Hi Dan,

>> The researchers are measuring the inorganic patterns of light.  They 
>> interpret those measurements intellectually by firstly claiming there is a 
>> thing such an inorganic pattern of light which they measure.  It is static 
>> value which creates the existence of static patterns.
> 
> Dan:
> I think it might be better to say (in the MOQ) that it is Dynamic
> Quality (experience) that creates and leaves in 'its' wake static
> quality patterns. Ideas arise from experience; matter (inorganic
> patterns) arises from ideas (intellectual patterns). Now, if the
> researchers were using the MOQ as a metaphysical framework I might
> partially agree. I find this annotation from Lila's Child quite
> interesting. Please see what you make of it:
> 
> Annotation 102. I see today more clearly than when I wrote the SODV
> paper that the key to integrating the MOQ with science is through
> philosophic idealism, which says that objects grow out of ideas, not
> the other way around. Since at the most primary level the observed and
> the observer are both intellectual assumptions, the paradoxes of
> quantum theory have to be conflicts of intellectual assumption, not
> just conflicts of what is observed. Except in the case of Dynamic
> Quality, what is observed always involves an interaction with ideas
> that have been previously assumed. So the problem is not, “How can
> observed nature be so screwy?” but can also be, “What is wrong with
> our most primitive assumptions that our set of ideas called ‘nature’
> are turning out to be this screwy?” Getting back to physics, this
> question becomes, “Why should we assume that the slit experiment
> should perform differently than it does?” I think that if researched
> it would be found that buried in the data of the slit experiment is an
> assumption that light exists and follows consistent laws independently
> of any human experience. If so, the MOQ would say that although in the
> past this seems to have been the highest quality assumption one can
> make about light, there may be a higher quality one that contradicts
> it. This is pretty much what the physicists are saying but the MOQ
> provides a sound metaphysical structure within which they can say it.
> [Robert Pirsig, Lila's Child]
> 
> Dan comments:
> So if a higher quality assumption is contrary to inorganic patterns
> known as light existing independently of experience, what are the
> researchers measuring who are measuring the speed of light? Are they
> measuring light or a representation of light? Are they not working
> with an underlying assumption that light exists independently of
> experience?

Before I start here I must thank you - I wouldn't understand the MOQ nearly as 
well as I do were it not for Lila's Child.  You were able to get some very 
illuminating comments out of Pirsig.  There's certain comments of his which 
I've read hundreds of times over trying to grasp their meaning and the above is 
a great example of one such illuminating Pirsig comment.

So to begin, I'm not sure how much you have read about the slit experiment, but 
it's amazing how much better a values metaphysics can explain the results of 
the experiment than can a SOM. It's almost like the perfect scientific 
experiment in which it shows how values exist and 'objects' don't.  The results 
of the experiment clearly demonstrate that it's what is valued is more 
fundamental than any scientific matter such 'light'.    So to answer your 
question, they are indeed working with that underlying assumption.  And this 
experiment shows that there is a better alternative - one where values are seen 
as fundamental and not matter.  

But this is beyond my original argument, I was claiming earlier that from a 
static quality perspective we always treat static quality as if it exists.  It 
has an entirely different value from Dynamic Quality.  Static quality cannot 
'understand' Dynamic Quality.  It never gets it right.  Static quality doesn't 
'know' Dynamic Quality.  Yet here we are, using words and treating things as if 
they exist. This is static quality.  The world of everyday ordinary language.  

>>> Dan:
>>> We do what needs to be done. :)
>> 
>> Mmmm. What about we apply the experience of DQ back to our everyday life.
> 
> Dan:
> Experience and Dynamic Quality are seen as synonymous in the MOQ. But
> we tend to bury the newness of experience under the static quality
> patterns we have grown used to and assume them to be our reality.
> 
> By waking up to the moment we do what needs to be done with the
> fullness of our attention without thinking about what we will be doing
> next or what we will be having for dinner later. There is nothing to
> apply back to our everyday life. We are experience.

Experience and Dynamic Quality are seen as synonymous in the MOQ because it is 
a static intellectual construction. Dynamic Quality isn't experience or value 
or anything else defined.  Your words above, and my words now, are they not 
static?  Dynamic Quality is not your definition above, nor is it these words I 
am writing now.  Dynamic Quality isn't any thing.  You're right, we do bury the 
newness of experience under static quality patterns.  We can't help but do 
this. We've both just done it.  We are using words and these are, by 
definition, not Dynamic Quality.   This is the situation, and we both agree 
with it.  Further, we both agree that in order to once again experience Dynamic 
Quality we need to 'wake up'.  But how do we do this? How do we 'wake up'? I 
think you know my answer, but what is yours?

>>> Dan:
>>> If something cannot be better it implies (to me) that it is exclusively 
>>> static.
>> 
>> I agree. Static quality (without DQ) does not get better.  But, it is Only 
>> static quality which can get better (as a result of responding to DQ). This 
>> is the key to our disagreement. The answer, I think, lies here. Can DQ get 
>> better? I think the answer to this rhetorical question is obvious.  DQ is 
>> not any thing so it cannot get any better. This is why I say that once sq is 
>> mastered it no longer exists. Because if you have mastered something, how 
>> can you get any better at it? This is what you ask me and I agree with your 
>> point that you cannot get any better after you have mastered something.  I 
>> seem to be saying that once something is mastered that's it for all time, 
>> for ever and ever. (how depressing).  But of course, we both know, that's 
>> not how it works.  No matter how 'enlightened' one may be, one cannot help 
>> but do things and act in a certain way and VALUE things.  This is 
>> unavoidable.  Static quality is unavoidable. Static quality will always ruin 
>> our Zen no matter how
>>  enlightened and in line with DQ we may be..
> 
> Dan:
> So you are saying there is no enlightenment, or at least that's what it seems.

After thinking about this some more - yes, indeed from a static point of view I 
am saying that.  From a static point of view, there is nothing but static 
quality.  We both know that static quality 'represents' Dynamic Quality, but 
static quality doesn't know that.  One only really 'knows' that if one 'knows' 
what Dynamic Quality is, which of course, is not static quality.  So from a 
static point of view, there really is no such thing as enlightenment.  I have 
heard that Pirsig's Zen teacher Katagiri Roshi went so far as to call Zen 
Bullshit.   It's this emphasis on the wordless and non-static which Zen is all 
about and yes - the MOQ agrees with it.  It agrees that ultimately - Zen is 
bullshit.  But so is the MOQ, and so is everything.  Yet here we are, talking 
about it.  So where the MOQ disagrees with Zen is that it says these words 
which we use to describe things are still important and so we might as well 
make them as good as we can.

So, in that sprit, what I'm saying is that yes, you're right,  Enlightenment 
doesn't exist.  In fact, ultimately, nothing exists.  But here we are, talking 
about existence.  So, because we're talking about existence and using words we 
might as well use these words as best we can.  So the best I can do is use 
words by their dictionary definition, and by its definition enlightenment(DQ) 
does exist.

>> Yes, I don't deny people can be bad. Of course they can. Of course people 
>> make mistakes. Of course people still mostly just look out for themselves. 
>> But if you look out at the history of the world, things have gotten better.  
>> But this is not really vital to my point and was a rhetorical question so 
>> I'm happy to leave it at that..
> 
> Dan:
> I wonder though just what it is that has gotten better in the history
> of the world? Our oceans are dying. We are at present experiencing one
> of the greatest mass extinction events in the history of the world. We
> are consuming far more resources than are sustainable leaving our
> descendants to do without commodities we all take for granted...
> peanut butter, honey, chocolate, fresh fruit and vegetables, sea
> food... these might all vanish except for the very wealthy able to
> afford such 'luxuries.'
> 
> I suspect (due to our 'success' as a species) we are kicking the
> biological rungs out of the ladder of evolution and without that
> stable support the upper levels will collapse. I guess I don't share
> your optimism that things have gotten better. I think that is an
> illusion we tell ourselves to rationalize the destruction we have
> wrought.

Okay, I don't deny any of that. But things have still gotten better. From the 
beginning of the universe with no intelligent life, to biological life on 
earth, right up to intelligent life over the last few thousand years. These 
things are better and improvements of one level over another.   The MOQ is good 
in how it shows us Metaphysically, as you say, that we need those lower levels 
to support our upper ones.  It shows this Metaphysically.  Not just for a few 
people, but for all things everywhere.  Imagine a world where most people saw 
this metaphysically..  Now there's an improvement. But the creation of the MOQ 
is more than a start!

>>> David H:
>>> I think it is because people, like all things, are static quality.  It
>>> is only static quality which can get better.  Any and all static
>>> quality can always be better.
>>> 
>>> Dan:
>>> I unsure if I agree.
>>> 
>>> "Static quality patterns are dead when they are exclusive, when they
>>> demand blind obedience and suppress Dynamic change." [Lila]
>>> 
>>> If we feel we've mastered something, that it is perfect, then we
>>> inadvertently suppress any Dynamic response to change... to become
>>> better. How can one improve on perfection? If something is perfect,
>>> doesn't it demand blind obedience?
>> 
>> Yes, this relates to what I said above where static quality (without DQ) 
>> does not get any better.  But I still maintain that it is only static 
>> quality which can better.  Any static quality you can think of can get 
>> better. That is the nature of static quality. Static quality is pain.  To 
>> put it in Buddhist terms, static quality is suffering.  We treat static 
>> quality as if it is reality and it isn't and this brings us suffering.
>> But without that suffering, things don't get better. We need static quality 
>> to make those latches. Once those latches exist we need to suffer with them 
>> by mastering them, to break them up and reveal the DQ which is there all 
>> along.  This is not blind obedience.  There, hidden in the most ritualistic 
>> static quality, the Dynamic Quality (and freedom) lies.
>> 
>> As Pirsig writes in Lila:
>> 
>> "You free yourself from static patterns by putting them to sleep. That is, 
>> you master them with such proficiency that they become an unconscious part 
>> of your nature. You get so used to them you completely forget them and they 
>> are gone. There in the centre of the most monotonous boredom of static 
>> ritualistic patterns the Dynamic freedom is found."
> 
> Dan:
> Yes I think we've been over this before. He is speaking here of the
> ritualistic nature of zen monasteries and I have no disagreement with
> this passage.
> 
> However, I don't think he means we have to forget everything to master
> something. And it is a bit of a misnomer to think of static quality as
> suffering. If not for suffering there would be no reason to improve
> one's lot. Good food, good drink, these are high quality patterns that
> do not entail suffering. A safe place to live, enough money to provide
> for one's family, these are high quality patterns as well.
> 
> I would say suffering is a kind of response to Dynamic Quality.
> Without suffering there would be no reason to better our lot.

Good food - what food? Good drink - what drink? A safe place to live - what 
place? Enough money - how much is that? Yes, we can define these things 
statically and to be sure, they might be very good.  But soon enough, if we 
hold onto these things for long enough, they too will become not so good.  This 
is the natural order of things.   Things get old and become not so good and 
eventually die.  This is why I say things have gotten better over time.  
Because things have gotten better over time and older patterns which haven't 
responded as much to Dynamic Quality - have gotten old. We can constantly 
update and indeed we do update our definitions of what is good food and what is 
a safe place to live but if we do not update these static things by responding 
to Dynamic Quality then they will get old and so not so good.  This is why I 
say that static quality is suffering.  If we hold onto it, and indeed we cannot 
help but do this, we suffer.  Static quality is suffering.  No matter how good 
a pattern is, it will end up being suffering.   So how do we avoid suffering? 
We can avoid it by constantly doing something else.  This is our traditional 
view of freedom in the West.  If your suffering on some such a pattern, you 
ought to be free to go do something else! 

But there's also another type of freedom, more common in the East.  That is, 
you free yourself by mastering those patterns so that they no longer exist. 
People in the West often shriek at the way folks in the East can work hard long 
hours without complaint.  'How can they do that?!'  How do they tolerate it?!'  
But as Pirsig points out the difference isn't genetic it's a cultural one where 
they figured out how to include static and Dynamic Quality without 
contradiction.

"Oriental social cohesiveness and ability to work long hours without complaint, 
was not a genetic characteristic, but a cultural one. It resulted for the 
working out , centuries ago, of the problem of Dharma, and the way in which it 
combines freedom and ritual. In the West progress seems to proceed by a series 
of spasms of alternating freedom and ritual. A revolution of freedom against 
old rituals produces a new order. Which soon becomes another old ritual for the 
next generation to revolt against, and on and on. 

In the Orient, there are plenty of conflicts, but historically, this particular 
kind of conflict has not been as dominant. Phaedrus thought that may it is 
because Dharma includes both static and Dynamic Quality without contradiction. "

This is how we truly free ourselves from the suffering of static quality; by 
confronting the static quality, suffering through the static quality and 
finally mastering the static quality by finding the Dynamic Quality which was 
hidden there behind the suffering all along.

>>> David H.
>>> You can always think of a way some such a static quality can be
>>> better. But alternatively, can Dynamic Quality get any better? That's
>>> like a Zen Koan, but being that it isn't any thing,
>>> 
>>> Dan:
>>> Dynamic Quality isn't any 'thing' but it does exist.
>> 
>> Yes, exactly, and so does static quality.  :-)
> 
> Dan:
> Okay... but isn't it better to think of Dynamic Quality as not this,
> not that? We understand static quality by what it is. We understand
> Dynamic Quality by what it is not. So to ask if Dynamic Quality can
> get better is to assume it is some 'thing' that we can fully define.
> 'It' is not. But 'it' exists nevertheless.

Yes, I don't disagree with any of this.  This was and is my point.  Dynamic 
Quality cannot get any better.  To ask the question treats it as if it is some 
thing which can get better.  And indeed, it does exist.


>> I think we certainly see things very similarly.  But I think there is great 
>> value in saying that enlightenment exists and that it can be achieved 
>> through the mastery of static quality.   The MOQ shows beautifully 
>> metaphysically how static quality and Dynamic Quality can live harmoniously 
>> together..
> 
> Dan:
> There is also great value in assuming that light exists and can be
> measured independently of the observer. But there may be a higher
> quality assumption that contradicts it. If a person finds value in
> saying enlightenment exists, that is a high quality assumption. But
> there may be a higher quality assumption that contradicts it.

Indeed. And there is a higher quality assumption.  I've said to you that 
ultimately you're right.  There is no enlightenment or indeed anything else.  
But here we are, talking, using static words to describe things, so therefore, 
enlightenment along with a whole lot of other things, exists. 

>>> Dan:
>>> I would say static quality is never gone. If we seek after
>>> enlightenment we will only draw farther away from the path even as we
>>> walk upon it. When we see 'it' for what it is we no longer waste our
>>> time.
>> 
>> If static quality is never gone, what then is Dynamic Quality? Do you know? 
>> Even by static quality - logical terms you cannot argue that you know what 
>> Dynamic Quality is if there is always static quality.
> 
> Dan:
> In the MOQ Dynamic Quality is seen as synonymous with experience. We
> define 'it' all the time. It is right here! But when it is defined we
> lose 'it.' We are left with static quality definitions. Intellect
> demands definitions. We can't help it. But those intellectual patterns
> of quality take us away from experience. They do not bring us closer.
> 
> There are different ways of knowing in the MOQ. Logic resides in
> intellectual patterns, not Dynamic understanding. Logic comes later.
> Still, without static quality we cease to exist. We need both to
> survive and thrive.

Much agreement here.

Thanks Dan,

-David.







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