Hi Dan,

>>> Dan:

>>> What Steve seems to be saying is: dilemma solved... no more need to
>>> talk about it.
>>
>> Steve:
>> That's not what I mean to say.
>
> Dan:
>
> Oh. I did get that impression from reading your posts. I am sorry if I
> was in error.

Steve:
In fact I've been talking about it quite a lot.




>> Dan:
>>>But it isn't solved so much as it is reformulated. And
>>> there is every reason to further explore this line of inquiry, to
>>> build upon it and expand it. But that means letting go of some
>>> preconceived notions of which we are all very fond of, like the notion
>>> of free will.
>>
>>
>> Steve:
>> But I agree that this problem gets reformulated. The question of free
>> will versus determinism gets replaced by the question, to what extent
>> do we follow DQ and to what extent do we follow sq? The one dilemma
>> gets dissolved but is replaced by another puzzler. The difference in
>> our views may be the extent to which we still see a concept that is
>> similar enough to the traditional notion of free in the re-formulation
>> to warrant maintaining the old SOM term in talking about what we want
>> to talk about without being misunderstood.
>
> Dan:
>
> Possibly. This is tricky stuff to be sure. I am unsure though if your
> reformulation works; it seems to be mutually exclusive in regards to
> the extent one follows Dynamic Quality or to who's behavior is
> controlled by static quality patterns.

Steve:
I'm not proposing any new personal reformulation. I'm talking about
Pirsig's reformulation which I think you are right to say does not
offer two mutually exclusive options.


Dan:
> Within the framework of the MOQ, it is not an exclusive, either/or
> proposition but rather both. From a static quality, conventional point
> of view, both free will and determinism are seen as correct. From a
> Dynamic point of view, both free will and determinism are illusions,
> the result of a dysfunctional narrative in which we have come to
> believe. .


Steve:
I still don't follow you on what these two different perspectives are.
I never claim to have anything other than a conventional perspective.


>
>>Steve:
>> What I thinks tend to go on with the way the term free will gets used
>> in these parts is that it gets slipped in the back door as the extent
>> to which behavior is a response to DQ, but then it reverts back to the
>> SOM notion of free will once inside. So I think it would be better to
>> drop the term from the MOQ vocabulary and maintain it only as an SOM
>> term worth criticizing.
>
> Dan:
> Like subjects and objects, free will and determinism are useful
> intellectual patterns of quality as long as we understand the
> shorthand meaning behind them. To criticize and condemn the notion of
> free will is to ignore a good deal of what RMP has to say in LILA,
> does it not?


Steve:
I'm not one of those that sets out to "improve" the MOQ or make my
mark on it. I see the MOQ as the philosophy of RMP, and that is what I
am trying to articulate. I'm not talking about ignoring anything
Pirsig said on the topic. I'm explaining my understanding of what
Pirsig has to say about it. All I'm talking about is condemning the
SOM concepts of free will and determinism in the way that Pirsig
does--as the result of asking a question with a bad premise.

Pirsig in Lila:
"It isn't Lila that has quality; it's Quality that has Lila.  Nothing
can have Quality.  To have something is to possess it, and to possess
something is to dominate it.  Nothing dominates Quality.  If there's
domination and possession involved, it's Quality that dominates and
possesses Lila.  She's created by it.  She's a cohesion of changing static
patterns of this Quality.  There isn't any more to her than that.  The
words Lila uses, the thoughts she thinks, the values she holds, are the end
product of three and a half billion years of the history of the entire
world.  She's a kind of jungle of evolutionary patterns of value.  She
doesn't know how they all got there any more than any jungle knows how it
came to be."

Steve:
In the MOQ, all we are and in fact experience itself is Value. We are
not determined by values. We are not "free to choose" our values. We
ARE our values. "Choosing" is the manifestation of what we ARE as sets
of values with the capacity to respond to DQ. In the MOQ, it is the
fact of such choices (value patterns) from which "the will" or the
self is inferred rather than the other way around. In contrast, the
SOM notion of free will is of an autonomous subject with metaphysical
primacy. dmb keeps saying that if we drop the notion of a choosing
subject (though he does say he drops the notion of a metaphysical
soul), then morality goes out window. I see that as about the most
un-MOQish thing one could possibly say. The MOQ is about asserting an
understanding of the world as a moral order through _denying_ the
subject-object picture. Instead of free will as the possession of a
self, Pirsig retools the notion of freedom (note that in the quote you
posted he shifts from "free will" to "freedom") as the capacity to
respond to DQ. And in LC he says that you are going to talk about free
will in MOQ terms as this capacity, then you may as well say that
rocks and trees and atoms have free will. But let's not slip the SOM
version of a freely choosing subject with metaphysical primacy in
through the back door here. Pirsig's notion of freedom associated with
DQ is very different from traditional SOM free will that is suppose to
distinguish humanity from the animals.

Best,
Steve
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