Dear Stephen Rose,
The many books of both John Deely and Jacques Derrida [JD] actually, if one 
gets involved with them, offers opportunities of cross reference and clearer 
expression of certain ideas than any one summary volume. Having the books, 
despite the expense, offers great opportunities for verification and 
counter-verification when one has time to read the full context – usually for 
my slow wittedness two or three times – brings great revelations sometimes to 
what one author may have footnoted in a marginal manner. When S. J. McGrath 
referred to Jacques Derrida’s THE GIFT OF DEATH I gained a great new 
perspective on Heidegger’s view of death as a realistic limit situation in 
language and experience as well as introducing me to deeper aspects of 
Kierkegaard. Jacques Derrida’s original ideas I find 'marginal' [joke, 
irony] but they usually bring with them great insights into other philosophers.¶
----
John Deely, on the other hand, may very well express one of his ideas in a new 
book much better in an old book or simply make it easier to find a reference. 
---
Pace Nietzsche, learning the wholly different ways one needs to read each 
philosopher, though it is frustrating, is always in the end well worth while. 
Nietzsche is both the hardest – because he is very easy and enjoyable to read 
as entertaining literature – but shows each of us how we are irreducibly FIXED 
in our personal/contextual/historical linguistic context – which to find out 
about is really what philosophy is all about just as in Socrates’ dialogic 
method of usually just asking questions [when most serious] or making speeches 
when he is wanting to enthrall others with his command of rhetoric. Enthralment 
obviously works at least just as well as logical conviction. Abinavagupta once 
said the the ecstasy of literature is far superior to even the religious 
ecstasy of the yogi. Nietzsche would have loved to have heard that, but the 
enthusiasm for Abhinavagupta [various spellings] is a late twentieth century 
thing. 
---
Regards,
Gary

From: Stephen C. Rose <stever...@gmail.com>
To: Gary Moore <gottlos752...@yahoo.com> 
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2012 11:32 AM
Subject: Re: [peirce-l] PEIRCE QUOTATION FROM JOHN DEELY LOCATION, now Nietzsche


The French including JD could have been spared a few books by this input. I 
have always credited ER as synonymous with what N means by amor fati which 
isn't exactly stoic. I see these things as a basis for achieving transcendence 
in the immanent frame, at least a bit. 

PS Web tip for those with fairly common names. Including middle initials works 
wonders for effective searches.



ShortFormContent at Blogger



On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 12:10 PM, Gary Moore <gottlos752...@yahoo.com> wrote:

Dear sir,
>  
>Nietzsche rejected the 'eternal return' as irrational in his earliest 
>notebooks attributing his source of the idea from Pythagoras which was a 
>surprise to me. I researched the Stoics as best I could, supposedly the real 
>generators of the idea, but it does not amount to anything important in their 
>surviving fragments – except, taking my clue from Marcus Aurelius and 
>Epictetus, the way things are, regardless of anything else whatsoever, is the 
>most perfect way things can be. If there is change, it is merely a return to 
>the same thing. The world you have is the only prize. 
>¶Nietzsche, though, made it a poetic metaphor, not a real philosophical idea, 
>in that one could say what has happened in your life you cannot change, and 
>therefore can use this myth to say, again no matter what, that it was the best 
>possible of your lives, that what you have lived cannot change therefore 
>accept it enthusiastically as it is your most precious life no matter what it 
>was! Marcus Aurelius essentially says the same thing even to the point of 
>saying that even evil men can have a rightful place in Nature’s plan in which 
>we all are just blades of grass anyway. ¶
> I would say Nietzsche never debunked science per se but rather the 
>self-importance and mystique of the Scientist's 'science'. He always finds a 
>way to attack the person behind the science who puts too much self-importance 
>into his accomplishment.
>--
>Regards, 
>Gary
>
>
>
>From: Stephen C. Rose <stever...@gmail.com>
>To: Gary Moore <gottlos752...@yahoo.com> 
>Cc: "PEIRCE-L@LISTSERV.IUPUI.EDU" <PEIRCE-L@listserv.iupui.edu> 
>Sent: Monday, April 30, 2012 6:59 AM
>Subject: Re: [peirce-l] PEIRCE QUOTATION FROM JOHN DEELY LOCATION, now 
>Nietzsche
>
>
>
>I have read the Heidegger though again I claim no expertise. On the matter of 
>eternal return in my Neitzsche gloss "Abba's Way" in he section on Enigma and 
>Myth I explicitly reject eternal return on grounds that turn out to be 
>Peircean I think. Continuity for example. Progress.   
>I think it would be interesting to see the linkages we have discussed examined 
>in context of integrating an understanding of Peirce that contains his ethical 
>and theological thought. Didn't he himself debunk science sufficiently to 
>suggest that he had a wider view?
>
>
>ShortFormContent at Blogger
>
>
>
>On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 3:08 AM, Gary Moore <gottlos752...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>Dear Sir,
>>MOORE: Now there is a fascinating topic! Nietzsche went mad because of the 
>>fundamental incompleteness of ethics per se . . . This goes enormously well 
>>with a number of possible semiotic investigations [since all investigations 
>>are semiotic investigations by necessity]. But beyond John Poinsot and 
>>Nietzsche’s exact contemporary Charles Sanders Pierce, Nietzsche is the first 
>>to get behind the workings of language itself, and making understanding him 
>>much more difficult, Nietzsche’s very process of the investigation of 
>>language employs his insights into the workings of language which then makes 
>>his writings in a way very much like James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake which 
>>explicitly employs the philosophy of Giambatista  Vico, and undoubtedly 
>>Aquinas, in Joyce’s bête noir  in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. 
>>Joyce writes in the dream consciousness of a drunken character utilizing the 
>>‘real’ chaos of the dream state which everyone from
 Cro magnon to Sigmund Freud thought hide a secret order behind it [people need 
to read Freud directly for themselves because the literal Freud is a real 
scientist and his observations have rational fundaments even if one finally 
rejects some in a fair trial]. It is also a way to connect Peirce through 
Freud, as well as Lacan who never thought he superseded Freud, directly to 
Nietzsche’s literal thought process. It is precisely because Nietzsche lays out 
his thought as exactly as he literally thought it < or as he saw himself 
thinking it > which is necessarily linguistic, that makes him so difficult:: 
Nietzsche is demonstrating language’s sober and natural, not dream or drunken, 
secrets. What Poinsot and Peirce try to do logically and scientifically, 
Nietzsche shows as he lives it self-consciously. If you start chronologically 
from the earliest Nietzsche in the philological articles and notebooks and go 
through to the ‘mad’ letters to Overbeck
 and Burckhardt among others, you see an unbroken whole of an internal 
investigation of language as people actually use it. You get to see the 
trinitarian process of internal discussion I wrote about going on in what 
Nietzsche put on paper. Nothing is sacred.
>>---------------------
>>MOORE: Yes, there were a number of irresolvable [incompleatable] ethical 
>>problems in his life that had to have irrupted, and not necessarily 
>>unconsciously, into his writings. Some of these were irresolvable, “What do 
>>you do when such is the case that nothing can change at all?” This 
>>unchangeability of one’s personal situation is the explicit meaning and 
>>Nietzsche’s intentional employment of the so-called theory of eternal 
>>recurrence, that is, a recurring problem, for instance your death, that 
>>cannot be solved or changed and yet your understanding of it determines the 
>>whole shape of your life. “Eternal recurrence” is not a philosophical or 
>>psychological theory at all but rather an inescapable but continuously 
>>personal problematic of “I am what I am” which Aquinas also dealt with in his 
>>own way in his ethical philosophy. Nietzsche’s “revaluation of values” was, 
>>by nature, ‘incompleatable’, certainly not systematic philosophy,
 and much more like a psychoanalysis of morality as it is found and abused in 
the real world, the meaning behind the meanings twisting and turning in one’s 
present moment conversation.
>>----------
>>MOORE: You need to read Heidegger’s Nietzsche lecture course, especially the 
>>first volume where Heidegger writes of the unconscious river that flows 
>>through every person that determines their character. Heidegger is honest 
>>here by anyone’s standard and the result is shocking, Here, Heidegger was as 
>>honest with himself as Nietzsche was always honest with himself. And then 
>>there is James I. Porter’s Nietzsche and the Philology of the Future which is 
>>as drastic as Heidegger’s but overwhelming scholarly in the conventional 
>>sense at the same time. Porter works through everything point by point. It is 
>>certainly totally relevant to Piercean or Poinsot studies. It literally 
>>attacks the basis of every and any scholarly ‘discipline’ and undermines them 
>>thoroughly. With Porter you have the advantage of his web site with a wide 
>>range of his papers on not only the theory but the practice of Nietzschean 
>>technique:
>>http://sites.google.com/site/jamesivanporter/
>>and 
>>http://sites.google.com/site/jamesivanporter/articles
>>and 
>>http://www.amazon.com/Nietzsche-Philology-Future-James-Porter/dp/0804736987/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1335769347&sr=1-1
>>Regards,
>>Gary Moore
>> 
>From: Stephen C. Rose <stever...@gmail.com>
>>To: Gary Moore <gottlos752...@yahoo.com> 
>>Cc: "PEIRCE-L@LISTSERV.IUPUI.EDU" <PEIRCE-L@listserv.iupui.edu> 
>>Sent: Sunday, April 29, 2012 11:05 AM
>>Subject: Re: [peirce-l] PEIRCE QUOTATION FROM JOHN DEELY LOCATION
>>
>>
>>You mention Nietzsche. My theory is that he went mad in part because his own 
>>values and those he excoriated  left him unable to complete revaluation of 
>>values of which Antichrist was the first of five intended works. I arrived 
>>independently (and pragmatically) at the values I now see as ontological 
>>about 30 years ago and then, after encountering Nietzsche in the 2000s  
>>(actually visiting Sils-Maria), wrote Abba's Way as a potential continuation 
>>of the revaluation. It is only in the last few years I have encountered 
>>Peirce. While I have no expertise regarding Peirce and Neitzsche, I think it 
>>is virtually impossible to come to some comprehensive understanding without 
>>integrating their insights.It was N mainly who created the basis for a notion 
>>of values being ontological within the immanent frame. And Peirce the basis 
>>for a reastic answer to nominalism. Dealing with this momentous achievement 
>>seems to me now to be what's happening. Best, S 
>>
>>
>>ShortFormContent at Blogger
>>
>>
>
>

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