Dan:
I found this in The Guidebook to ZMM; perhaps it might be relevant here:

"Two things that intuitionists frequently say about intuition are worth
singling out here, because they have special relevance to ZMM's
epistemological insights. One is that intuition is a sort of "inside"
knowledge, a knowledge had by a sort of sympathetic entry into the thing
known rather than by an external examination; a kind of knowledge by
identity rather than by confrontation. This is the idea of intuition that
you can find in the writings of Henri Bergson (1859-1941), who described
intuition with phrases like "intellectual sympathy." It is also the idea of
intuition that young Phaedrus encountered in the writings of Albert
Einstein, who said that the universal laws of the cosmos could only be
reached by "intuition, resting on sympathetic understanding of experience"
(quoted in ZMM, p.99). That idea would be carried forward in the narrator's
reflections (undoubtedly inspired by, if not inherited from, Phaedrus) about
the relation of Quality to caring (ZMM, pp. 25, 247).

"Just as for Einstein the intuition of cosmic laws is rooted in a
sympathetic understanding of experience, so for the narrator the intuition
of Quality is rooted in caring about what one is seeing and doing. But for
the narrator the flow goes both ways. Caring-which, you might care to note,
involves both willing and feeling-is reciprocally related to Quality. The
more you care in your knowing and doing, the more you see (or intuit)
Quality. The more you intuit Quality, the more you care. "A person who sees
Quality and feels it as he works is a person who cares. A person who cares
about what he sees and does is a person who's bound to have some
characteristics of Quality." (ZMM, p. 247)." [Guidebook to ZMM pg 171-172]

Dan comments:
A couple things stand out here: first, the role of sympathetic entry into
the thing known. Dusenberry comes to mind here with his Rocky Boy Indians.
Rather than playing the role of an 'objective observer' standing apart, the
observer becomes one with the observation in a very real way. Second, there
is a reciprocity involved as well. Not only does the observer come to care
very deeply about the observation, the reverse is true as well. Remember how
the Indians always described Dusenberry as a GOOD man, emphasis on good.

[Krimel]
Good points, I would mention  Dwight Conquergood an ethnographer who worked
in refugee camps in Thailand as Cambodians fled Pol Pot. Conquergood
insisted on living in the camps with the people instead of on the distant UN
base. While working in Chicago he lived in a neighborhood of Hmong refugees
and aided them much as Dusenberry did. Later he moved to North Chicago in a
gang infested poor neighborhood. Brought his caring and compassion to his
work as an ethnographer.

With respect to intuition, CS Pierce called it abduction. He saw it as a
form of reasoning where answer just sort of come to you. This is an
irrational process but we use reason to check these answers. So for Pierce
deductive reasoning (top down) and inductive reasoning (bottom up) were
secondary forms to provide systematic verification. BTW, intuition or
abduction are the source of all those hypotheses that so bedeviled Pirsig in
his chemistry days.

[Dan]
I think the artist (and that includes all the arts) delves so deeply into
their art that they become the art, that is, if they are GOOD artists. The
caring is such that art not only informs them but becomes them: a Van Gogh,
for example, or a Cezanne. Picasso's work is instantly recognizable.

[Krimel]
I think Pirsig's great contribution here is to recognize that a barbeque
grill is sculpture and fixing a motorcycle is artistic work.

[Dan]
The question then becomes: how does this relate to the MOQ, specifically to
Dynamic Quality and static quality?

I would say in essence there is no separation between the two. If a person
is too static they become stuck. If they are too Dynamic they become lost.
By striking a balance, by using not only rationality but intuition as well,
a person, especially an artist, can bring into being something new and yet
still grounded in the old.

[Krimel]
I think you have hit upon a point that Lao Tzu makes. We are on a path. Our
journey is a flow. We seek harmony along the way. The road twists and turns.
Parts are familiar; others are new. Quality is a balance of all the things
life lays before us. This is why I claim there is not clear line to
distinguish SQ and DQ. They are derived after the fact from our experience
of Quality.

[Dan]
I have reservations about intuition as Dynamic Quality, however.
Rather, I think it is knowledge outside the bounds of rationality.
Does intuition bring us closer to Dynamic Quality? Perhaps it is the first
move away from pre-intellectual awareness. David Morey posted a paper that
seems pertinent. I don't know if you have seen it:

http://www.thersa.org/action-research-centre/social-brain/reports/the-divide
d-brain 

David said something like the right side of the brain being Dynamic while
the left side is static. I hesitate to say as much. Rather, it would seem
intuitive might be a better label to to hang on the right side.

[Krimel}
My first instinct is to argue that intuition is a subset of the irrational
and is entirely pre-intellectual. But your point is well taken. I am
attracted by the negative connotations of the word. It forces me to confront
and challenge them and I think the effort pays off. But that is probably
just me. I do think it offers another perspective on the experience of
dynamic Quality though. One that offsets the exuberance of DQ as the mainly
mystical.
I used to complain frequently about Pirsig's use of the term Quality instead
of Tao. My problem with Quality is the inverse of your problem with
irrational. I think Quality brings a positive set of luggage with it but
because it is positive no one seem to miss the negative.

>[Krimel]
> That's how I put a thread or two over. On reflection I wouldn't make 
>too  much of the word judgment which does seem out of place. But 
>basically  something like that. In fact I could use some assistance in 
>working that  part out. Perhaps habits or drives would be better.

Dan:
I guess it depends. Habits seems too static unless it has to do with caring.
This artistic drive some folk feel is quite likely a response to Dynamic
Quality but I don't know if we can say it is Dynamic Quality itself. I think
Robert Pirsig says something like some artists have to create art; if they
don't they go crazy. In that regard, the drive we feel to create art is a
response to something we cannot name, something that is hidden from us and
yet is always there pushing us.

[Krimel]
Perhaps something like what Kierkegaard calls faith. It is an orientation
that takes over one's life and moves one outside of morality. A form of
personal transcendence. Or maybe Maslow's self-actualization, the ability to
transcend the self. In this case not just the ability but the compulsion.

>
> [Krimel]
>> Have you defined
>> DQ  so rigidly that you are certain what is and what is not the 
>> proper way to speak of it?
>
> Dan:
> I feel I have been consistent over the years with not defining Dynamic 
> Quality in any way. We can say what it is not, but as soon as we say 
> what it is, we have effectively encapsulated it into static patterns.
>
> [Krimel]
> Perhaps, but I am not sure how saying what something is not escapes 
> being a definition. It is about like saying what something is, it just
takes longer.
> But think of it this way, when Pirsig say that DQ IS the 
> pre-intellectual cutting edge of reality I don't think he means this 
> as exhaustive account of what the "pre-intellectual" is. So while I 
> understand your reservations with identifying DQ with the irrational, 
> I think see fewer problems with claiming that the pre-intellectual is
irrational.

Dan:
I think he uses terms like 'pre-intellectual' and 'cutting edge of
experience' to point to that which cannot be defined. In my opinion, we
should take care not to begin intellectualizing Dynamic Quality into
something we think it is by defining it. He did so in an effort to point at
it, to use experience as the beginning point of the MOQ.

In essence, I suppose there isn't really a problem saying Dynamic Quality is
irrational. However, some of the negative connotations of irrationality
might mislead those who have yet to familiarize themselves with the MOQ.
They might think: oh, only mad people and crazy folk can fathom what Robert
Pirsig is saying. Or perhaps I am on about nothing. I don't know.

[Krimel]
No, no I see your point. Again for me there is a sort of gestalt shift that
occurs when meanings get contrary and sort of oscillates. Pirsig sketches
all this kind of thing out but it is not as though all the details are there
or that he gets it right in every instance. I am a blind man touching
elephants. The places I can lay hands on the beast the more perspectives I
have. The elephant is "like" a rope or a wall or a tree trunk or... No
single bit of fondling can teach me about an elephant. The "elephant"
emerges from the process of touching.



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