Greetings, Steve --

My understanding of metaphysics is that it breaks down
into ontology and cosmology (though I think Pirsig uses
the term metaphysics very loosely to mean philosophy).
I'm not "trying to understand these issues from within
SOM" as ontology or cosmology, but I do think that
epistemology always takes a dististinction between
knower and known for granted. Epistemology does not
need to be SOM in taking the subject-object ontological
distinction as fundamental and given by reality, but I think
it is always "SOE" (subject-object epistemology) in
taking the subject-object distinction as a useful one for
the purpose of talking about how we may be justified
in believing what we believe. ...

You make some good points here, Steve, and your comments demonstrate that most of the confusion is contextual rather than conceptual. For example, if "metaphysics" is concerned with the fundamental nature of reality, it seeks an answer to the question: Are there principles applying to everything that is real, to all that is? Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy asks it this way: "If we abstract from the particular nature of existing things that which distinguishes them from each other, what can we know about them merely in virtue of the fact that they exist?"

What Pirsig abstracts from things is "quality", and he posits it as the fundamental reality. But quality exists only as a "realization", which presupposes a cognitive agent. Thus, the reality Pirsig addresses is "existential", not fundamental, and the MoQ is not really a metaphysics but a euphemistic description of the relational world.

[Steve to DMB]:
I don't know how else to talk about knowledge without
talking about "we" and "it" as ...I think you always do when
you talk about epistemology even with your "pure experience". ...
I do understand the radical empiricist's point that the believer
need not be thought of as having any ontological status
outside or prior to experience, and I agree, but once we
start talking about epistemological issues like "what is good
to believe" we are always accepting the hypothesis of the
existence of a believer at least for the sake of argument.

My point, exactly. Epistemology (i.e., how we know) assumes a knower in a relational world. It deals only with the relational aspects of existence, not metaphysical reality. By the same token, while "cosmology" (theories about the origin and dynamics of the universe) and "ontology" (theories about the nature of "being") are valid branches of philosophical study, they are "fundamental" only to the extent that they relate to an ultimate source that transcends space/time, self/other existence.

[DMB]:
As you might recall, James says that the first great pitfall
from which radical empiricism will save us is a fake idea
of the relation between knower and known. His doctrine
of pure experience says knower and known, subject and
object, are secondary concepts derived from experience
and not the ontological ground of experience... (ZAMM 239)

I maintain that "radical empiricism" is a ruse that only pretends to dismiss S/O experience, while alluding to it all the time. There is no distinction between empirical knowledge and the SOM (which Pirsig is alleged to have invented), nor is ultimate reality divided into levels of Quality that evolve toward "betterness". Evolution is process in time, which should be our first clue that Quality doesn't define metaphysical reality.

Unfortunately, since semantic terms take precedence over concepts in philosophical discussions, you and I will be reprimanded for "failing to understand" the MoQ instead of complimented for helping to clarify the issues at hand.

Essentially yours,
Ham


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