Hi All

Reading through many of the posts over the last few days caused me 
to have an interesting thought regarding reality, DQ etc. 
What popped into my mind was Zeno's tale of Achilles and the 
Tortoise. Given a head start Achilles can never quite catch up with 
the Tortoise because whenever Achilles arrives at the place where 
the Tortoise was, it's not there anymore. 
This is the same as with Intellect(Achilles) and DQ or the Quality 
Event (tortoise). Whenever we become aware of the event it's gone - 
our Intellectual experience of DQ seems to be always of a past 
event. But, from this, another interestng thought occurs - the moment 
of realization is also a Quality Event and this is also the NOW. 
So from this it would seem that there exists at least 2 NOW 
moments. The Quality Event which causes and the Quality Event 
which is caused. So which is 'real' and which is not. Answer - they 
both are! 
To call one real and the other unreal is not only incorrect but a non-
sense. 
Both the Now and Reality are contextual as they only make sense 
within a particular context. The Now/Reality of the Intellect is just as 
'real' as the Now/Reality of any other Quality Event. This goes for 
Inorganic reality, Biological Reality and Social Reality. Each of these 
realities occurs in a different context and as such constitutes a 
different experienced reality. What it is that does the experiencing is 
also contextual. This, I believe, is the key to the passage from Pirsig 
to Ant:

> "In the MOQ, experience is pure Quality which gives rise to the 
> creation of intellectual patterns which in turn produce a division 
> between subjects and objects. Among these patterns is the 
> intellectual pattern that says 'there is an external world of things 
> out there which are independent of intellectual patterns'. That is 
> one of the highest quality intellectual patterns there is. And in this 
> highest quality intellectual pattern, external objects appear 
> historically before intellectual patterns...  But this highest quality 
> intellectual pattern itself comes before the external world, not after, 
> as is commonly presumed by the materialist." (Pirsig in letter to 
> Anthony McWatt)

Context makes sense of the above, not a recourse to some 
absolutist reality or non-reality. Past, present and future are equally 
real because they are experienced Intellectually NOW. Our 
memories  of 'past' events and our projections into the 'future' are all 
part of a contextual Intellectual NOW. If past events and experiences 
had been different then this would have given rise, via the path of 
Quality Events to a different now.
External, material reality is only external in the context of that 
material reality - but nonetheless its Quality Events are every bit as 
'real' as the Quality Events we each 'personally' experience. Whether 
we are or are not aware of a meteor hitting the other side of the moon 
does not detract from the occurrence of that particular Quality Event.  
Its 'reality' should not need to be in question.

I agree with Keith that the division [of 'reality'] is arbitrary although 
again this is also contextual, but I don't agree that it follows from 
there that 'Reality' is fundamentally mystic. It's not fundamentally 
_anything_ because it is _everything_ and to state that something is 
fundamentally X is to do no more than put an intellectual label on it - 
and worse than that to put an absolute label on it. If those Quality 
Events which are 'in the past' and which we experience through our 
own moments of QE/Experience/Revelation/Realization are labelled 
'Mystic' then what does this say about reality? As far as I can see, to 
label 'reality' as anything but a contextual interpretation or experience 
denies the idea of many truths and attempts to confine the dynamic 
within a static prison. Mystic and Rational are irrelevant labels. They 
just cart along a lot of unnecessary baggage.

A world exists, it is created as it is experienced. It is only the 
context within which it is experienced that causes it to appear 
different and it is only the context that is relevant to the experience.

Having said all that, where does this lead us. Does this mean that 
atoms and suns, genes, viruses and bacteria, cells and bodies, 
governments and universities, people and animals and trees don't 
exist? If you're careless enough to sit on the hot stove is the pain 
real? Damn right it is! No amount of 'mystic' or 'rational'  
interpretations of reality and postulating that there is no real reality - 
only our interpretation - alters the fact that you're airborne within 
milliseconds. The MOQ provides a metaphysical context within 
which to understand our experiences and explain how our 
experiences relate to the what goes on 'around' us. The MOQ won't 
get a rocket to the Moon, find a cure for AIDS, stop wars, pay the 
rent or put a meal on the table - unless your name happens to be 
Pirsig. It might provide an explanation as to a best approach to these 
things. It is also here that I think that Pirsig has scored when he 
posits that all activities, experiences etc. are moral events. One of 
the things that the MOQ does (or could do) is to provide a possible 
means to bridge the Fact/Value problem - how to get 'ought' from 'is' 
without ridiculously convoluted explanations. If all activities are moral 
activities then all statements are moral statements, which means 
that there is no logical or semantic impediment to a valid moral 
system of thought and ethical dilemmas - such as the Naturalistic 
Fallacy -  can be finally buried. The only problem that exists now is 
to show that the MOQ _does_  provide this framework and that it is 
valid. 
Dead easy - Eh?


Horse




MOQ Online - http://www.moq.org

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