Balder:
Let me try to work through this here. This is a really spot-on question, in my opinion.
Let me just think aloud to help myself work methodically here...
1. The W-C lattice is a grid. Running vertically along its left side are the stages of development from lowest (archaic) to highest (super-integral). (Why no colors? It may be that Combs was not ready for the amber, orange, green, teal, etc. logic.) Running horizontally across the top are the major states (gross/nature, subtle/deity, causal/formless, and non-dual).
2. The nodes on the grid represent the developmental level at which a given state of experience is being interpreted.
3. The confusion that led to the discovery of the W-C lattice was, as you pointed out:
* there are stages of development at the very top that appear to have similar characteristics to the highest states. And this originally led to a graphic that stacked the highest states on top of the highest stages, leading to a non-sensical graphic.
4. The reason it did not work was there there is an abundance of evidence showing that people can access the highest states of consciousness and then interpret those states and behave in ways that are clearly not developmentally evolved. How can you put a spiritually adept lout with piss-poor morals and ethnocentric self conception at the highest levels of human development? You can't. And yet, you cannot deny their extremely sublime spiritual states either.
5. So, the Rosetta Stone was the distinction between states and stages.
6. And the important point is that the highest stages (3rd Tier indigo, violet, ultra violet and clear light) are virtually indistinguishable in their properties from the highest states.
7. So, where does the pre/trans fallacy come in?
8. The pre-trans fallacy as Wilber uses it today says something like this: in any developmental sequence (pre-rational to rational to trans-rational, or subconscious to self-conscious to superconscious, or pre-personal to person to trans-personal) development that is truly "pre-" can get confused with development that is truly "trans-" and vice versa.
9. So, on the W-C Lattice, if we focus on the vertical line of developmental stages, at any given level there are numerous lines of development running through (e.g. cognitive, emotional, aesthetic, etc.) It makes no sense to speak of a level of development without specifying the line that we are referring to.
10. Somewhere just around magenta or red, development moves from pre-rational to rational on the cognitive line, pre-personal to personal on the self line, etc. and then somewhere north of green development moves to a trans- level on the various lines. Pre- to trans- runs from down to up in an altitude sense.
11. So, if we mistake a pre-rational level of development as a trans-rational level of development on the cognitive line, we have applied the pre/trans fallacy.
12. OK, that seems clear. So, what role does the horizontal state axis play?
13. As far as I can tell, it plays no role. Gross, subtle, causal, and non-dual are states that are available to everyone who is alive. It makes no sense to refer to pre- or trans- states for the simple fact that states .... do not develop in the first place. What develops is the interpretation of them!
14. So, in summary, the pre/trans fallacy is a warning about how we interpret .... the level of interpretation applied by another. It does not warn us to correctly interpret states - however we interpret a state is exactly indicative of the stage and fits perfectly and accurate right onto the W-C Lattice. A person cannot misinterpret their own state - however they interpret their state is how they interpret their state.
But ... when it comes to the way we as 3rd persons interpret the 1st person interpretation of another applied to a state experienced by the other, we can commit a pre/trans fallacy.
15. If a person reports a gross, subtle, causal or non-dual experience and explains to us what it means, and then we improperly interpret their explanation as indicative of a 2nd Tier level of consciousness when in fact it was a 1st Tier interpretation, we have committed a pre/trans fallacy.
And similarly, if a person interprets any state experience they had and we then improperly interpret their interpretation as indicating a 1st Tier level of consciousness when in fact it was a 2nd or 3rd Tier interpretation level that provided the explanation, we have committed a pre/trans fallacy.
I think the mix up may be that early on, Wilber often used the pre-rational/rational/post- or trans- rational example to discuss the pre/trans fallacy and that is suggestive of states that are non-verbal. The problem with this is that, from a cognitive development standpoint it makes sense to speak of trans-rational, and also, from a state standpoint makes sense to speak of trans-rational. This can lead us astray as we try to figure out whether the pre- and trans- is referring to stage development or non-verbal states.
I think this has been reconciled by pointing out that the pre/trans fallacy properly applies to the issue of whether a 3rd party has accurately identified the level of development that is indicated by another's first person interpretation of a state experience.
Having said that, I have a nagging concern.
Just how often is it that we meet people who even accept the notion of adult developmental states in the first place? How can the pre/trans fallacy be an issue when for it to be committed in reference to an adult, one has to speak in terms of 1st and 2nd Tier development? I cannot even make such a mistake when I don't recognize any development levels in an adult to begin with.
It may be time to amend the pre/trans fallacy, correctly identify it for what it is (a failure to properly interpret the development level indicated by a state interpretation of another), and generate a new fallacy which is the state/stage fallacy.
This state/stage fallacy involves the simple confusion of a state experience of a non-verbal kind with an interpretation as a level of development.
Does it really make any sense to speak of pre- anything subtle experiences? Or trans- anything non-dual state experiences?
If I report a non-dual state experience, and someone says it was simply a re-experiencing of symbiotic, sensorimotor consciousness (a level/stage), they have confused a state with a stage. And similarly, if I say that my one month old child is enlightened because his awareness is residing in non-duality, I have confused a stage with a state.
So to summarize again: I believe that the Wilber-Combs Lattice is reconciled with the way Wilber is now expressing the pre/trans fallacy. However, I believe he has reigned in the pre/trans fallacy so tightly that it can only be applied when someone is referencing levels of stage development. And this is generally not done (unless we are talking about children vs. adults).
The original problem was the confusion of states and stages and this was what the pre/trans fallacy was originally attempting to highlight. So, it is high time that Wilber enunciates a new and improved pre/trans fallacy in terms of states/stages to deal with the very real and constant problem we have of either:
a. dismissing the reports of states experienced and then interpreted by high levels of consciousness as "just" low-level stage reports, or
b. elevating the reports of states experienced and then interpreted by low levels of consciousness as high-level stage reports.
Am glad you brought this up Balder. This states and stages issue is something that lies at the core of Integral and until we get this stuff clear ...
Please tell me if I dropped any frames in the analysis.