Welcome back, Paul --

I hope you've come to stay awhile, as you've had closer contact with Pirsig than most of us and your past comments were insightful. Checking the archives, I note that you unsubscribed in December 2005, which was about the time I came aboard. (Perhaps you can brief us on what you've been up to during the past three years.)

Your treatment of duality is unlike anything I have seen on the MD, and I'm sure I am not alone in wondering what inspired it.

First of all, there is one fundamental insight which, though at
first glance may seem very simple, can actually prove decisive
in our quest for life's meaning.

This insight, if understood and worked with on a daily basis,
can help enormously in purifying our urge to seek, so that it
becomes much more dynamic and capable of reaching its goal.
This insight is the knowledge that our urge to seek -- our
yearning for absolute truth, perfection, healing, love -- does
*not*originate in the part of ourselves we are accustomed to
calling 'I,' although it may *appear* to do so. Our thirst for
the Absolute actually originates from an eternal principle latent
within us. This *eternal* principle is quite distinct from the ego,
and remains in a more or less dormant state in most people.
We call this principle of eternity the 'Rose,' but it is also known
by many other names, such as 'divine spark,' 'spirit-spark atom,'
the Christos, the Pearl of Great Price, the Precious Jewel in the
Lotus, and so on.

Your "eternal principle' reminds me of Meister Eckhart's mystic "little castle in the soul" which "...is at once pure and free, as God himself is, and like him in perfect unity and uniformity." Are you at all familiar with Eckhart, Paul? (I have Raymond Blakney's translation from the German.)

Apart from the Rose, our whole being is a product of nature,
entirely subject to the laws of time and space. That is why,
of ourselves, we can never achieve anything absolute and lasting,
for our creations will always be subject to finiteness and
temporality.

The Rose, on the other hand, as the principle of eternity latent
within us, is subject to the laws of eternity. That is why, if we
want to transcend space and time, if we want to reach the
Absolute, the eternal, we will never be able to do so with any
part of our self as it is at this moment. If we want our thirst for
the Absolute to be satisfied, we will need to begin by
'standing aside,' as regards our ordinary, I-central
consciousness, and allowing the eternal principle latent
within us to develop so that it gradually becomes predominant
in our system.

The goal the is to shift the I-central consciousness from its
position as 'king' in their inner household, and to restore it
to its proper role: that of 'servant' to the growing True Self
within, the Christ-Self, the Rose. Simultaneously, this Rose
within them is given all the sustenance it needs to be able to
grow. If the person cooperates and perseveres in this
process, the Rose increasingly unfolds and blooms; it becomes
an inner source of light and love that sheds its perfume
and radiance over all, for the benefit of all.

This religious mysticism is all very intriguing, although certainly not rooted in the evolutionary hierarchy of Pirsig's thesis. Is it the product of your personal intuition or does it reflect your thoughts on some published source? You have us all mystified. I hope we don't have to wait too long for an explanation of this teaser which appears to be the result of an epiphany of some kind.

Anyway, it's great to have you back, Paul.

Best regards,
Ham

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