David --

In my haste to present the Essentialist view, I may have given your 
composite concept of the individual short shrift.  This wasn't my intention.

[DM]:
> For me, subjectivity is what DQ looks like when you
> mix it with 4 levels of SQ. So its a composite thing,
> that's why it disappears or dis-emerges when you
> run it over. Of course DQ can't be run over!

Actually, your "4-level mix" analogy is quite brilliant in the MoQ context, 
and I believe Pirsig would be pleased with it.  If this levels tetrology is 
considered the fundamental reality, whether euphemistically or 
metaphysically, one must resort to a composite subject made up of (perhaps) 
equal measures of inorganic, organic, cultural, and intellectual "stuff". 
My objection to such an amalgamated man has to do with the principle of the 
concept rather than the analogy used to explain it.

In the first place, the reduction of existential reality to four 
compartmental levels is arbitrary at best and awkward to the point of clumsy 
when compared to the traditional mind/matter construct.  Some might argue 
that "dimensionality" ought to be a level, since time and space are 
necessary for change and form in physical reality.  Others would complain 
that feelings or "emotional sensibility" are not accounted for in the 
four-level paradigm, unless the emotions are encompassed by DQ.

Secondly, it appears to me that Pirsig has traded a duality for a tetrology, 
making it twice as difficult to resolve existence into its prime unity. 
You'll have to admit that four levels contesting for supremacy sets a whole 
new differentiated system on top of reality as we experience it.  (Such 
unnecessary complexity again brings Occam's razor to mind.)

But my major objection to the author's hypothesis is that it completely (and 
I think deliberately) misses the essence of subjectivity, which is 
proprietary awareness.  One can divide the content of conscious awareness 
into inorganic, biological, and social phenomena (whether ordered by 
intellection or not), but awareness itself is none of these things. 
Awareness is knowing or feeling as related to oneself, or what in 
pre-Kantian epistemology was called 'Nous' or 'Psyche'.

When you dismiss the Knower you deny experience, which in Pirsig's formula 
equates to Reality.  To make this work epistemically, consciousness must be 
relegated to objective reality, which is illogical because a subject cannot 
be an object.  Thus, although Pirsig doesn't deny subjectivity, he simply 
denies its proprietary nature -- man's most precious asset.  And that 
sleight-of-hand trick is what makes the MoQ thesis in its present form 
untenable for me.

I hope the above clarifies my position on the 'Individual=Subjective' issue 
without demeaning your analysis of the "official doctrine".  Although I'm a 
heretic in this forum, I suspect there are others here who feel that the 
individuated subject (self-awareness) has been slighted in Pirsig's 
philosophy and are looking for a way to acknowledge it as an existent on its 
own merits.  You may even be one of them.

Thanks, David.
Ham

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