Re: messiness
Posted by:
drpeternsz (---.hsd1.ca.comcast.net)
Date: July 25, 2021 06:14PM
It does not ollow logic. But it may follow lived experience. Remember, Hugh, that logic is a way of ordering expeience so that we may systematically expand and explicate the past on the basis of present experiences and the projections and inductions consistent with this present occasion. But we exfoliate our experience in our ways than straight logic also and some of those ways may be useful or fun or fruitful in other way. Also, there are other patterns besides the liniear development of Aristotelian logic or even modern logics. We may say metaphorically that each event has a logic of its own, meaning the configurations and patterns are something we can follow and aometimes repeat systematicly [sp]. But there are patterns we can'f repeat which are orderly, patterns with more than one choice available, like some subatomic events which may not predicted in advance.
One of my teachers used to teach me how to generate text about my thesis by having me brainstorm facets of the thesis. The clusters of thoughts resulting became nodes to brainstorm in turn. she would have me follow that pattern until I was exhausted. She called what resulted creative chaos, because there was an order, maybe more than one order, I could logically project on the resulting lists anddiagrams whichitself generated consistent texts which I could them relate to each other in a Kantian way, archetectually, and relate that archetecture to my thesis. But the initial stages and phases af this process had to be messy, include 'bad' ideas, which might need to be dropped, illogicat combination, which sometime provoked me into explicating their antitheses, obverses and converses, logical antagonism appered that needed to be resolve -- a very messy matrix, but a matrix, a womb, nontheless, which gave birth to fruitful concepts I had to midwife.
I raised this queston, not because I dis not have experience with such a creative, messy process (I had), but becauese I hope other members and visiters to the discussion group had had their own expeiences with the messiness of composition, and could describe that experience so I could use their encounter with creative messinesses.
Experience and logic do need to interact sometimes, Hugh. And they can be very fruitful. But experience does not always follow the expected path and it can be useful to just keep our eyes open for what happens beyond our expectations. Thanks for the contribution to our thinking about Beehler's thought on Stevens' poetics. The experiments I mention about, by the was, were brainstorming toward a senio thesis on Ezra Pound's Pisan Cantos in undergraduate school. They did actually result in a mess of good ideas that were not sufficiently, consistently arranged in their last form, in my opinion, to constitute a work that was viable on its own. I view all of my college and univesity papers as works in progress in their latest forms, no matter whether they contained some good ideas in them.
Peter