dmb said:
Yes, Krimel, DQ has a negative face. Chaos and confusion and degeneracy
ensues when things are too dynamic. ...This negative aspect of DQ has been
part of the MOQ since the day it was published. Sitting on hot stoves is no
picnic, for example.

Krimel replied:
Unbelievably, dmb and I seem to have found some common ground. Before it
turns to quicksand, who will join us in admitting that DQ is not always
"Good" or even "good"?

dmb says:
If DQ is not always good and does have a negative face, we can get at the
idea of "betterness". All these things go together, after all, simply
because betterness depends of knowing what's good and what's not so good. As
in the hot stove example, the negative quality of the situation is
immediately felt and there is immediate movement to address that negative
situation. In that sense, the movement toward betterness is very basic and
spontaneous. It is an uncalculated response based on the immediately felt
quality of the situation.

[Krimel]
Ok, we get "betterness" but we get "worserness" too. Whether we run away
from worserness or towards betterness is a chicken and egg kind of question.
The example of the hot stove is the example of reflex action. It is a purely
hardwired biological reflex action; in which certain pain receptors bypass
any cognitive processing at all. The input connects directly to the output.
We jerk away from pain. 

What you describe below seems hardly more sophisticated. These are
experiences that all animals have and are necessary for their survival. Even
single cell organisms have tropisms where they are attracted to light or
repelled from acids. Experiences of even the most primitive sort have
valence. They are positive or negative. Often we know or perceive this
valence instinctively. This valence in mammals takes the form of emotion.
Emotion enters into our awareness at a very primitive level of
consciousness. In fact you could say that this emotional valence, the sense
of attraction or repulsion precedes either the sense of subjects and objects
or any awareness of static or dynamic. That sense of Quality as Pirsig calls
it is unconscious and primitive in evolutionary terms.

I am puzzled that you think much can be made from this kind of experiences.
Isn't it after all the higher level processes of cognition that define us as
human? They serve as checks and balances on the more primitive emotional
responses. The capacity for rational thought seems to arise from the fact
that these instant impressions and pre-intellectual responses are very often
wrong and the ability to override them is a serious benefit.

Certainly they come before cognitive assessment but without cognitive
assessment we might as well be reptiles. Cognitive assessment is what allows
us to avoid sitting on hot stoves in the first place.

[dmb said]
It's useful to think of James's description of "pure" experience here. He
says it is a, "plain, unqualified actuality, a simple THAT, as yet
undifferentiated into thing and thought". Compare that to Pirsig's language
in the hot stove example, where he says any person will verify that, "he is
in an undeniably low-quality situation: that the VALUE of his predicament is
negative. This low quality is not just a vague, woolly-headed,
crypto-religious, metaphysical abstraction. It is an EXPERIENCE. It is not a
judgment about experience. It is not a description of experience. The value
itself is an experience. ...This value is more immediate, more directly
sensed that any 'self' or any 'object' to which it might be later assigned.
It is more REAL than the stove. ...It is the primary empirical reality from
which such things as stoves and heat and oaths and self are later
intellectually constructed." Now both of these descriptions portray the
cutting edge of experience as pre-intellectual, as prior to cognitive
assessments, and yet the overall quality of the situation is certain,
positive or negative as the case my be, and spontaneously guides our
response in such a way that it can be justified in conceptual terms after
the fact. And guys like Pirsig and Dewey talk about the quality of the whole
"situation" because the distinction between the subject's burning butt and
the temperature of the metal object which is said to be the cause of that
burning has not yet entered into it. This example, of course, is meant to
show how DQ is at the front edge of all experience. It's what you know in
direct everyday experience, before you even know that you know it.
Paradoxically, this immediate sense of quality exists even at the front edge
of thought itself. Ideas have an immediately felt quality even before we can
put it in conceptual terms, before we can find static, post hoc reasons to
justify that quality. 

Thanks.

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