Struan:

I appreciate your comments about William Inge, especially your final 
sentence:

� � all postulate a transcendent world of values as the greatest good. I have 
no problem with that at all.�

Neither do I. Nor IMO does Pirsig. 

Nor do I have a problem with admitting I believe in God if you define �God� not 
as a divine person but as  Pirsig does:

�Dharma is Quality itself, the principle of "rightness" which gives structure 
and purpose to the evolution of all life and to the evolving understanding of the 
universe which life has created.

That definition is similar to the world coming into being as the result of an 
�ethical requirement,� an idea championed by the Canadian philosopher, 
John Leslie. 

I�ll take either one of those definitions of �God� though you won�t find them in 
a dictionary.

What is yours? On what beginning assumption do you base your 
metaphysics? Why is there something rather than nothing? What started it 
all and �structured evolution� in your opinion? Do you attribute creation to a 
divine creator? A principle? An accident? 

I don�t deny that �mystery, awe, wonder and pursuit of beauty and truth are 
the motivations for what they (scientists) do.� My only possible disagreement 
with you is when I vigorously support Pirsig�s claim that these are MORAL 
pursuits. And I doubt you assertion that �every single educator tries to instill 
these goals in his or her students.� We certainly don�t see it here in the 
states where public education at the secondary level is abysmal. Nor do our 
colleges support your claim. To quote from Yale professor of computer 
science David Gelernter:

�If we care about technology excellence, we are foolish not to train our young 
scientists and engineers in aesthetics, elegance and beauty. The idea of 
such a thing happening is so far-fetched its funny � Art history in the 
colleges nowadays often seems like mud wrestling, as posturing professors 
who care not at all about truth and beauty and a lot about politics, ideology, 
and social agenda drag art down to their level, and the whole field sinks 
slowly into the slime, you can only shake your head and wonder.� In the U.S. 
at least, Pirsig's message is sorely needed.

Finally, as you demonstrated, there are some social situations when lying is 
the better course of action. I agree with you--that�s TRUE. As I say, there�s 
no escape from the morality of truth in philosphical (intellectual level) 
discussions. 

I�m encouraged by your general approval of Inge�s views and all those other 
philosophers you mentioned. It�s only a small step from their �transcendent 
world of values as the greatest good� to Pirsig�s Metaphysics of Quality�a 
step that frankly I�m baffled at your resistance in taking. Is you objection that 
the MoQ is nothing new, or that it�s just plain wrong? If the latter, specifically 
at what point does it go astray in your view? Or, as newcomer Daniel 
Colonnese just wrote, �If someone can produce evidence which disproves the 
MoQ that�s just the thesis we�ve been waiting for.� Of all those who have 
posted to this site so far, you are the most likely candidate to accept 
Daniel�s challenge.

Platt




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