Greetings Joe and Mark --

Mark said:
Value in evolution could be depicted in the paradigm of survival.
In my opinion, Evolution is not the levels, but what creates the
levels.  We do not consider the modern version of the horse to BE
evolution, because it is static.

Joe had said:
I am trying to understand a value in evolution.

So am I, Joe. What evidence do we have that value evolves? Has the value of the universe, or man, increased in quality over the generations? Is there more value in the world today than existed in the neolithic period? I think not.

Value is man's sense of virtue, worth or excellence. It is derived from the uncreated Source from which man is separated as a newborn individual, and it is objectified in his experience of a relational universe. Thus, the amount of value realized by mankind at any time in history is limited to the space/time perception of the human organism. Unless the value-sensibility of that organism is somehow enhanced in the process of evolution, the value perceived remains unchanged.

Joe goes on to say:
The value between defineable and indefinable is negation.
Evolution is not negation.  Existence is logically perceived in
different formats, DQ/SQ.  I do not want to view DQ as
individuality, but rather as common to sentient individuals.

I agree in principle with this analysis, although the details are somewhat murky.

Perceived difference of any kind is a result of negation. The fact that Joe's awareness differs from Mark's is a consequence of the individuation that makes Joe a different person (i.e., sensible agent) than Mark. Individuation is an attribute of all beings in existence, since Beingness itself is negated from Sensibility to create being-aware. It is this primary difference that distinguishes being from nothingness, subjects from objects, self from other, static from dynamic, space from time, and the definable from the indefinable. The process of evolution is not negation until it is broken down (intellectually) into changed segments or differentiated levels.

Also, inasmuch as DQ is for all intents and purposes Pirsig's Primary Source, Joe does not view it as "individualized" but as a common "property" of sentient individuals.

Mark says:
I believe that Value between what one can define and what one
cannot (definable/indefinable) is the same as the value between
boundaries and "no boundaries".  The definable is confined and
the indefinable is not.  Personal valuation of these two states,
depends on how one uses them.

As I see it, DQ is not individuality but that from which individuality
comes.  Take for example the experience of a roller coaster.  Each
ride is an individual experience, but Experience cannot be confined.
We can say that Experience is common to us individuals, but
individual experiences are not.  One is foundational, the other is
ornamental.

If DQ is taken to be the Absolute Source (Essence, in my ontology), then it is that from which everything comes. However, differentiation is not an attribute of the Source per se, but is actuated by a negation of the Source. Again, existence is a contingency of being and nothing. So a thing does not exist until it is differentiated from nothingness. Where does this nothingness come from? Since Essence is absolute 'IS-ness', nothingness logically must be negated by Essence.

Thank you, gentlemen, for providing an opportunity to demonstrate negation as a fundamental principle.

Essentially speaking,
Ham

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