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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

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great book.
Review: I read this book twenty years ago, and I still think about it. That, to me, is the measure of a great book.

Pirsig, of course, is writing on many levels, but the central theme is hinted at in the title. "Zen" is all about experiencing things directly, immediately, without a preconceived intellectual filter. Zen Buddhism is very anti-intellectual. "Motorcycle Maintenance", to be done well, requires a deep conceptual understanding of how a motorcycle works, and a scientific approach to trouble-shooting. Pirsig is trying, with mixed success, to reconcile what he calls "romantic" (immediate or "Eastern") thought with "classical" (scientific or Western) thought.

Pirsig believes that the reconciliation lies in a deeper (pre-classical) understanding of "quality". Quality is neither objective nor subjective, it is prior to them, it is the primordial ether from which the objective/subjective dualism arises. (I do not do him justice here, if you are interested, read the book.)

What makes the book work is that it that style of writing is a labratory for the concepts he his presenting.

His prose is simple, almost poetic, when describing what is around him and his relationships to his son and his past self. His honesty and directness are alternately refreshing and alarming. Then he shifts gears and tries to unravel and re-weave many of the core issues in Western Philosophy. He manages this without resorting to an academic style or stuffiness.

Pirsig, is a gifted thinker and writer, and certainly not a conventional one. He is a philosopher in that he is working through original ideas with courage and clarity. In the end, like most true philosophers, his philosophy is intertwined with a self-analysis and catharsis, yet has broader meaning and applicability.

There are, I presume, flaws in his reading of the ancients, and I think that his conclusions rely to much on the multiple definitions of the word "quality". The merit of his metaphysics should be discussed but mostly I admire his grit, honesty and gumption to write such a text. It is those characteristics that I would most like to emulate.

I also recommend the sequel, "Lila". It is more down to earth, but equally couragous and fascinating.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Moving
Review: I first read this book in 1985 and again a few months ago, if it doesent have a impact on the way you think about your life check your pulse!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not terribly great, but thought provoking
Review: ZAMM is a book of intense thought. Some of it is true, some of it is plauseable, but for the most part it just rambles. It somehow makes up for its rambling nature by provoking thought, but in a way it presents a danger that some will take its philosophy as their own. It is not a great philosophy or a great book. It does however open up a train of interesting thought. If you find your thought stagnateing and need a little kick start it is a good read, if you need some life changing answers, guideance or direction, look somewhere else.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It will change your life
Review: A friend of mine suggested this book to me. I was skeptical at first, but I decided to give it a try. That was probably one of the best decisions I've ever made. The book changed my life. I look at things in a completely different light now. Pirsig's insight captivated me in a way that really made me think. His writing style is great too. He produces great philosophical rhetoric along with an intersting storyline. This is definately a book that everyone shoud read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A vital book, without peer in late 20th Centuary literature
Review: An essay into values that transcends the academics of established philosophical rants. No other book so immediately inspires that on second reading one is looking for the catch. The inter-twining of a dark struggle, an honourable quest and the delicate experience of a cautious man dragged me through the other wonders of the book. I have read 'dry' philosophy before and since and I would rather people who wrote about the subject actually cared for it in the way Bob Pirsig does or else just shut up. Often regarded as a hippy tome this book offers more than any self-improvement manual could ever hope while taking one on a thrilling trip. It has also improved my car maintenance!

The best first work of the centuary.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very high quality book
Review: This was a very excellent book. Pirsig shed a lot of light on some the issues in life which I have been looking for, but have had trouble grasping. It gave me a perspective of learing that I never knew existed, and it tore down a few walls for me. Quality book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Supplementary text for my AP Calculus Class
Review: I don't know if it was the timing of reading it, or the content of the book, but ZEN is a book that rang with me when I first read it over a decade ago, and still does every time I pick it up and read it to my AP Calculus classes. I had to read it 3 times. The first time was for the story of him and his son, the second as a philosophy primer and the third as a metaphysics. It was the first time that I ever read a book and really believed that the author just wanted me to think about what he was writing and not AGREE with what he was writing. I was allowed to think for myself, encouraged to think for myself as I read. It is the single most important book I have ever read in regards to my career as a teacher, and the messages about how we think and the way we perceive and learn are, I feel, so important that my classes need to see them and not just hear me talk about it. Its a tough read.....but so well worth it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: READ THIS
Review: the endless text of the book and the division of the reviewers' opinions should illustrate to you that this book is waaaaay too complex to listen to reviewers about it. Just read it. (Yes, I realize the irony.)

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Caveat
Review: ZAMM is a quirky book that has some interesting things to say, but it is certainly no masterwork, and those who believe it is are sadly misguided people for whom one can only feel a certain amount of pity. Those who are the objects of that pity do not care for it, of course, but a man can't help how he feels. Perhaps having been written by a mentally unstable author, ZAMM has attracted more than its fair share of mentally unstable believers -- or perhaps they are the usual crowd of lost souls who will follow anything that moves, anything that can be taken for a plausible Messiah. I have nothing particular against the mentally unstable, you understand, I just don't want to receive philosophical instruction from them. Especially when it comes in this form, and I quote: "But there it was, the whole history of science, a clear story of continuously new and changing explanations of old facts. The time spans of permanence seemed completely random he could see no order in them. Some scientific truths seemed to last for centuries, others for less than a year. Scientific truth was not dogma, good for eternity, but a temporal quantitative entity that could be studied like anything else. " This is just specious nonsense through and through. The sort of thing that sounds wonderful when put across with a glib dead-pan delivery, but which has absolutely no truth about it. It is, in short, the kind of confused construction that comes from the mind of a man suffering a mental breakdown, and the sort of "illumination" that attracts similarly confused people. But at least ZAMM is not a deliberate and cynical confidence trick as so many publishing projects of this kind turn out to be. I believe that its author is sincere about what he comes up with, but sincerity does not equate with wisdom, nor even to expertise. As for the readership ... the sheep that follows other sheep must remain lost; people choosing to regard ZAMM as profound have not got to first base yet, which is the realization that there are no gurus who have the answers, that when it comes to real understanding one has to work through the problems oneself. Unfortunately even the signposts that Mr. Pirsig provides are misleading. A close examination of the text reveals little more substance than that which might be expected to impress a certain sort of young person reading psychology or philosophy at undergraduate level; it certainly didn't impress me as meriting the kind of praise that some have heaped upon it. What a person ought to know, at least if he or she wishes to understand the book world, is this: a great many best-selling books present false intellectual credentials, which are endorsed by publishers and critics, either cynically or unknowingly, so that what is whipped up is a small tornado of publicity which beyond a critical point can feed off itself. Large sums of money and stocks of kudos are generated in this process, and what arises is a situation like that which appears in the tale of the Emperor's New Clothes. No one with a valuable reputation dare tell the truth -- which is that the intellectual credentials are false -- for fear that he or she will be taken for a fool,or worse. Times change though, and yesterday's silly fashions are seen for what they are. There was a time, for example, when to have said, "The books of Salman Rushdie are appalling drivel" would have irreparably damaged the reputation of any self-respecting literatus, whereas now it is damaging @not to agree with that assertion. And beware concluding in this case that the survival of ZAMM in print for so long proves its essential truths. It's just that it enduringly appeals to a certain kind of confused middle-brow "searcher after something", which of course is no endorsement of its quality at all. Why else is ZAMM not a great masterwork? Because (the unfortunate and much-discussed title aside) it promises rather more than it delivers; it does not provide much more than a few shallow excursions into the topics it purports to illuminate in a new way; it lacks rigor, and because of that reason alone it would be worse than useless. I would go so far as to say that its success is actually embarrassing to anyone interested in intellectual quality, because it shows how easy it is to blind with science, or at least pseudo-science. One last thing. Publishers are playing with fire when they print, "This book will change the way you think." on the cover of any book, because there are always legions prepared to believe a statement like that, and that is probably because there are legions who want to change the way they think, finding (one assumes) that they regard the way they presently go about it as unsatisfactory. If you doubt this, ask yourself if you could ever bring yourself to believe every word, no matter how improbable, written in a book that contains the specious guarantee: "Everything written in this book is true." Of course not, you may say. What a cheap and transparent trick that would be. Except that if you think about it for just a little while you will see that this has been the @actual story of western culture for at least the last two thousand years. My advice to you, ironic though it may sound, is this: never make men into gods, and whenever you start feeling lulled by the beguiling words of a guru, stand up and immediately start thinking for yourself, tough though it is. S. J. L.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Mixed Feelings About This One...
Review: Mr. Pirsig has written a very thought-provoking book and I am glad his stand on quality and values (or the lack thereof in this society) was put into print. As I continued to read, however (and I did read the whole thing, by the way), his character became more and more scary. I don't think I would like to meet him because the picture in my mind was of Reverend Jim (from the old tv series "Taxi") but only more bizarre and without a sense of humor. The book became increasingly ponderous and incoherent, sort of like the main character. I would recommend reading it, however, because it does contain some good ideas plus you will know what people are talking about when they refer to this book.


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