Hello Ham,

I appreciate you critique and perspective.  It is my objective to provide my 
concepts and perspective on Pirsig's writings and to learn from you all that 
share in a similar journey. It not my goal to simply restate what Pirsig has 
written, but to add twists that may not have been considered.  I think that 
most folks that write are very auditory, but applying art and charts often open 
up a different understanding to a concept.  I greatly appreciate your post as 
it helps me to stretch my mind and understanding.

You stated, "Bruce's brainstorm is to make "static" apply to three Quality 
"states" which 
he defines as stasis, declination, and improvement.  His idea contradicts 
the MoQ in several significant respects."   My attempt here is not make 
"Static" apply to these three states, but to say that beside "Static Patterns", 
things either improve or decline. IMO, there is only one  true static pattern 
and that is total disorder or a return to "MU".  "Static Patterns of Quality" 
have to consume in order to survive. In addition, something that is seen as a 
static pattern such as the biological level has to "improve" in order to 
survive as it must gain new defences.  The point here is really even static 
patterns are not static, they are either improving or declining.

The next point here, that seems to be in flux within this community, is to 
determine if Dynamic "Quality" only moves items in the direction of improvement 
or is also responsible for declination as well.  I have struggled with this and 
try to make it both, but just can't quite make it fit.  I think the problem is 
that Pirsig waffles on this in Lila and in other writings.  In chapter 11 he 
clearly states that it is only the movement to improvement and that Dynamic 
Quality is not structure, but is not chaotic. He goes on to say that Dynamic 
Quality goes against the laws of nature.  Thus, it appears to me that the laws 
of nature prove that there is a declination to disorder that is outside of 
Dynamic Quality.  That said, is there Dynamic Quality and Dynamic Disorder as 
well?  Some would have me believe that Dynamic Quality is nothing more than a 
big hammer that strikes shit every now and then to see what happens.  Every 
time that it strikes things they automatically get better organized. Ugh, yeah 
that is what made all of this out of nothing.  The thing is there is a force 
that drives things to improvement and I see that as Dynamic Quality.  Sometimes 
things are destoyed so that something better can be created, but I would think 
that Dynamic Quality also uses the destructive qualities of nature to 
deconstruct so that construction for "betterness" can occur.  As you stated, 
"stasis" and "movement" are a inherent to Quality itself... I would say, as I 
did above, even "stasis" is moving.  The only "true stasis" is absolute 
disorder and that could only occur if items are left alone without Dynamic 
Quality.

I would say, yes, this is my concept mixed with Pirsig and can either be 
accepted or not... :-)

Once again, I truely appreciate your input and critique as I attempt to order 
my thoughts and ideas.  I hope my input challenges others to new thoughts and 
ideas as well.

Thanks,

Bruce
PS. Yeah, I saw that I misspelled declination in the subject line after I 
posted it. Not quality.

Ham Said:
> Greetings, Bruce and All --
>
> I hope you will give some consideration to the voice of a renegade here,
> because this approach to Quality is a step in the wrong direction. I say
> this not only because the basic premise is flawed, as I will attempt to
> show, but because it is clear to me that what Bruce is proposing would not
> have Mr. Pirsig's endorsement.
>
> The MoQ postulated by Pirsig is based on Quality as the fundamental Reality.
> Any "subset" of Quality is either a "dynamic" level or a "static" pattern.
> The levels evolve to a "better" (i.e., higher moral) state, whereas the
> patterns remain fixed over time. This paradigm is theorized to encompass
> all aspects and processes of the universe, at least insofar as they are
> experienced.
>
> Bruce's brainstorm is to make "static" apply to three Quality "states" which
> he defines as stasis, declination, and improvement. His idea contradicts
> the MoQ in several significant respects.
>
> First of all, the term "static" means "lack of movement, animation, or
> progression," so it applies only to the state defined as "stasis". Clearly
> a decline or an "improvement" in Quality is not a static state. Moreover,
> "declination" (misspelled in the header) is not included in Pirsig's
> paradigm. I'm not aware of any mention of Quality regressing or degrading
> to a chaotic state in the author's thesis. Also, "improvement" is already
> accounted for as the directional "movement" of Dynamic Quality. In short,
> Bruce's three proposed "static states" are neither new to the MoQ scheme nor
> correctly named.
>
> That would be problematic enough for Pirsig, but in Bruce's analytical
> breakdown of this revised scheme he commits a semantic error which changes
> the whole context of his argument. In truth, he's not really addressing
> Quality as the "subject" of this analysis but as a modifier of the
> nominative "states". Consider the headings:
>
> 1. Static Quality [the quality of STASIS]
> 2. Dynamic Quality of IMPROVEMENT
> 3. Dynamic Quality of DECLINATION
>
> By using the three proposed states "of Quality" as the titles pf his
> proposition, Bruce has made the "state" the modus operandi instead of
> Quality itself. For example, he says "Static Quality attempts to maintain
> the status over time;" "[Improvement's] mission is to improve Quality over
> time;" "[Declination's] mission is to diminish or decay Quality over time."
> In all three cases it is the "force" or power of a particular state which
> effects or produces the Quality change. I'm sure that Pirsig would point
> out that "stasis" and "movement" are inherent in Quality itself, that the
> resulting conditions or "states" are patterns of Quality.
>
> I don't mean to be critical of Bruce's hypothesis, as it is well conceived
> and could conceivably stand on its own as another perspective of existential
> reality. Instead of a hierarchy of Quality levels, we could reduce the
> dynamics of the universe to Stasis, Dissolution, and Consolidation. (After
> all, Hegel is remembered for having reduced all process to Thesis,
> Antithesis, and Synthesis.)
>
> The point of my critique is that this is Bruce Underwood's concept, not
> Robert Pirsig's Quality thesis.
>
> Respectfully submitted,
> Ham
>
 Bruce Said:
> Hello Folks,
>
> I have been wrestling with this idea for a while and thought I would throw
> it out here for comments and banter. I hope to do better about responding,
> but it is hard to find the time to respond as I would like to.
>
> The idea here started off by thinking of what "Static" means and applying
> that to three areas: Stasis, declination and improvement. As many of you
> have seen, I think that Chaos is the state where something has declined from
> organization to an absolute state of disorganization and is thus the
> opposite of Quality. However,energy still exists, but in a disorganized
> state. Dynamic Quality will continue to affect the energy. I see things as
> energy either moving towards improved organization or moving towards chaotic
> disorder. Below is a link to an image that depicts what I have been thinking
> about. You may want to think of it as life as you view it or most any item
> that is static.
>
> http://www.thinnerself.com/quality_of_improvement.gif
>
> I was thinking about this and came to think of "Quality" as being in one of
> three states “Quality” states:
>
> Static Quality:
> Static Quality attempts to maintain the status over time. Static Quality’s
> position is to neither improve nor decay, but to maintain status quo.
> However, from an energy stand point, Static Quality must consume energy in
> order to maintain its position to not be consumed by Dynamic Quality of
> Chaos or Dynamic Quality of Improvement. By default then it would appear
> that Static Quality is a destructive force by nature as it consumes energy
> to remain static.
>
> Dynamic Quality of improvement:
> Its mission is to improve Quality over time by destruction and construction
> and to establish ratchet points of Quality. By nature, it consumes energy to
> move forward towards in a positive direction over time.
>
> Dynamic Quality of declination:
> It mission is to diminishes or decay Quality over time. Items move towards
> chaos and are being consumed in destruction. The only state of "true Static
> Quality" is a state of total disorganization of energy into a chaotic state.
>
> Thanks for your thoughts and responses,
>
> Bruce

                                          
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