On Wed. Mar 16, 2011 at 2:56 AM, "Dan Glover" <[email protected]> wrote:

[Ham, previously}:
I know, of course, that [Pirsig] also equated Quality with Experience;
but as I have always considered experience to be the patterns, which
are subsequent to the primary (source), the logic of the premise
"Quality = Experience" still eludes me.

[Dan]:

Maybe this quote will help:

"Any person of any philosophic persuasion who sits on a hot stove
will verify without any intellectual argument whatsoever that he is in
an undeniably low-quality situation: that the value of his predicament
is negative. This low quality is not just a vague, wooly-headed,
crypto-religious, metaphysical abstraction. It is an experience. It is
not a judgment about an experience. It is not a description of
experience. The value itself is an experience. As such it is completely
predictable. It is verifiable by anyone who cares to do so. It is
reproducible. Of all experience it is the least ambiguous, least
mistakable there is. ..."

Yes, I'm familiar with this quote. Pirsig is talking about the reaction to pain, which neurologists call "proprioceptive trauma" -- the body's protective mechanism against injury. Leaping off the stove is an autonomic reflex of the stimulated leg muscles, while the "oath" uttered by the victim is a learned habit. Nothing in this simplistic example has any relevance to "quality" for a non-Pirsigian.

"The reason for hammering on this so hard is that we have a culturally
inherited blind spot here. Our culture teaches us to think it is the
hot stove that directly causes the oaths. It teaches that the low
values are a property of the person uttering the oaths.

"Not so. The value is between the stove and the oaths. Between the
subject and the object lies the value. This value is more immediate,
more directly sensed than any "self" or any "object" to which it might
be later assigned. It is more real than the stove. Whether the stove
is the cause of the low quality or whether possibly something else is
the cause is not yet absolutely certain.  But that the quality is low is
absolutely certain. ...." [LILA]

"Between the subject and the object lies the value." That much is true. Alas, however, the author refuses to acknowledge this division, insisting that subjects and objects are "patterns of Quality". How can a pattern of Quality be aware that it is Quality unless what he calls the "pattern" is an autonomous sensible subject?

Dan comments:

Value is the primary empirical reality from which our world is
intellectually contructed. Value is more immediate, more directly
sensed than any subject or object to which it might be intellectually
assigned later on. Sitting on a hot stove provides direct empirical
evidence of experience equaling (low) quality.

If the subject is " intellectually ssigned later on," how can he feel the pain, let alone evaluate it qualitatively? Again I maintain that a cognizant subject must have aesthetic or moral sensibility to discriminate between greater and lesser values. "Man is the measure of all things," declared Protagoras. Unless you deny this, you will have to concede that it is the individual subject himself who determines the relative value of experienced phenomona.

[Ham]:
By what faculty does [Pirsig] propose that inanimate objects sense
Quality?

[Dan]:
In the framework of the MOQ, "object" is a convenient shorthand for
inorganic/biological patterns of value. So your question, from the MOQ
point of view, becomes: by what faculty do inorganic patterns of value
sense Quality?

Since value and Quality are synonymous, inorganic patterns of value
are Quality. They don't sense anything intellectually. Rather, they prefer
certain preconditions, like iron filings prefer preconditions set up by a
magnetic field or the growth of crystals prefer conditions set up by
super-saturated liquids.

Dan, do you realize that what you are postulating is nothing more than primitive Animism?

In the framework of the MOQ, we cannot possess value. Value
possesses us. Human beings are seen as a colllection of patterns
of value plus undefined Dynamic Quality. So, taking the MOQ
into account, to say we desire to possess the value of what we
sense seems to be a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature
of experience.

It is a radical view, I suppose. Yet, we know that we are drawn to Value, that it represents what we desire in life; indeed, one might say we live for Value ("high Quality"). Valued objects are the 'desiderata' of human beings. We construct these objects by consuming their value (experientially) for ourselves. In other words, we bring being into existence out of sensible Value. Doesn't this ontogeny explain the dynamics of Value in a more systematic way than the 'Experience = Quality' equation?

[Ham]:
I maintain that value-sensibility is the "core self" (sometimes called
'the soul') of man.  Desire is the individual's realization that spiritual
fufillment does not lie within himself but in the "otherness" from which
he was created and to which he bears witness. It is the Value of this
other that he seeks to possess; but he can only do this provisionally --
by differentiating Value experientially into the "many and many things"
that constitute his being in the world.

[Dan]:
In the framework of the MOQ, there are no supernatural entities like
spirit and soul. The MOQ is empirical. "The many" refers to static
quality patterns of value which are defined and discrete.  Experience
(or awareness if you prefer) refers to Dynamic Quality which is both
undefined and infinitely definable.

If Quality is definable only in its "infinite" state, I submit that the reason we can't define it "discretely" is that it we experience it as the finite beingness which provisionally satisfies our (spiritual) need for the infinite Source of our existence. Yes, that's a "supernatural entity", but the essential one from which all values are derived and without which we would not be talking. Philosophy has always been a quest for this "ultimate reality". Unfortunately, the MoQ as I understand it does not resolve this quest.

Thanks for giving me this opportunity to express my essentialist views. I appreciate your understanding of Pirsig and your work with 'LILA's Child'. And I would only hope that my insights might enhance the MoQ thesis rather than detract from it.

Best wishes,
Ham

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