Hello Andrew,

I am new here too, found out about the site a few days ago. I use to be on 
Demings  quality management Linked-in discussion group. 

Thanks for the post! Pursig had stated our ability to reason; contemplative and 
 reflective  thought is at the top of the MOQ. This is what can bring change to 
a culture or society. He also stated morality and quality are the same thing; 
this is similar to  William Edwards Deming.  The owner of an organization must 
have quality inside his character, in order to be capable of providing a 
quality product or service.

In Lila towards the end; when Lila has her epiphany clutching the rubber doll, 
Pursig takes on what he feels is his moral responsibility to look after Lila 
for the rest of her life.  Even when Rigel shows up offering to take her away, 
Pursig challenges him, knowing it is not in Lilas best interest. His life 
without Lila
 would be much easier is what his biological self would urge; however his 
morality and quality of character have been built through his intellect.

Pursig had empathy with Lila knowing what she was probably going to face.
 
Pursig was always in an inner struggle trying to make sense or find purpose in 
the world. He knew who he was and was trying to make the world his students 
lived in a better quality atmosphere in which to learn, he abandoned grading at 
Bozeman. Deming spoke openly as a University professor , that no one ever fails 
his class , everyone gets a passing grade. 

Quality in a human being is all about character. I agree with you, bigger 
houses, more diplomas, expensive cars, boats and other toys have nothing to do 
with a quality human being. It was in Pursig when he decided to do what's best 
for Lila, look after her for the rest of her life. He strongly interceded 
against Rigel taking her but was over ruled by Lila.



----- Original Message -----
From: Andrew Chu <andrew....@gmail.com>
To: moq discuss <moq_discuss@lists.moqtalk.org>
Sent: Fri, 18 Aug 2017 21:24:07 -0600 (MDT)
Subject: [MD] The need for quality

Hello all,

My name is Andrew and I came across this site after re-visiting Zen recently.  
Zen was, without a doubt, the book that has made the most formative impact on 
my own personal philosophies and values.

So I’m not sure who else is still active, but figured it was worth reaching 
out.  

It seems to me that the world today could benefit greatly from a broader 
understanding of Quality.  

The fundamental framework that qualities are intrinsic in things, peoples, 
cultures is driving more and more swaths of humanity apart.  Your quality is 
determined by where you live, what car you drive, what language you speak, the 
color of your hair, the religion you practice, the party you voted for.  These 
are all driven by the simple humanistic tendency to make sense of the world by 
creating symbolic representations of disparate pieces of data and observations. 
 However, without an understanding of the nature of quality, these simple 
models have in many ways *become* the world.  The representations have become 
the reality.

And that’s a problem.

The simple acknowledgement that quality exists within the relationship between 
things, encompassing both the subjective and the objective nature of our 
individual experiences, could give people the freedom to feel comfort in their 
own perspective on the world while also understanding that that relationship is 
unique to them and might not be shared equally by others.  It could give us the 
opportunity to start breaking down some of the increasingly prevalent Us vs 
Them dichotomies we see in the world.

Anyhow, I hope this finds everyone well.  I look forward to engaging in 
dialogues about all things Quality.

Sincerely,
Andrew  


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