Arlo quoted Northrop's "The Meeting of East and West":
... "The true relation between intuitive, aesthetic, and religious feeling and 
scientific doctrine is one of mutual supplementation."

dmb says:
I'm enjoying these passages, Arlo. Thanks.
There is a passage in ZAMM wherein Pirsig tells us that the classic-romantic 
distinction is directly taken from Northrop's distinction between the theoretic 
and the aesthetic dimensions. And as we see in Northrop's pithy line, the 
overall idea is to acknowledge the importance of both, to exclude neither. As 
the central metaphor suggests, the artful mechanic brings both sides to the 
task. 
Orpheus was a Dionysian reformer. He loved the wild side. His mother was one of 
the nine Muses and he fell in love with a wood nymph (Hippie chick) but he was 
also the son of Apollo, the god of light and order. His instrument, the lyre, 
is geometrically and mathematically constructed and yet the rivers, trees and 
wild animals are just as enchanted by his music as is the human heart. So 
Pirsig - I mean, Orpheus - represents a fusion of the Apollonian and the 
Dionysian spirits. Dynamic Quality and static quality together. That's when 
you're firing on all cylinders.                                         
Moq_Discuss mailing list
Listinfo, Unsubscribing etc.
http://lists.moqtalk.org/listinfo.cgi/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org
Archives:
http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/
http://moq.org/md/archives.html

Reply via email to