Hi MOQ Foci.
Inspired by the many good essays delivered up to now I would have 
liked to pick my own favourite LILA passage, but find it hard to 
choose between the story and the philosophical sections, so - to 
avoid using Todd's method of throwing the book in the air and 
letting gravity decide - I elect one chapter which IMO is a mix 
between the two, namely number 26 and from it the "insanity" 
passage. On page 334 in the Bodley Head edition it says: 

      (LILA)  
      That includes the considerations of people like Lila. This whole    
      business of insanity is an enormous important philosophical    
      subject that has been ignored - mainly, he supposed, because of
      metaphysical limitations. In addition to the branches of    
      philosophy - ethics, ontology and so on - the MOQ provides a    
      foundation for a new one: the philosophy of insanity. As long as    
      you're stuck with the old conventions, insanity is going to be a    
      "misunderstanding of the object by the subject". The object is    
      real, the subject is mistaken. the only problem is how to change
      the subject's mind back to a correct comprehension of objective
      reality." 


Pirsig speaks of the contrarians of the Plains Indians who rode 
facing backwards and generally did everything the opposite way. 
Perhaps we of the LS/MF/MD are "contrarians" of our culture. I am 
to a degree, being dead tired of the predictable opinions aired 
everywhere and jumps with joy each time I see a surprising input. 
John Beasley says that Pirsig created his MOQ to meet his own 
demands (hopefully he sees the backlash effect here?). Let that be 
as it may, the Metaphysics of Quality is revolutionary in every 
aspect, but in its treatment of insanity it really shows how different 
it is from the conventional wisdom. 

Throughout our discussion we have pointed to many subject-object 
"platyi", but in my opinion SOM has its hardest time when one 
start to analyze abnormal human behaviour. I guess only the 
psychiatrists still believe in the theories what causes "illness of the 
mind". I am no expert in this field  - but as far as I know all 
creatures above the reptilian realm can be brought to nervous 
breakdown if confronted with a sufficient confusing environment. 
There are also a lot of phobias and irrational notions, but this isn't 
insanity in the Lila Blewitt sense. It is the subject's explanation of 
reality that we call craziness. 

Long before Lila -  even before ZMM - I had this suspicions 
regarding psychiatry. Some of it stemmed from my reading of the 
French multihistorician Michel Foucault's work "Madness and 
Civilization" in which he shows how culturally dependent our 
attitude regarding abnormality is. And yet, how deep Focault saw 
even he was SOM-steeped and struggled like "mad" to come to 
grips with the problem. He obviously didn't fall in the "be kind and 
nobody will go mad" trap, but sees that all cultures have their 
special form of madness and that something fundamental is 
connected with abnormality. I would have liked to go deeper into 
his work, for instance the notion that the Medieval times were so 
abnormal in themselves that the mad weren't very noticed - merely 
called "fools" and put on boats to sail the channels of Europe, but 
must limit myself to one quotation that is uncannily like the one 
from LILA about the subject misunderstanding reality. Foucault 
says - quoting one De la Rive: 

    External objects do not produce upon the mind of a sufferer       
    the same impression as upon the mind of a healthy man; these 
    impressions are weak, and the sufferer rarely heeds them; his   
    mind is almost entirely absorbed by the action of the ideas        
    produced by the deranged state of his brain."

This is the eighteenth century and still what we deem a brutal view, 
and yet it is the start of the modern humane "illness" model which 
is prevalent today when every effort is made to liken mental illness 
to  a somatic one. It's a matter of bad luck if you are to contract a 
mental disease in the same way as you may have the bad luck of 
inhaling a virus. An aside here. My wife works as a librarian at a  
mental hospital and I have had glimpses into the archives and seen 
the vast written material on the illness model of abnormality. It's 
stupendous. 

Of course, there are theories and countertheories: a phony show of 
disagreement, but it merely fluctuates within the same paradigm. 
Before LILA I had no means to understand my feeling of 
uneasiness when confronted with this enormous theoretical edifice 
and I still shudder when contemplating the possibility of it 
crumbling. Anyway, the MOQ view of insanity model was an eye-
opener for to me and the part of LILA that made me shout (after 
looking carefully around) "yes"! 

We know its outline: The static value levels and their respective 
"immune systems" much like the biological one, of which the 
intellectual one looks for dangerous non-self ideas entering its 
perimeter . 

     (LILA)
     "Obviously no culture wants its legal patterns violated and when  
     they are, an immune system takes over in ways that are    
     analogous to a biological immune system. The deviant     dangerous
     source of illegal cultural patterns is first identified,     then
     isolated and finally destroyed as a cultural entity. that's    
     what mental hospitals are partly for. And also heresy trials.    
     They protect the culture from foreign ideas that if allowed to    
     grow unchecked would destroy the culture itself".

At this point I must tell about the Austrian writer Robert Musil and 
his work "Mann Ohne Eigenschaften" (The Man without Qualities) 
1930, in which there is a scene where a party is being shown 
around in a lunatic bin and passes from one section worse than the 
previous. Somehow they grows used to the naked feelings and 
honesty of the insane so when entering a room with silent people 
they think it's the lost cases, but it proves to be visitors. That is 
what sanity is: tranquil, well behaved automatons saying the 
expected things.  

Pirsig's assertion is that each level strives to control the values of 
the level below, for instance does society want the biological 
impulses to be brought under its own umbrella: sex to be 
institutionalized in matrimony, food to be shared at meals along 
with millions other written or unwritten laws. The "immune system" 
of an actual modern day society: a country  - penal law and its 
enforcement -  works to keep that  society healthy: keep biological 
impulses at bay, but also social growths from spreading too far. 
However, there is a "society" far more subtler: Culture, or in 
MOQish: The Intellectual level. 

Its "immune system" is equally subtle, but the methods are more 
far-reaching and effective than the coarse bludgeon-like of the levels 
below. The means of control varies according to the times, but it is 
always a isolation of the deviating individual something that makes 
the erring mind either recant or - if it is honest - go mad. As Michel 
Foucault shows the culture/times determines what model is 
applied to abnormality, right now it is the SOM derived mental 
illness template, in former religiously dominated times it was 
"heresy".

The present S-O mental illness model of abnormality is considered 
humane. Will a Quality abnormality model be inhumane then? Not 
as I see it, on the contrary it will be much better and may even 
eliminate "madness of intellect" because it sees beyond intellect, 
but introduce an abnormality of the ....?? This is so weird that I 
don't dare venture along that path any longer for fear of being 
regarded a contrarian among contraians :-).  

Bo
------- End of forwarded message -------


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