Hey,
Are ya'll actually suggesting discussing "Good is a noun."  That's great.
I've had a lot of trouble with this supposed one sentance summary of the
MoQ.  It's a funny kind of summary because it's essentially meaningless if
you don't know the whole of RMP's theories; and even if you do it's still
pretty damn tricky.

all Good,
Rick


At 09:21 AM 3/4/99 -0500, you wrote:
>Roger wrote . . .
>
>>The quote: 
>> >While living,
>> >Be a dead man.
>> >Be completely dead,
>> >And then do as you please.
>> >And all will be well.
>> 
>>Is okay, but Pirsig himself explains it rationally on the same page.
>
>That's true, but that particular MOQ translation doesn't move me the way
>the original poetry does, even though I understand it rationally.  I guess 
>the challenge would be to come up with a rational take on it that also works 
>in the affective domain.  That's the way both ZAMM and "Lila", taken as a 
>whole, work for me -- like, I don't know, prose poetry or something.  They
>work in the head and in the gut.
>
>>Another idea...... Jonathan's Q.... "Is a city sentient?"  
>>
>>Or Platt's..... "Are subatomic particles aware?"
>>
>>Or what does "Good is a noun" mean?
>>
>>It seems we could "Go both ways" on these as well.  Count me in on whatever
>>has value.
>
>All would be worthwhile inquiries.
>
>Jeff Travis
>
>
>
>MOQ Homepage - http://www.moq.org
>Mail Archive - http://alt.venus.co.uk/hypermail/moq_discuss/
>
>


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