Hi Group:

Thanks to a suggestion by John B. in his post dated 11 May, I brought up 
�The Dazzling Dark" by John-Wren-Lewis on the web.

In this article Lewis, a hard-bitten physicist, describes what is commonly 
called a Near Death Experience, only his was quite different from others 
you've probably read about. Rather than dwell on the differences I simply 
want to quote Lewis' description of the �eternal dimension� he witnessed 
and see if anyone agrees with me that it comes close to describing 
Pirsig's indefinable �Quality.�

Lewis writes:

"It was like having had a cataract taken off my brain, letting me 
experience the world and myself properly for the first time--for that lovely 
dark radiance seemed to reveal the essence of everything as holy. I felt 
like exclaiming, 'Of course! That's absolutely right!' and applauding every 
single thing with tears of gratitude--not just . . . the small jar of flowers the 
nurse had place by (my) bedside, but also the ominous stains on the bed 
sheets, the ancient paint peeling off the walls, the far from hygienic smell 
of the toilet, the coughs and groans of the other patients, and even the 
traumatized condition of my body. From the recesses of my memory 
emerged that statement at the beginning of the book of Genesis about 
God observing everything 'he' had made and finding it very good. In the 
past I'd treated these words as mere romantic poetry, referring only to 
conventionally grand things like sunsets and conveniently ignoring what 
ordinary human consciousness calls illness or ugliness. Now all the 
judgement of goodness or badness which the human mind necessarily 
has to make in its activities along the line of time were contextualized in 
the perspective of that other dimension I can only call eternity, which 
loves all the productions of time regardless."

It's hard to imagine that ethnic cleansing is "loved" in the larger 
perspective of the "dazzling dark" Lewis describes, but that seems to the 
message he and others who have had mystic revelations bring back to 
us. Pirsig's metaphysics starts out with the same proposition it seems to 
me, but quickly brings us back to our practical "line of time" mode with 
his Dynamic-static split and death struggles between competing levels of 
good.

Anyway, I join John B. in recommending this article to you. It's not often 
a scientist admits to experiencing amazing grace.

Platt




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