It's got to be one or the other. Probably not the latter, makes more sense the former. He himself admited that he wasn't much of a scholarly philosophologist. And who has time to be? Academics in their lairs, maybe. In this busy age life is too big to keep your nose in books all the time. So "ignoramous" non-perjorativel then, but the fact is, he DID at least read some AN Whitehead. Quotes him from reading his book on history of philosophy, in the bowels of the troopship. You'd think he might have followed up on the man's thinking a bit?
All these questions I mumble to myself are bound up in my reading the introduction to a book by Whitehead, Religion in the Making, starting with a quote from said book, *There is a quality of life which lies always beyond the mere fact of life; and when we include the quality in the fact, there is still omitted the quality of the quality. (RM 80)* Now, dear fellow MoQers, I don't know about you, but that statement kicks me right in the gut. Quality? That's OUR term, right? What's Whitehead doing stealing it from us? In 1926, even. That takes some chutzpah AND a time machine. The introducer, goes on to say, " Religion in the Making is a book about value. The intriguing passage quoted above suggest several important aspects of Whitehead's philosophical thinking about the reality and metaphysical significance of value (here termed 'quality') and reveals one the central objectives of the present text. First, the sentence manifests Whitehead's typical approach to intuitive experience, especially the qualitative and emotionally clothed dimensions of our immediate contact with reality. As a corollary to this, Whitehead is implicitly asserting (against much of the critical tradition in philosophy) that we do in fact,have such immediate contact and that it can serve as a starting point, if not a justification, for the kinds of claims made by metaphysicians." That is, Quality cannot be defined, but you KNOW what it is. And THAT it is. And this can be a starting point for discussion and logical analysis. Pirsig and Whitehead seem to be perfectly harmonious, fundamentally, So was Whitehead an influence on Pirsig's thought? OR, did they take separate trails up the same American mountain of thought and reach the same perspective? Who knows? Anybody? JC 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
