The thought came to me , If elephant can paint without words ,Why can't we?
mando
On Sun, May 11, 2008 at 2:17 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I said Derek's recent response to Mando's citing painters, sculptors.
> hummer-whistlers, dancers, musicians,   as people who are clearly
> harboring thoughts
> without words, is so objectionable it deserves its own posting. Here it
> is.
>
> Derek responded to Mando:
>
> "But those are other ways of expressing thoughts.   The idea of a thought
> minus any form of expressing it seems unthinkable to me.   What would the
> thought
> be about?   One would have no way of saying. So it would be a thought
> without
> content?   Is there such a thing? A thought about nothing - a
> 'nothing-thought'. Perhaps in the higher reaches of Zen or something, but
> I leave that to the
> aficionados."
>
> This is an unacknowledged flat reversal of his assertion earlier:
>
> "How do we know what the thing is until we have found words to describe
> it?
> Are there wordless thoughts? I don't think so."
>
> Right up till his responding to Mando's good observation, Derek had
> maintained that WORDS were necessary for thought. Now, under irresistible
> pressure, he
> changes his position. Yes, there can be thoughts without words if there is
> another way of expressing the thoughts.
>
> Notice he begins with the word 'But' as if to suggest it is MANDO who has
> overlooked something.
>
> Moreover, everything he says in his response assumes the very point at
> issue
> -- which WAS that words are necessary to thought, but which he's now
> changed
> to a "form of expressing it" is necessary. Exactly what he has badly
> failed to
> support is his notion there can be no thought without words. He ridicules
> the
> notion of a writer's having a thought before he finds his words to express
> it
> as "thought without content". No. The writer's thought has loads of
> thought-content. It is a notion. Once he has the notion, the writer's job
> is to find the
> words to convey it.
>
> The writer is not "minus any form of expressing his thought".   He has a
> FORM
> "of expressing it": language. He may struggle for a long time to find the
> right language -- while the idea is already there. Derek continues to
> confuse
> THOUGHT with the EXPRESSION of the thought. Until that happens he would
> call it
> "a thought about nothing - a 'nothing-thought'." Which is again to insist
> that
> the thought and its expression are inseparable. Which can't be right
> because
> we know many thoughts precede our finding the words to express them.
>
> (A throw-away argument: A woman in agony cries, "There's no way to express
> this pain!" Derek says, "Well, if there's no way to express it, it's
> without
> content. Thank goodness we don't have to worry!")
>
> Mando has Derek. Derek's position -- "Are there wordless thoughts? I don't
> think so." -- is untenable. Why does he cling to it?
>
> I submit from this and his long history with us that Derek cannot bring
> himself to accept he's put forth an idea that is mistaken. Similarly
> unacceptable
> is that someone is saying something he might learn from -- which would
> entail
> the implication that someone had an idea he hadn't thought of.   As I've
> said,
> I recognize that generic personality, because I saw flashes of it in
> myself in
> my late teens and early twenties.
>
> I outgrew it, though not graciously, not in public. I don't know what
> Derek
> thinks when he's offline, but I had an unshakeable habit of reviewing in
> solitude arguments I'd "won" -- by which scare-quotes I mean arguments I'd
> lost but
> could not concede at the time. If the other guy had been right, I had an
> uncomfortable but irresistible (and lucky) way of finally admitting it to
> myself --
> in solitude. When I had this happen enough, it began to slow me down in
> party
> confrontations.
>
> The other "mellowing" influence on me was finally achieving something in
> life, and sustaining it. Of course, "achievement" was what got me in
> trouble in
> the first place. I'd always been the class smarty-pants, and in a narrow
> juvenile way I came to feel that was "who I am". So if I made mistakes,
> that was damn
> bad news for my psyche. What I achieved later was finally earning my keep,
> becoming a good "provider" for those who depended on me, which included
> employees. The sustaining was critical, because if you managed it long
> enough you came
> to see you didn't have to be right every single time -- merely enough of
> the
> time. In fact I eventually found that admitting to my colleagues things
> I'd
> blown was a good idea because it allowed them to admit things too, not
> hide
> them.
>
> So here I am, admitting like crazy, still in hopes of influencing.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> **************
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>
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