My prior post ended a bit prematurely. I got a little mired in the subject and was having a hard time transitioning so I figured I would just post and go. I will now endeavor to explain the affect of logic on experience and the affect of experience on your core beliefs.
If your stroll through a single day was examined, you would see the millions of decisions you make as you go. When you “static latch”, every one of these decisions, or at least as many as you are capable of processing, needs to be examined. For every decision examined, a logic filter is applied, and depending on experience and your core beliefs, you make high and low quality decisions. The cyclical aspect of logic and experience is important to note here. Your logic dictated your decisions yesterday which created the experiences you apply your logic to today. Thus, a continual evaluation of your decisions directly affects your experience and aides logic in its attempt at providing high quality decisions. On a side note, not all decision making is conscious, so there is more to this, and I will discuss it later. So, your repetitive actions, which can be dictated by your logic both high-value and low-value, are the essence of your experience. A daily movement through the world creates another day or piece of experience for you to draw from. Actively applying logic will help you to create experiences, thus logic creates your path through the day and the resulting experience can affect you core tenets. The long-term effect of this is a shift of cores. The entire template can adjust completely and move your “self” to a better or worse place on the quality scale. This theory is obvious but describing the process sounds convoluted. The point of this becomes convoluted as well. Never-ending questions of why we would want to change, who should change, and what the “higher Quality” would embody. This isn’t the post where that gets discussed. So simply define this theory yourself, as it applies to you, if you think it applies to you. Enjoy…
Wednesday, March 08, 2006
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