Hithere said:
Has anyone got anything on this?
I have a comment or two I can offer in the context of your replies to rebinator.
Hithere said:
rebinator said:
Since one of Larson's main proponents on the web seems to be David Wilcock, I would not expect to find too much sympathy for him or his Reciprocal System here.
The discussion regarding Wilcock has no immediate relevance to my eyes here...
Nor to mine. Is this Dewey B. Larson the same Larson that died in 1990? If so, why should anything Wilcock, Elkins or anyone else say about Larson or his work automatically and negatively bias an assessment of the RS theory or the state of Larson's 'noodle'?
Speaking pragmatically, I wonder since when is someone's narrative about someone's elses narrative about their conceptions of their perceptions more important than simply taking the time to understand what is being said and extending the theory into a realm of social relevance to estimate its 'cash value', so to speak?
Hithere said:
I myself have read Structure of the Physical Universe, and Beyond Space and Time, and enjoyed the latter the most.
Thank you for the tip, after rereading this post I will put them on my reading list.
FWIW, here is a link to Larson's collective works: _http://www.reciprocalsystem.com/dbl/
And for a general overview which I enjoyed the most:
A bird’s eye view of the theory and its ramifications:
_http://www.reciprocalsystem.com/nlst/index.htm
A Philosophical Postlude:
_http://www.reciprocalsystem.com/nlst/nlst17.htm
Hithere said:
Now, that being said, many cranks throughout history have had a positive effect on the sum of human knowledge. Conversely, many models once held to be definitive, have run into observed phenomena which require a reevaluation of hypotheses, but only after a lot of challenging data (cranks tend to be among the first to discard established theory in the face thereof). Take Newtonian mechanics for instance.
This is the interesting part of it. I today interpret your post as you found Larson's theories to be interesting and maybe with some merit to them.
I also find Larson's ideas interesting. Not sure about merit yet. I'm a wee bit disappointed in a lack of information on the observer's role and influence in that system. Without knowing his conjectures about observer effects, when he makes a statement like this:
A progression is continuous. There is no change in the motion at any time. A succession of jumps is
discontinuous. Nothing happens for a time, then a jump occurs, and so on.
Source:
Questioner: Frank
_http://www.reciprocalsystem.com/dbl/cor/880524franlar.htm
Answerer: Dewey B. Larson
_http://www.reciprocalsystem.com/dbl/cor/880603larfran.htm
...I can't tell whether he thinks he is talking about reality or a particular characteristic of mechanistic perception (that inertia of perception that allows noticing of change only when aggregates of physical pattern motions reach our liminal threshold).
If nothing else, there may be another way of seeing value in the theory. As Mae Wan-Ho says: "There is another deeper reason why new theories in general are important for science: they direct us to new observations which may very well not be made otherwise..."