I find I agree with most of David B.'s and EWenn's insights on our reading 
(and Diana's recent input too).  Please let me know any and all thoughts and 
suggested corrections to my synopsis below.

The three key conceptual strands that braid together the initial chapters of 
Lila are Objectivity, Mysticism and Freedom.  The interaction and conflict 
between these strands is used to develop Phaedrus' peyote experience, to 
introduce us to the MOQ, and to profile the impact of American Indians on 
Western values.

I. The MOQ was born of a mystical experience in the teepee as Phaedrus 
followed Dusenberry's advice to abandon objectivity in the study of Indians.  
Characteristics of the mystical experience include the following:

-- Increased attention to direct experience,
-- Attraction to the analysis of complex and transcendent realities,
-- Expanded consciousness,
-- Union with nature as opposed to "objective" separation, and
-- Dissolution of personal identity

II. From this attentive, nonobjective experience, he was able to "spin an 
enormous symmetrical web, larger and more perfect than any [his analytical 
side] had spun before."  The MOQ arises from direct mystical experience, and 
despite his praises for a "more perfect" metaphysics, Pirsig reinforces that, 
ultimately, the value of metaphysics is more to free himself from 
intellectual patterns than it is just to create them.  His goal was to keep 
his cup (everyday mind) empty, not full.

In a sentence, the MOQ is a metaphysics built from mystical, nonobjective 
awareness which points toward a greater freedom beyond its own static 
intellectual boundaries.

III. Phaedrus' initial mystical insight was that Indians are "the 
originators" of many of the aspects of the American cultural mythos that so 
differ from its European roots.  By abandoning objectivity and embracing 
mystical awareness, he saw that the following Western values -- all relating 
to freedom -- grew from exposure to Indians:

-- Directness (freedom from pretense and ceremoniousness)
-- Simplicity (freedom from confusion and intellectual clutter)
-- Anti-snobbery (freedom from social hierarchy)
-- Equality (freedom of opportunity)

To summarize, I believe that the three essential conceptual strands in the 
initial chapters of Lila are the rejection of objectivity, the mystical 
origins of the MOQ, and the emphasis on the value of freedom.  These concepts 
become essential not only to the foundation for the book, but for the 
metaphysics itself.

Roger

PS -- It has probably been 6 months since I contributed to this forum. I 
sense this new methodical approach offers great potential value if we stick 
with it and find a way to summarize and record our progress.  We can use it 
to empty our own cups, so to speak. 

   




MOQ.org - http://www.moq.org

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