Hello everyone

On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 5:56 PM, David Harding <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Dan,
>
>>> So it's relative?
>>
>> Dan:
>> Not sure what you mean... relative to what? Or relative to who? You
>> are not suggesting enlightenment is a 'thing' apart from oneself, a
>> thing to be sought after... are you? I would say there is no
>> enlightenment apart from the self, which is itself a static construct
>> to keep stable the overwhelming force of Dynamic Quality. But that is
>> just me saying so.
>
> I would say that we(sq) exist and that's better than nothing. :-)

Dan:
We exist but a short while. We are born, flourish, and then pass away.
This is the nature of all static patterns. And yes this is better than
nothing... I would agree.

>
>>> Not by words.  One can however describe how to experience it. A finger
>>> points to the moon..
>>
>> Dan:
>> If this is so, what is there to experience? I guess that's what I'm
>> asking... isn't saying there is such a thing as enlightenment somewhat
>> akin to saying there is such a thing as God?
>
> I don't really think so, but with a stretch you could say so..
>
> Enlightenment(DQ) is something you experience.  If you want to equate DQ with 
> God then that's fine and it's not incompatible with the MOQ IMHO. But 
> personally I find bringing a monotheistic religious term such as God into the 
> equation confuses things and doesn't really bring any further clarity.  That 
> said, I find a 'belief' in anything, including God, to not be compatible with 
> the MOQ.  Quality isn't something you believe in, it's something you 
> experience.

Dan:
I don't want to equate Dynamic Quality with God. I was asking you a
question and you've seemed to work out an answer acceptable to both of
us.

>
>>>> David H:
>>>> I think enlightenment (or perfection) (or Dynamic Quality) does exist
>>>> and is not merely a mistaken belief.  But there is more to life than
>>>> just Dynamic Quality.  This is what the MOQ says and this is where it
>>>> differs from Zen Buddhism.
>>>>
>>>> Dan:
>>>> We know Dynamic Quality by what it is not... would you agree?
>>>
>>> Yes. Intellectually we do. But we also 'know' it by experience -
>>> before these words capture it and thus point out what it is not.
>>
>> Dan:
>> Good point, yes. I would say too that experience and Dynamic Quality
>> are synonymous so to experience reality is to know Dynamic Quality.
>> But when we label experience and package it into intellectual terms
>> like enlightenment and yes even the term Dynamic Quality we are moving
>> away from reality we seek to know and not toward it.
>
> Yes. But is this to say we don't 'experience' static quality?

Dan:
Static quality comes after experience.

>  I think we do. I think that we could say direct experience is Dynamic 
> Quality but then even that is probably saying too much :-).  I think the MOQ 
> would say that you can break experience into DQ and static quality.  But even 
> the recognition of this fact is sq.. So DQ, the best thing to say is, 'Not 
> this, not that.'

Dan:
The MOQ says Dynamic Quality/experience comes first. Remember the hot
stove? The response comes first and the oaths come later.

>
>>>>> David H:
>>>>> Well, not as much disagreement here (relative to the amount of time I put 
>>>>> off responding) as I was expecting Dan.  The only point of contention in 
>>>>> this post was whether you think enlightenment exists or is just a 
>>>>> mistaken belief..
>>>>
>>>> Dan:
>>>> If a person believes in enlightenment I would say good for them.
>>>> Personally, I do not share that belief. But I would not go so far as
>>>> to say it is a mistaken belief. It is like those people who profess to
>>>> having a belief in God... I am not about to discount such beliefs
>>>> though I do not share it.
>>>
>>> I too think that enlightenment isn't something you believe in, but I
>>> do think that it is something you experience.
>>
>> Dan:
>> Then it is. Whatever you think 'it' is, or want 'it' to be, it is. I
>> have no argument with this.
>
> Well, I don't see how it's whatever one thinks it is.

Dan:
I know. That's what this discussion has been about... isn't it?

> But it's good that you have no argument..

Dan:
It is a wonderful thing to think there is enlightenment awaiting one
at the end of diligent and profound practice. That lends gumption to
the pursuit. So I have no argument with anyone who seeks to better
themselves.

>
>>
>>>
>>>> On the other hand, I know what I know but I have no way of sharing
>>>> that knowledge other than through my interpretation of analogies like
>>>> the gate-less gate. That analogy suggests (to me) that for those who
>>>> know there is no enlightenment... so what is it that the seekers seek
>>>> if not themselves?
>>>
>>> I think the gateless gate analogy is about the moment of enlightenment
>>> itself. It's that moment when you realize that the thing which you've
>>> been striving for was there all along.
>>
>> Dan:
>> And so everything you've been seeking is in the mirror staring back at
>> you. Then what is it you're seeking if you already have it?
>
> The instant there is a 'you' or a 'me' to do the seeking then we are no 
> longer DQ and are once again separate from it and thus once again seek 
> enlightenment (DQ).  We can't capture enlightenment or DQ.  It isn't 
> something we can 'have' as we are only sq. But we are(thanks to being 
> alive!), able to respond to DQ. And we are(thanks to enlightenment), able to 
> wake up to this fact.
>
> There is a great distinction here which may clear this up - between 180 
> degrees enlightenment and 360 degrees enlightenment.  180 degrees 
> enlightenment is the 'realisation' that DQ exists and is the source of all 
> things. This is something we can 'have'.  But then there is 360 degrees 
> enlightenment and this is the application of this realisation back to 
> everyday life. This is something which continues forever and in this regard 
> enlightenment is not something we can 'have' but we can experience each and 
> every day.

Dan:
I've heard this distinction made and yes it may profit some to follow
these guidelines. I have no quarrel with this. Yet (I would say) there
is no forever and there is nothing to hold onto. It all slips away
like water we try to grasp in our clenched fist. Even the notion of
enlightenment slips away as all such notions are temporal.

>
>
>> Thank you,
>>
>> Dan
>>
>> PS Been reading the AHP transcripts (thank you Ant and Andre) and came
>> across this excerpt which might (or might not) be pertinent to our
>> discussion... what do you think?:
>>
>> Question: 'In other words do you see a monistic "It" as static or Dynamic?'
>>
>> Pirsig: 'If I am intellectualising, that's one thing. If I am
>> experiencing… getting into a problem here… [that's another thing].
>> There's the Quality of Zen and there's the Quality of the MOQ and they
>> are not the same thing any more because the MOQ is an intellectual
>> static pattern and already it has been polluted plenty to get into
>> that pattern and all of a sudden there's… you're taking sides and
>> things, you're picking and choosing you know and in Zen you're not
>> supposed to do that: you don't pick and choose.'
>>
>> 'I'll give you that koan, that's a good one: "The Way is not difficult
>> except to avoid picking and choosing" that's a famous koan and the
>> Quality that's Quality is arrived at not by picking and choosing.'
>
> Yes. This is the contradiction that to understand the MOQ you need to forget 
> it. Dynamic Quality is not an idea, it's an experience.

Dan:

'It' is not an experience... it is experience. This is important to
note. And I would say in order to understand the MOQ we need a
foundation on which to build, like the foundation of jazz that started
this discussion.

On the other hand, we arrive at an understanding of  Quality by
avoiding intellectual pitfalls of picking and choosing and that
includes the MOQ. I would suggest it is best not to conflate the MOQ
with Quality. The MOQ is a metaphysics, a collection of intellectual
quality patterns. Quality as discussed in ZMM (or Dynamic Quality as
discussed in Lila) remains undefined. We know it when we see it but
when we begin describing it, 'it' goes away.

I would say a number of contributors get tripped up here and end up
believing the MOQ is reality. It is not. It is a description of
reality and as such provisional. It changes when something better
comes along.

>
> Thank-you Dan,

You're welcome, and thank you too, David

Dan

http://www.danglover.com
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