dmb, Thanks for the quotes. Here's one for you
" ... Strictly speaking, the creation of any metaphysics is an immoral act since it's a lower form of evolution, intellect, trying to devour a higher mystic one. The same thing that's wrong with philosophology when it tries to control and devour philosophy is wrong with metaphysics when it tries to devour the world intellectually. It attempts to capture the Dynamic within a static pattern. But it never does. You never get it right. So why try? It's like trying to construct a perfect unassailable chess game. No matter how smart you are you're never going to play a game that is 'right' for all people at all times, everywhere. Answers to ten questions led to a hundred more and answers to those led to a thousand more. Not only would he never get it right; the longer he worked on it the wronger it would probably get. . . . ". (LILA) The MoQ is based on a radical empiricism. I would think that RMP created his conceptual/theoretical metaphysics, including the conceptual quotes, built on a foundational understanding of his direct experience, and there may very well be, as RMP has suggested, discrepancies between his many conceptual explanations and examples and his direct experience? And there may be further differences between RMP's presentation and my own experience. Not necessarily right versus wrong, but different. Or maybe everyone who has had a different experience, major or minor, should forget the empiricism part and leave the MoQ behind? And by the way, there is far more to the MoQ than chapter 29. Marsha On Oct 31, 2012, at 1:53 PM, david buchanan <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Mark said: > I am really not sure what dmb means by the distinction between concepts and > reality. Concepts are a part of my reality. > > Marsha said: > Perhaps dmb means the distinction between concepts and direct perception. Or > perhaps he means the difference between conceptual & perceptual experience > and the undifferentiated with no information whatsoever. I don't know, but > concepts are a part of my reality too. > > > dmb says: > If you're really not sure what this distinction means then you really don't > understand the MOQ's first and most basic distinction. And yet both of you > spend a lot of time pretending that you do understand the MOQ. > > It's not that you need to understand what I mean by the distinction but > rather what Pirsig and James mean to say. > > This is Pirsig quoting William James in LILA, at the end of chapter 29: > > " 'There must always be a discrepancy between concepts and reality, because > the former are static and discontinuous while the latter is dynamic and > flowing.' Here James had chosen exactly the same words Phaedrus had used for > the basic subdivision of the Metaphysics of Quality." > > In other words, there must always be a DISTINCTION between static concepts > and the directly experienced reality, because concepts are NOT a flowing flux > while pre-intellectual experience is dynamic and flowing. The DISTINCTION > between static and dynamic is the most basic line drawn in the MOQ. > There is plenty of textual evidence that shows the importance this > distinction. > "Subjects and objects are secondary. They are concepts derived from something > more fundamental which he described as 'the immediate flux of life which > furnishes the material to our later reflection with its conceptual > categories. In this basic flux of experience [DQ] the distinctions of > reflective thought [sq], such as those between consciousness and content, > subject and object, mind and matter have not yet emerged in the forms [sq] > which we make them. Pure experience cannot be called either physical or > psychical. It logically proceeds this distinction." > "Quality is a direct experience independent of and prior to intellectual > abstractions. Quality is indivisible, undefinable and unknowable in the sense > that there is a knower and a known, but a metaphysics can be none of these > things. A metaphysics must be divisible, definable and knowable, or there > isn't any metaphysics." > "In the past Pheadrus' own radical bias caused him to think of Dynamic > Quality alone and neglect static patterns of quality. Until now he had always > felt that these static patterns were dead. They have no love. They offer no > promise of anything. To succumb to them is to succumb to death, since that > which does not change cannot live. But now he was beginning to see that this > radical bias weakened his own case. Life cannot exist on Dynamic Quality > alone. It has no staying power. To cling to Dynamic Quality is to cling to > chaos. He saw that much can be learned about Dynamic Quality by studying what > it is not rather that futilely trying to define what it is... Slowly at > first, and then with increasing awareness that he was going in a right > direction, Phaedrus' central attention turned away from any further > explanation of Dynamic Quality and turned to the static patterns themselves" > (Robert Pirsig in Lila). > "Static quality patterns are dead when they are exclusive, when they demand > blind obedience and suppress Dynamic change. But static patterns, > nevertheless, provide a necessary stabilizing force to protect Dynamic > progress from degeneration. Although Dynamic Quality, the Quality of freedom, > creates this world in which we live, these patterns of static quality, the > quality of order, preserve our world. Neither static nor Dynamic Quality can > survive without the other." > > 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 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
