Hi,
I was caught up in the concept of emergence, so I turned to the
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (http://plato.stanford.edu).
I got stuck reading about British Emergentism.  This has probably
already been discussed before in this forum because it appears to
be similar to MoQ, in some ways.  Take the following two summary
paragraphs (some parts removed):

1.4 Summary of British Emergentism

Let us sum up our discussion of the British Emergentists. Common to all these 
theorists is a layered view of nature. The world is divided into discrete 
strata, with fundamental physics as the base level, followed by chemistry, 
biology, and psychology (and possibly sociology). To each level corresponds a 
special science, and the levels are arranged in terms of increasing 
organizational complexity of matter, the bottom level being the limiting case 
investigated by the fundamental science of physics. 

Crucial to an account of emergence, however, is a view concerning 
the relationship of such levels. On this score, we find that there are, in 
fact, two rather different pictures of emergence, one represented by Mill and 
Broad, and the other represented by Alexander. For Mill and Broad, emergence 
involves the appearance of primitive high-level causal interactions that are 
additional to those of the more fundamental levels. Alexander, by contrast, is 
committed only to the appearance of novel qualities and associated, high-level 
causal patterns which cannot be directly expressed in terms of the more 
fundamental entities and principles. But these patterns do not supplement, much 
less supersede, the fundamental interactions. Rather, they are macroscopic 
patterns running through those very microscopic interactions. 
Emergent qualities are something truly new under the sun, but the world's 
fundamental dynamics remain unchanged.

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/properties-emergent/

Does Pirsig discuss this philosophy?

Mark
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