Hi.... my name's Michael.

I have been following some of the posts on mysticism (don't have time to 
read them all) and have found the discussion most interesting... I have 
recently been reading several books written by and about a prominent Jewish 
mystic (who died in the 1930's) by the name of
Abraham Isaac Kook. I thought perhaps I might contribute to the discussion 
by telling something about him and his writings.

A prolific author, he did not set about composing a systematic philosophical 
system, but rather wrote daily in a notebook as an outlet for his feelings, 
thoughts and experiences. Only later did scholars and students try to give 
order to his work and attempt to derive its philosophical implications.

Kook described himself as "one with a poetic soul" and his writings are 
written in a poetic style. Poetry, he said is "the most penetrating 
comprehension, the most intimate within the dephs of the essence of the 
concept. Something which is utterly impossible to prosaic understanding."

The ability of poetry to understand stems from the affinity of poetry to the 
internal essence of reality, for reality is not "prosaic", but is has a 
poetic nature itself:" Woe to him who wishes to destroy from life the beauty 
of its poetry, for he destroys the entire essence of life and all its 
truth."

In my reading, I have been struck by the similarity between ideas expressed 
by Kook and those developed by Pirsig (despite their widely different 
backgrounds). Here is some text from a book entitled "Poetry of Being, 
Lectures on the Philosophy of A.I. Kook". The quotes are Kook's own words 
(translated from Hebrew).

"The desire of being" for perfection and for greater power is evident in 
human history in the development of human and spiritual culture.... "It is 
just this basic force which propels all of the movements of creation, 
evolution and the masterful machinery, which brings to fruition all its 
powers in the whole world and in every avenue according to its own value. 
And it is just this internal principle which motivates the cultural forces 
in man, his parties and his nations, and it circulates among all creatures 
without exception, from the smallest of parts in the most dull beings 
through to the most exalted and lofty celestial worlds."

"Good" is everything which stengthens "the supreme moral tendency of being" 
and "evil" is whatever impedes this process. The Divine "moral plan" thus 
rules not only over "the spiritual laws of the world" but "its spark has 
also not been extinguished in the physical laws, as the
Divine light which is garbed in the great general moral tendency of all 
being, which also blazes its path in all the forces of nature that appear to 
be carrying out their tasks as dead inanimate objects, without understanding 
or aim."

The power of moral determination which man has "which we refer to as free 
will" is but "an agency" of the improvement of being "whose quality is to 
emphasize and reveal being in its most profound essence" But the category of 
"choice" applies in reality to everything, and it is expressed in the 
gradual particularization of the world...
"Each creature has, in accordance with its ability, a part in the choice, 
and that is the basis for its betterment in the future... The hidden choice 
is what acts on all those creatures where open choice does not reveal its 
power. It prevails most at the differentiation of stages, whether physical 
or spiritual, and even at the specification of kinds and species that are 
far from the circle of life where, too, the Divine justice must run its 
course."

(Echoes here of Pirsig's levels, although not stated explicitly. In other 
writings, Kook does speak about conflicts between different levels of 
existence as conflicts of value)

The special status of man in this development is only that the striving for 
improvement which acts in nature... has, in the case of man, reached the 
stage "of having revealed the ethical choice in its full character, which 
stands before us in the human psyche."

These ideas are also reflected in Kook's thoughts on repentance:

"From the depths comes repentance, from so great a depth that the individual 
human spirit is not a unique form in relation to it, but a continuum of the 
grandeur of universal existence.... Pentinence is inspired by the yearning 
of all existence to be better, purer, more vigourous and on a higher plane 
that it is. Within this yearning is a hidden life-force for overcoming every 
factor that limits and weakens existence."

(Sounds like the ability to go beyond constricting static patterns by 
tapping into Dynamic quality)

Also, regarding evil, which Pirsig calls the negative face of Dynamic 
quality, Kook says: " Had there not been the darkness, there would not have 
been the constant impetus to elevation"
------------

Well, I hope some of you folks found this interesting. Even though the 
language and terminology used are different, I think you can appreciate a 
closeness in the sense of what both are saying.





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