[John M]
The MOQ isn't a living, dynamic entity.  It is a static intellectual pattern.  
It was made at a point in time by one person, in the midst of his own unique 
circumstances.

[Arlo]
Just jumping in to address a couple points, John. In all philosophy (indeed, 
across all academic disciplines), there are (at least) two different ways of 
looking at ideas. First is the overall category, like "Idealism" or 
"Pragmatism". Second is a particular author's ideas, like "Hegel" or "James". 
People tend to use the phrase "The MOQ" interchangeable across these two, and 
that creates problems, such as "the MOQ isn't a living, dynamic entity". As for 
the latter, "what Pirsig said" (or "what Hegel said" or "what James said"), you 
are (mostly) correct. This is static. Unless those authors are still active, 
their ideas become static patterns within the larger intellectual level of 
value. But, as for the former, the more generalized 'tradition' (if you will), 
this is constantly evolving as new voices enter the dialogue, as ideas are 
refined, challenged, revisioned, elaborated, linked, uncoupled, etc. For 
example, Peirce broke from the general field of pragmatism (he even creat
 ed his own label, pragmaticism). So within general discourse on "pragmatism", 
one distinguishes (when necessary) between the different voices, but recognizes 
that the overall theory moves forward (and sometimes this happens by rejecting 
certain voices as much as appropriating them). 

Personally, I try to use "Pirsig's MOQ" when talking, or thinking, about 
specifically what Pirsig wrote. But I use the more general "MOQ" to refer to 
the field, or category, of ideas is, or will, evolve within a larger, general 
tradition. So, yes, while one "was made at a point in time by one person", the 
other is a "living", evolving pattern of understandings that incorporates many 
voices. 

[John M]
But it doesn't fit mine, so I try to bend it into something I can use, and I 
get chastised by some in this forum for doing that. 

[Arlo]
The only time I've seen anyone "chastised" is when they erroneously attribute a 
position to Pirsig. For example, if I said "Pirsig's MOQ includes animal 
behavior on the social level", this would be wrong, and I'd imagine those 
familiar with Pirsig's writings would call me out on this mistake. But, I've 
said many times that I, personally, distance myself from this categorical 
mandate, and have never been chastised for this. But, I can, and have, made an 
argument that is within the larger, general tradition of a MOQ that preserves 
the structure even if it disagrees with certain details of Pirsig's personal 
ideas. 

Importantly, you have to understand what someone says before you can agree of 
disagree, or revise or extend, etc. Peirce had to understand exactly and 
precisely what James was saying in order for his "pragmaticism" to make any 
sense. When people get very sloppy about what Pirsig did, or did not, say, it 
hinders the way intellectual evolution works. So, if you "bend" Pirsig's ideas 
into something you can use, and think this would be of value to others, by all 
means share (and be prepared for evaluation). Just be clear in your thoughts in 
articulating; (1) this is what Pirsig said, (2) this is why he was wrong, (3) 
this other way of looking at it is better, (4) and here is why. (I should 
addend this by saying that if you're disagreement with Pirsig takes you so far 
away from a MOQ-discourse that you are really presenting a different 
metaphysical approach altogether, you'd really be better off taking your ideas 
to a more similar forum.)

[John]
So this is one of the key issues with the MOQ for me.  Pirsig avers that the 
four levels of the MOQ embrace all of evolution and of human experience.  Well, 
it deliberately (and I think arbitrarily) excludes the most significant 
dimension of my human experience! 

[Arlo]
Based on the preceding paragraph, I assume this "dimension" you refer to is 
"religion"? What Pirsig does is separate out a mystical awareness of Dynamic 
Quality (or the Buddha, or the Godhead), from the dogmatic, theistic narratives 
of religion. The latter becomes social patterns, but the former really is 
'outside' the describable experiential landscape. It sounds like you want 
Pirsig to have included DQ within the four levels of his MOQ? 

[John]
But then came the MOQ.  It's brilliant and beautiful.  But it comes up short 
and says, "Your experience doesn't count.  It isn't valid, and there's no place 
for it in the MOQ."

[DMB]
The MOQ  says, "Your experience doesn't count.  It isn't valid, and there's no 
place for it in the MOQ" ?! Where did you get that idea? Nothing could be 
further from the truth. The MOQ absolutely does NOT say any such thing. Quite 
the opposite, in fact. 

[Arlo]
I agree with DMB, I do not think Pirsig's MOQ says "your experience doesn't 
count". Almost to the contrary, I'd argue he says "your experience is all there 
is". Everything in his described four levels is derivative to 'experience'. 

[John M]
But the MOQ is static, as Andre says. It is an intellectual pattern, and any 
attempt to update it or extend it or expand it is forbidden.

[Arlo]
Again, as I mention above, this is simply untrue. But, extension or expansion 
has to proceed with intellectual quality. Knowing precisely what was said is 
critical to articulating coherent disagreement. And while you should expect 
(and demand) evaluation of your ideas, if those ideas are rooted in 
misunderstanding, misattribution or misinformation (of Pirsig, or anyone else), 
then your thesis will be (rightly) rejected from the start. For example, take a 
look at both Granger's academic thesis on Pirsig and Dewey, and Crawford's 
"Shop Class as Soul Craft" (I'll avoid plugging people who are on-list this 
time around). Both form critical links between Pirsig's ideas and practice, as 
well as building a network from Pirsig to others working under different, but 
similar, larger umbrellas. One is aimed (mostly) at academics 
(theory/pedagogy), and the other is aimed (mostly) at laypeople 
(practice/education). Here are two, high-quality ways in which the overall idea 
of a metaphysics 
 of Quality is evolving.

[DMB]
The MOQ is the launch pad from which I explore all kinds of things, forming an 
increasingly larger circle of understanding. It's a fun and relatively easy way 
to learn philosophy. Start with what you know and work your way outward from 
there. As far as I can tell, Pirsig, James and Dewey are still down the road 
waiting for everyone else to catch up.

[Arlo]
I've always thought it would be neat to see everyone's "concept map" of who is 
in their personal circles (or even specific books/articles). For example, I am 
now about halfway through Henry Miller's Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus 
Bosch, as recommended by Dan. As I read, its apparent why this would 'link' to 
Pirsig's writings, both in genre and perspective. I think Ant was making (is 
making? has made?) a library or "bookshelf" of works that would fit as, for 
lack of a better word, 'sympatico' with Pirsig's thesis. There are the obvious 
ones, of course (like Granger and Crawford), but ones like Big Sur by Miller 
would have flown completely outside of my radar had not Dan first recommended 
it. 

[John]
Please tell me, David, how you have used it.  What has it done, or what do you 
do with it to enhance your life?  To enhance anyone else's life? 

[Arlo]
What's been astounding to me is how coherent an skeletal structure Pirsig's MOQ 
is for organizing different areas of interest. I can move from discussion on 
"art" to "primate evolution" to "ISIS militants" and stay within a coherent 
structure or voice. Importantly for me, this also includes pedaogy, and I can 
move from Vygostsky's work in the 1920's and 1930's directly to "Common Core" 
without skipping a beat. Just as an aside, I am currently working on a 
presentation I'll be giving in the Spring called something like "If education 
is art, what can it learn from a Theatre of Cruelty" (working title), where 
Pirsig will provide a structure for bringing (primarily) Artaud, Foucault, 
Freire, and Deleuze to bear on educational practice here. But, I could envision 
a similar presentation in anthropology where Pirsig could provide a structure 
for bringing in Tomasello, Dusenberry (of course), Vygostky and Lewis-Williams 
(interesting ideas about cave paintings). In other words, Pirsig
 's MOQ provides a way for me to integrate, appreciate and understand (better) 
a wide-array of ideas (and authors/'artists') that I find, personally, highly 
valuable and interesting.


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