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by cgriswald
977 days ago
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I read this as a young adult and I understood what Pirsig was saying in an intellectual sense, but I didn't really grok the book until I was closer to Pirsig's own age (when he wrote it) and learned 'the hard way'. I also didn't finish the book because I felt like Pirsig was repetitively making the same point. As a result, I have some questions (not necessarily directly for you, @patrickthebold, but for whoever cares to answer): (1) Were you able to internalize the lessons from this book? (2) Is there anything valuable in the back ~half of the book? (3) If you read this book about 20 years ago, would you re-read it; or if read it less than 20 years ago, would you recommend your future self re-read it? |
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Edit: so to answer your points
1. No need to.
2. Worth reading the whole thing.
3. At the first reading when younger, one might focus too much on the philosophy and miss the story of the person behind the thoughts. It's not a book where you learn philosophy, but how this person thinks and how it impacts his life. With some life experience and perspective this aspect is much more interesting.