[Platt rolls out a quote]
"These patterns can't by themselves perceive or adjust to Dynamic Quality. Only
a living being can do that." (Lila, 13) 

[Arlo]
Gee. You want to instigate another dialogue you are incapable of responding to
already? Cool.

Answer me the following.

Was there ever a time nothing existed that could respond to DQ? Or at every
point in time was there something that could?

What responded to DQ before "man"?

What is another "living being" that once could respond to DQ but no longer can?
Or is no longer in existence?

Give me an example from our vast anthropological and historical warehouse of
knowledge, just ONE example, of a "living being" other than man responding to
DQ? Say in the entire Cretaceous period (a span of 70 million years, certainly
some "living being" was able to respond to DQ during that entire time? Give me
an example, or even take a guess!)

Yes, let's take the Cretaceous as a good starting point. 70 million years. No
"man". A plethora of "living beings". So, was ANY of them able to respond to
DQ? How? What were they doing (in response to DQ) that other "living beings"
today are no longer able to do?

Its obvious Pirsig misspoke here (he is not infallible), since in other places
he makes it clear that responding to DQ is something even atoms and amoebas can
do. (Reflect on the fact that Pirsig himself says the Quality of ZMM is the DQ
of LILA. Then reread the amoeba/acid passage.)

What Pirsig SHOULD have said is "only a living being can respond to DQ with a
BIOLOGICAL repertoire of possibility", then go on to say "only SOME living
beings of sufficient complexity can respond to DQ with a SOCIAL repertoire of
possibility", then maybe even "only MAN can respond to DQ with an INTELLECTUAL
repertoire of possibility (and possibly some higher mammals)".

Then he'd be on firm ground.

Indeed, he says so much in ZMM. 

"An amoeba, placed on a plate of water with a drip of dilute sulfuric acid
placed nearby, will pull away from the acid (I think). If it could speak the
amoeba, without knowing anything about sulfuric acid, could say, ‘This
environment has poor quality.’ [HERE] If it had a nervous system it would act
in a much more complex way to overcome the poor quality of the environment. It
would seek analogues, that is, images and symbols from its previous experience,
to define the unpleasant nature of its new environment and thus
‘understand’ it. In our highly complex organic state we advanced organisms
respond to our environment with an invention of many marvelous analogues." (ZMM)

The amoeba responds to DQ with a very limited "set of analogues" (repertoire of
responses). More complex organisms are able to respond socially. Even more
complex, intellectually.

He talks about the "hot stove" as an example of a person responding to DQ. This
is the SAME as the amoeba responding to nearby acid. The initial reaction to
pull away is both responding BIOLOGICALLY to DQ. The human can later develop an
"understanding", in other words can later also respond INTELLCTUALLY (founded
on his assimilation of social patterns).

Here Pirsig is on firm ground.

Just considering your quote alone, he is not. And neither are you. Because when
you take that little quote and really think about it, it simply can't hold
water. 

Unless you think you can answer any of my above questions.

I know you can't. And here's where you prove me right. 

(I'll remind everyone that I've asked you these questions several times before
(in the archives), and every time you demonstrated only that you are incapable
of answering, giving only distractive rhetoric (just like you did about the
distinctions between "chance" and "DQ".) And yet you drumbeat that quote. Sad.
Such intellectual dishonesty.)






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