Exam IV
1.)
What is the basic difference
between a game and a contest? Why is Wattsâs adaptation of the traditional
Indian view put in terms of the one instead of the other?
2.)
In chapter one (but it is also
found in chapter three), what does Watts suggest has become the âoppositeâ but
equally devastating viewpoint of that which takes God to be the benevolent
overseer of our lives? (In some ways, he hints, this viewpoint is just the inevitable
flip-side to the belief in a benevolent Father who is a discrete and separate
power from us.)
a.
That God is a malevolent
overseer who has deliberately put us in a lifeless and lonely cosmos.
b.
That the wrath of a hot God has
died away to give us the cold chill of a blind, fragmented, lonely world.
c.
That the world is more alive
than we are.
d.
That the universe is an
illusion.
3.)
Briefly describeâwithout using Wattsâs words or examplesâWattsâs
account as to how cause and effect is more a way we are trained to perceive
things than it is the way things occur.
4.)
Give two of Wattsâs examples of
the ironic consequences in turning black-and-white into black-vs.white.
5.)
Explain the nature of the
double bind or self-contradictory command Watts discusses in chapter three.
6.)
Why is it, according to Watts,
that it is still too much to say that the antsâ behavior is conditioned by or
is a result of their greater context/environment?
7.)
Briefly give the basic argument
Watts makes in chapter four for considering intelligence to be a cosmic rather
than merely human quality.
8.)
How does Watts argue, near the
end of chapter four, that we produce the universe just as much as it produces
us? (Hint: look at end of the part
dealing with rainbows and rocks.)
9.)
In chapter five, Watts goes
through a series of steps wherein the self seems more and more to become
zombie-like until at last it breaks. Can you recount this series of steps
(without simply borrowing Wattsâs words)?
10.)What is Wattsâs point in
chapter five about contemplation and action?
EXTRA CREDIT:
11.)Watts makes a point about practices such as meditation, regression
therapy, etc. that may seem rather surprising. What is it he says about
these and why does he say he regards them in this way?
12.)At the end of chapter four, right after talking about rainbows and
rocks, Watts shyly alludes to a notion of time (and one, it might be mentioned,
that has been considered by a couple of quantum physicists as well) that he
quickly draws back from so as not to startle the reader too much. What is this
notion of time?