Re: virus: Technology (was manifest science)

Joe E. Dees (joedees@bellsouth.net)
Thu, 3 Jun 1999 23:03:11 -0500

Date sent:      	Thu, 3 Jun 1999 19:52:32 -0700 (PDT)
From:           	Dylan Durst <ddurst@levien.com>
To:             	virus@lucifer.com
Subject:        	Re: virus: Technology (was manifest science)
Send reply to:  	virus@lucifer.com


> > I think that it's not a matter of belief, but of knowledge. Free
> > (though not absolutely free) will is exercised by all of us, every day.
> > As Maurice Merleau-Ponty says in THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF
> > PERCEPTION (p. 442), "The rationalist's dilemma: either the free
> > act is impossible, or it is not - either the event originates in me or
> > is imposed on me from outside, does not apply to our relations with
> > the world and with our past. Our freedom does not destroy our
> > situation, but gears itself to it."
>
> If that is a way of saying that it is irrelivant, then I agree. But I
> only agree when looking at my own choices. I say that everything we do is
> a product of our environment. I say that evolution is a proccess of our
> environment ("evolution; it just is"). 'Technology' (whatever
> we came out with a definition to be) and our tools are just more of the
> same proccess.
>
> - dylan
>

There is a diffence between being trapped on the back of a wild stallion and grasping the reins in our hands. The horse may yet unseat us, but while we are astride, it will not gallop randomly any more.
>
> Dylan Durst # ddurst@levien.com # ddurst@cats.ucsc.edu # dylan@haptek.com
> http://www.porter.ucsc.edu/~dsd # <-<--<---<----<----|---->---->--->-->->
>
>