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Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance : An Inquiry Into Values

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance : An Inquiry Into Values

List Price: $39.95
Your Price: $26.37
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best
Review: This is one of the great pieces of modern literature. Any critic of note agrees, as did the book reading world when it was published. It's success was a bit of a surprise, as it is a deep philosophical ramble for the most part, not your typical best seller. I am both a motorcycle rider and a student of Eastern religions, so this was made in heaven for me. No interest in either of those subjects is at all necessary to love this book, needless to say! More Western than Eastern philosophy here, both are presented brilliantly, and the final stop is pure enlightenment. The extraordinary mental journey that takes place in this book, the agony and seriousness of the author's search for truth, the philosophical heights, the madness, and the epiphanies along the way are all examples of the author's unique genius. The ending has an impact one would not expect of this book. It explodes. This is not one of your typical "Zen and the art of this or that" deals. This is one of the best books ever written, period. Not an easy read, but more than worth the effort.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Wolf's Perspective
Review: This is my second reading of this classic. The first was around '74 when I was actively reading various philosophies and trying to be a normal person. Pirsig just blew me away with his wide-ranging scope and single-minded intensity. ZAMM is a profound accomplishment on both a personal and philosophical level. Phaedrus, a true lone wolf, an outrider by necessity, finally squared the circle and cracked the koan.

Businessmen who work their way to wealth through shrewd dealing have many admirers. Even more make heroes of athletes who robustly compete and win medals. I respect Pirsig more. He followed his mental compulsions to their denouement without assistance or thought of personal gain. When some anonymous functionaries at Bozeman try to standardize his teaching, does he have a chat with the department head? Well, of course not. To Phaedrus, his classroom procedures bear the weight of the planet's collective wisedom. He must justify what he does personally and professionally with the only response acceptable to him. And that requires that the entire Western philosophical tradition be tweaked into concordance with the East. The result is an amalgam that will please 1) the over-organized, rational engineers, 2) the spacey meditators seeking nirvana, 3) the spiritual who want God on High, 4) and especially the lone wolves of the mind.

Pirsig is not just a philosopher. By training and profession, he is also a rhetorician. That means he presents his case with ability, drama and persuasion. You may not hang on every word, but I can think of no other book that so dramatizes an intellectual battle.

Of course he was insane. Of course he treated people badly. But the necessity of resolving such a conundrum is exigent in very few. Fewer still come away with resolution, much less their sanity. If you've ever been in Phaedrus' pack, read this book. The indelible impressions from 30 years are still with me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Trip
Review: This is an astonishingly good book, though hard to characterize: it's a travelogue, philosophical meditation, intellectual autobiography, father/son story, spiritual quest, and tale of madness. It's true that the author, Robert Pirsig, has a touch of crankiness about him -- who else but a crank would believe that he's solved the deepest problems of Western civilization? It's also true that some of Pirsig's details about Greek philosophy and the history of science are wrong -- Copernicus did not, for example, discover that the Earth is round. But these are quibbles. Pirsig's overall lesson is that thinking is a serious, almost life-or-death adventure. In a culture swamped with materialism, fundamentalism, and nonsense disseminated on the internet, that's a huge accomplishment. I can't think of any book that would do a better job of getting an intelligent high school of college student turned on to serious philosophy. Six stars!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Metaphysics in laymens terms
Review: This book is metaphysics from the bottom up, which makes it interesting for anyone who likes philosophy and thinking about lifes meaning, and also feels too overwhelmed with those thick super dense writings by the classic icons like Kant. This might open up those more distant figures to a practical understanding too. A must read overall for anyone who likes to think about things.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Happiness from "Quality" - an investigative expose
Review: I've procrastinated for months before writing this review because I was afraid of doing the book a disservice. But....the time has come :-)

I love this book - for its excellent handling of an oblique subject, and for giving us a message for the times.

In Pirsig's words, ZATAOMM has acquired "kulturbearer" status - i.e., it encompasses entire realms of thought within our present culture, and it attempts to carry these things into cultures of the future.

It talks about the split between Art and Technology and the unease of regarding one from the other standpoint. It discourses about the innermost mechanisms that make "Hip" and "Square" two distinct schools, and how they actually represent two different worldviews. But Pirsig is about unifying, not dividing. He delineates the divisions, only to unify them later.

The book seeks to create a framework (of thought) from which such concepts - Art/Technology, Hip/Square , Groovy/Classical - need no longer be treated as disparate entities. This is an ambitious work all right. Pirsig points you to subtle concepts - he needs to uncover the very nature of our natures before he can show you what's wrong with it. To do this, Pirsig deconstructs Perception to study why we believe what we believe - this involves discourses on Myth and Legend (my other hero, Joseph Campbell came to mind a lot in these passages).

He goes back in history to the ancient Greek schools - Stoics, Aristotle, and the beginnings of Dialectic and Rhetoric. The last part of the book is pure detective work, where he uses thought structures as clues and tracks down the perpetrator of the crime; the crime being the modern disconnect between Form and Function, and the perpetrator being the person who dominated early Western thought and created the philosophical foundations of the Modern Western Industralised World. I won't reveal this villain here - go read the book.

Pirsig opines that humans took a wrong turn at that point in history, and grew into a race of beings that only recognised Good-Bad, Right-Wrong, Theory-Proof, i.e. a "Dialectic Approach" ; Pirsig blames this worldview for many modern evils.

Pirsig claims to have studied Eastern philosophy - spent time in Benares, India and so forth. But his deconstruction is mainly relevant to Western thought, or Dialectic Reality. Some of his conclusions are indeed mirrored in Vedantic teachings. But, this reworking for a modern audience is worth its weight in gold.

The practical relevance of this philosophical tour-de-force is the message of Quality, its relation to happiness, and how to achieve it. Pirsig's Quality is not the ubiquitous quality - it is far more involved but very simple when you understand it. The book's final assertion is "From Caring comes Quality, from which comes happiness". "Gumption" is noted as something that will help achieve Quality, and Pirsig uses motorcycle maintenance as an illustration.

Although the subject is so arcane, it is very interestingly rendered. The philosophical plot is masterfully interwoven with the mundane plot with descriptions of life on the road and with friends, and with his son, which are all relevant to the philosophy that follows it. And, there's also a dramatic twist in the story regarding the main characters in the book - i.e., Pirsig and his son, which really elevates the book.

For all the heavy language and unintentional high-brow, this is a very humanistic work with a timeless message. This book will cease to be important the day happiness goes out of fashion. Go for it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read it twice.
Review: A stunning, important work about the nature of truth, beauty, and the subjective and objective realities of life through which we find and create meaning. For anyone who has wondered about such things and who enjoys an engaging story (fictionalized, but I believe it to be largely autobiographical).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Really only for those seeking deeper meaning
Review: I first read this book as a junior in high school, which is probably to young of an age to really understand much of what the book explores. Subsequently, I've reread the book on two occassions.
My review of the book is simple. For those who are interested in an exploration on the nature of thought and philosophy and a willingness to explore human intellect, then much of the book will resonate with you. For many, it is a book that you will willingly re-read.

For those with zero interest in the subject, save your money for something else.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Toss Out the Frozen System
Review: Anything you know, either unfolded before your senses, or you heard about it from someone else, and it unfolded before theirs. And it keeps going, and you can't freeze it. The mind, beholding Quality, or Tao, is all there is. After 4 reads and 15 years, I finally got it. It's super-simple, yet the hardest thing to accept. But once you do, watch life's Gordians knots fall apart.
Thank you Mr. Pirsig, for your intellectual pit-bulledness in the face of Plato's inversion.
The book's highly rich parallel structure is poetically satisfying.
Why did the author collapse? He paralyzed under two fundamental reversals at once: philosophical conversion to Quality from Truth, and, moral conversion from power to "mu"?
My opinion is that if he had been in the right hands at the time, he would have pulled out ok, ie, without the shocks.
P.S.: It's Monism.


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