Warren Kinston
11. March 2012 22:00
Change is hard.
Have I mentioned that before?
Not just hard to do, but hard to see and hard to grasp. I came across the superb blog of Giorgio Bertini; who covers an amazing amount of topics, all related to helping change agents. Just look at his category cloud. I doubt that it is just me who finds change massive and near-overwhelming.
So I'm progressing very slowly. Here is an update on latest thoughts. If you are new to THEE: see the graphic showing levels of WILL that also forms the framework for Personal Endeavour.
Is CHANGE the right name for Level 3 in the Root Hierarchy? It seems to work but that does not mean it is correct. When I was finalizing the Levels of Will, there were two levels causing me trouble. Level-5 was then called "Naming". It was probably because I was preoccupied with More...
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Warren Kinston
Warren Kinston
8. March 2012 19:00
Most of my life I've been trying to create a better world. Ever since I was a deluded young idealist.
All my friends grew up into intelligent successful adults. But somewhere along the road my brain missed the turn-off to maturity. So I'm sort of stuck. Still trying to make the world better. I should have joined Idealists Anonymous long ago.
To my credit, I do believe I've helped a few people along the way. And I do know that More...
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Warren Kinston
Warren Kinston
5. March 2012 11:00
Long, long ago in a universe far, far away, I was inserting electrodes into the brains of live cats to look at single neurons in the thalamus responding to visual stimuli. I wondered about 'seeing' in the way this cat was doing, and 'seeing' in the sense of appreciating a situation or issue. The cat was anesthetized and paralyzed, so not doing too much of the latter.
Fast forward decades and this difference, so typical of being human, was eventually published on the website as the two realities we live in: psychosocial reality and empirical reality. One is about the sun rising in the east and setting in the west, and has nothing to do with what we want or choose. And then there is another «Reality» which is constructed out of our choices.
How exactly do these utterly different human realities More...
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Warren Kinston
Warren Kinston
2. March 2012 18:00
Politics is a mess. No doubt about that.
But let's put it into perspective.
The origins of politics are to be found in the early civilizations. Politics were further developed following the dark ages in Europe, but with mainly social changes. The essential feature at all times was rule by a King who was divine, or was there by divine right, and who could do no wrong.
This is crazy. So politics was psychotic. But people accepted it.
Crazy rulers like that still exist. They operate by whim and their own personal power. They are surrounded by unproductive people: always secret police and a military. In the past, there were also More...
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Warren Kinston
Warren Kinston
29. February 2012 09:30
One of the ideas of the website, was that the essential work of being critical of formulations and properties could be partly taken up by others—by at least a few, perhaps tens, even hundreds of others. However, I now realize that the Internet doesn’t work that way. Creativity, we are told again and again, depends on not criticizing ideas. Common politeness respects personal autonomy and demands restraint—there is something in that.
But, oh dear, does that mean the evolution of ideas based on competitive battles, necessarily red in tooth and claw, must give way to consensus on the lowest common denominator of expedience, fashion or what feels good? Not really. It just means that I have to be my own biggest enemy. So I am playing the role of hitman today on More...
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Warren Kinston