(urth) Father Inire Theory cont.
Gerry Quinn
gerryq at indigo.ie
Mon Dec 13 10:57:04 PST 2010
From: "Lee Berman" <severiansola at hotmail.com>
>>Gerry Quinn who seems to have decided that his calculations of
>>"probabiity" and "likelihood" of rightness
>>are general truths and not based on personal feelings.
>
>>Gerry Quinn- I don't say anything of the sort, as you well know. I do say
>>that there *are* criteria that
>>can be used to gauge the likelihood of rightness of different
>>interpretations.
>
> Gerry, your statement above denies then immediately affirms my words. If
> there are are "criteria that..
> gauge the likelihood of rightness.." which transcend your own opinions
> then you are arguing that there
> are lupine universal truths.
Which there are. Some things in Wolfe's stories are ambiguous, others are
rather certain. Triskele is a dog, or a dog-shaped aquastor. It is very
unlikely that he is a cat. It is even more certain that he is not an
elephant. An interpretation that requires Triskele to be an elephant has a
high likelihood of being wrong.
Of course I could be wrong in thinking this is so certain that it can be
described as a Lupine universal truth. Even universal truths can be
accessed only through human understanding. But the concept is hardly
incredible.
> If you do not believe in universal lupine truths I will recommend a change
> in wording of your statement to:
>
> "There are criteria that I use to gauge what feels like the likelihood of
> rightness to me".
>
> Phrased that way, I have no problem at all. I think recognizing one's own
> limitations is admirable and elevating
> one's own opinions to the status of generally acknowledged truth is
> annoying. That's all I mean to say.
As you can see, I have no need for the words you so thoughtfully offer to
place in my mouth. There are demonstrably generally acknowledged truths,
and I believe there are generally acknowledged means of judging the
likelihood of purported truths. There is no need for me to assert that my
opinions are in line with such truths - I can simply state my opinions and
the reasoning behind them, and see whether others agree or disagree. If
they disagree, I can consider why, and change my opinion if I find the
reasons convincing. Othes can do the same. I make no claims of special
insight. My opinions should be judged on their own merit or otherwise. The
same goes for yours.
>>You are claiming in essence that all readings are equally valid.
>
> No, I am pointing out that not all readings are equally valid to YOU. And
> I am suggesting there are no ways
> of evaluating ideas that are universally valid. What seems like a good
> theory to you will seem bad to others
> and what seems bad to you will seem good to others. I have not seen the
> slightest evidence of any two contributors
> here who evaluate interpretions in lockstep with each other. Have you?
> Thus, what we have is what you recoil in
> horror from: collection of private mythologies. Why deny it?
You say: "What seems like a good theory to you will seem bad to others and
what seems bad to you will seem good to others."
This *is* either the claim that all readings are equally valid, or the
near-equivalent claim that the notion of validity is either meaningless or
inaccessible to us.
I reject this claim, in either form. There are better interpretations and
worse interpretations, and there are ways of telling the difference.
- Gerry Quinn
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