he
is trying to say. It is an example of rhetoric.
The way I would like to see 'it' is like this; You can't expect to change
things by a revolution. It is much to unstable, unpredictable, and
undesireable. Revolutions cause such swift change that it often does not
benefit the majority, but only the few (ogligarchy).
You have to go into things, not expecting everything to happen "NOW", "Right
Away!", "A>S>A>P". If there is ever to be a change in mindset from what we
have now, or something simlilarly
not-good/fake/materialistic/inproportional/off-balance/out of whack, then it
must be attempted with care, and diligence. Some Good(Quality) things take
time. It is like planting a sapling when you buy a house. You don't plant
it because the sapling is -insert characteristic here-, and thats what you
want. You plant it to look , feel, listen, and live with it when it is
mature (or semi-mature). A tree doesn't make really loud noises coming from
animals. It softly whispers in the wind , always there, but not often
focused on.
Right now, I am not telling people "You are stupid! You are only aware if
you have read ZMM". What I try and do, is to influence them, and if
possible (often not) try and get them to read the book. Then, they will
come to their own conclusions. I have not told them what to do, or what to
believe in, but have presented an opportunity for them to change. If they
only change a little, then that is still good. Then that might have a chain
reaction affect. Spread across generations.
This is where the practicality of ZMM, and the facilitation of Quality
awareness are. It will only be helped when we really start to wreak our own
havoc. When we finally see that we're on the edge of a very sharp cliff, or
walking on the edge of a knife , you might say.
Perhaps things like petroleum shortages, and a severe and rapid drop of
life-spans (ask me, I know what is coming).
HAVING IS NOT HAPPINESS!!!! <--- The current mythos we are in, supports (or
maybe sustains is better word) materialism. But of course we all know this.
Matt- My only suggestion is that when your group "goes public," you might
want to reformulate the practical suggestions you have and drop the Quality
vocabulary to increase the chances of your suggestions' success.
----- Original Message -----
From: MATTHEW PAUL KUNDERT <mpkundert@students.wisc.edu>
To: <moq_discuss@moq.org>
Sent: Wednesday, February 25, 2004 7:04 PM
Subject: Re: MD When is a metaphysics not a metaphysics?
> Wim,
>
> This last post you've added I've found the most pointed.
>
> First, on vocabularies:
>
> Wim said:
> 'If you're not content any more with "vocabulary" defined as a "systematic
arrangement or organization of your beliefs", please provide another one',
as vocabulary appears to be a core concept in your terminology.
>
> Matt:
> I think of it as a way of speaking. For instance, as you are right to
point out, the concept of a "vocabulary" is important in my vocabulary.
Rorty is one of the pioneers of the "'vocabulary' vocabulary" (as Robert
Brandom put it). I think of it terms of a conversation. For different
conversations, you may use different words. For instance, in Christian
conversations the words "God," "Church," and "Jesus" are important, whereas
in football (Americana) the words "Quaterback," "Hike," and "Touchdown" are
important. If you don't understand what these words mean, then you won't
understand much of what those respective conversations are about. And the
fact that these conversations don't overlap very much in terms of the
purpose, goals, and concepts of the conversation (except the word "Sunday,"
as in "What's more important for me to do on Sunday?") it becomes possible
to make a viable distinction between them as being different conversations
and using different vocabularie
> s. There is, however, no permanent or fixed distinction between
conversations and vocabularies except for the ones that we make. One
distinction that William James suggested is a distinction between "science"
and "religion." James' "Will to Believe," in this sense, was the
dialectical update of Kant's "Religion within the Limits of Reason Alone."
He wrote it to balance his scientific, pioneering efforts in psychology and
his father's Swedenborgian theology. Another distinction that the
Enlightenment thinkers suggested is a distinction between the "public
sphere" and the "private sphere."
>
> This turns to the heart of our (apparent) differences. There are two
reasons why neo-Enlightenment political thinkers would like a separation
between church and state, between the private and the public. One is to
protect certain decisions that we think should be left up to the individual.
Things like "Should I believe in God?", " What is the meaning of life?",
"What should I do with my life?", "What book should I read next?", "Should I
have eggs for breakfast or a bagel? Or both...?", etc., etc. The other is
for purposes of expediency. As my oft repeated slogan goes, we don't want
to re-enact the Republic on the Senate floor.
>
> What I keep dancing away from and you keep trying to get me to admit is
that "a Metaphysics of Quality ... DOES have relevance for politics." You
want, for instance, "religious truths/insights/inspirations" to have
political relevance. The only extent to which I see them as political
relevant is the sense in which they motivate _you_, the believer, to make
practical suggestions, for doing "social stuff." Here's what it boils down
to: if you have a vision from God who tells you that homosexuals should be
able to marry within the eyes of the law if they want to, the only part that
matters is your belief about homosexuals, not where you got it from. If we
start discussing it in terms of God, what am I supposed to say? I don't
believe in God. The conversation doesn't go very far because the
vocabularies we are using don't overlap enough. More to the point, if you
start talking in terms of Quality, where does that leave other people who
don't like Pirsig, or more probably,
> have never read Pirsig?
>
> I think we have to leave religion and philosophy at the door of the
Capital on two counts: one, we don't want to start forcing people to have
certain conversations to be able to do certain things and two, if we ever
want to get anything done, we might want to leave a 2500+ year old
conversation at the door. I say "at the door of the Capital" for a very
specific reason. Its because if you and others would like to form a group
that uses a "Quality vocabulary" to create a social vision and even to make
practical suggestions, then you have every right to do so and I think it
would be great. Anything that brings people together to do good stuff can't
be bad. My only suggestion is that when your group "goes public," you might
want to reformulate the practical suggestions you have and drop the Quality
vocabulary to increase the chances of your suggestions' success.
>
> (As a side note, I have never dissuaded anyone (so far as I can remember)
from talking about practical things or turning _this_ group towards
generating a great social vision. The only things I've said on the subject
are: A) count me out and B) I doubt you'll get very far in _this_ group. I
have a feeling the group's political differences are too great for one
generally agreed upon social vision to emerge. The only times I've ever
spoken on the subject are when people have said things to me, in
conversation with me or having butted into a conversation I was having
("butting in" is a very fuzzy line on the internet, but it can be drawn
sometimes). At most, I've reacted slightly negative because the person was
trying to chastise me for only sticking to philosophy. That's when I start
talking about the purposes of this forum and private and public and blah,
blah. I see this forum as being a private installation that allows for any
conversation you would like (within certa
> in limits). As such, it can accommodate as many visions of what the
purpose of the forum should be as there are people (something that has been
a bit of an annoyance to some). So, when I say, "the purpose of this forum
is...," I'm really saying that "This is the purpose I have for the forum,
and I won't really be straying from it. And unless you know where I live, I
don't see how you could stop me from only participating in what I want to.")
>
> Your points about the current political scenes of the West I think are
either slightly besides the point or an agreement on the point I would like
to make. In the case of "constitutions, democracy and all kinds of checks
and balances," these are exactly the practical incarnations of the
public/private distinction I'm talking about. The outcome of these
incarnations, we neo-Enlightenment political thinkers think, is the
secularization of our political conversations. If you are suggesting
something different, I'm still not sure what it is. I still don't see how
the two of us are going to talk about God and get anything practical done,
which is exactly what I'm talking about. It may be a tad ironic that I keep
saying that we should leave philosophy aside when talking social stuff, and
then refuse to talk social stuff on this list, but I find it a tad ironic
that you are talking about incorporating your Quaker beliefs in your talk
about social stuff, yet I find so little of
> it in our conversation. Essentially, you're meeting me on my secularized
ground. And that's just it: for both of us to have this conversation we
have to agree on some ground rules. My point about the distinction between
public and private is a point about vocabularies. It is a practical
suggestion about how to think about things, about how to talk about things,
so we don't come to as many major stumbling blocks. It says its okay not to
talk about philosophy or religion when we are making policy. "Do not block
the road of inquiry" said Peirce and as far as I can see, Plato and God
would block our inquiry as to how to solve some of our social problems.
>
> In the case of American politics, you've caught me mixing the real with
the ideal, but all good political thoughts, I should say, are just that. It
is true, America doesn't always live up to its image, the image handed down
by its forefathers, those Enlightenment thinkers, particularly Jefferson.
One area it doesn't is in its secularization of politics. Rorty and I both
lament that, still to this day, people who are professed atheists won't get
elected to public office, certainly not the highest office.
>
> You say that "this thin strip of public opinion making only leads to
compromises of the kind that safeguard and promote American material and
otherwise short-term interests at the expense of the social and ecological
balance in your own society and in global society as a whole." My response
is that I don't see how any other society could prevent such a perversion of
image. I don't think there is anything perverted with the public/private
distinction that would necessarily lead to such a stripmine attitude about
the world. The turn taken by America, indeed all nations, is taken by
perverted _people_, the greedy oligarchies and kleptocrats. If you are
thinking that a nation whose state religion was Christianity and quoted
Bible scripture on the Senate floor, not for inspiration, but as a debating
point, would be more morally suited than our ostensibly secular one, I have
only to point to the Crusades. Good ideas like "do unto others as you would
have them do unto you" can
> always be perverted by people. Its the people who are the problem.
Which is why the West invented democracy.
>
> In the end, you are right, the Quakers were instrumental in America's
early moral make-up. But what is important for us secularists is still not
that they opposed slavery because of God, but that they opposed slavery. A
turning point in my life was when I looked around at my fellows at Church,
fellows who believed in God whereas I did not, and noticed that I acted just
as morally, if not more so, then they, that I acted like a good Christian,
just without the Cosmic Christ bit. What secularists are betting is that
you don't have to be religious or philosophical to be moral. We're betting
that you can reformulate the good, sound moral intuitions that Christianity
gave us, things like "love thy neighbor," and reformulate them in different
terms, terms that drop out reference to God or the Bible, and not lose
anything. If the _only_ way in which you can formulate your point, if the
only way you can defend your political view, is by referring to the Will of
God, quoting the
> Literal Truth of the Bible, or from your sight of the Form of the Good,
then secularists argue that it isn't defensible as a political belief. In
this case, it is a religious belief or a philosophical belief, but not a
belief that you can debate on the Senate floor. And we are not sure how you
can have it any other way. For purposes of politics, we may separate the
religious from the political, but that doesn't mean we are suggesting that
they don't influence each other. It simply means that the only way we can
imagine having Hamilton's pluralistic salad bowl society is if we privatize
some of our beliefs and leave them out of the political conversation.
>
> So, do you want a colorful salad, or do you want a grey gruel?
>
> Matt
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