posted on Aug, 8 2009 @ 09:17 AM
Part TWO
In the generator, P is split into either X or S. This means that paradigms can be only from Social Norms or eXperiential norms. They have to be one or
the other, they cannot be both. In symbolic logic the word "or" is expressed as a lower case "v" so we now can symbolize: P = (X v S) If it’s
paradigm it’s either experiential or social. This is an idea old as Aristotle, we’re just redefining terms to examine a current phenomenon. Think
of it as "either I eXperienced it myself or somebody told me so." (There is little room for arguing that "being told so" is, in itself, an
experience. It is, but without the direct stimulation of the actual experience, you are without proof. We will cover this paradox in greater detail
soon enough.)
Change always waits until the last minute. Whatever shift is required will only occur when it becomes a necessity. In a natural system the preceding
(repeated) statement is true. This means we can deduce that change is a necessity. If there is human interference then change can be created,
destroyed, controlled, etc. It was this realization that caused the "first" Enlightenment at the last half of the eighteenth century. French
philosophers, unhappy under what they considered the tyranny of their own leaders, "woke up" and started asking questions. "Why does the church
have to be linked to the state?" "Why do our young men have to join the campaign or be labeled traitors?" "Why does one who has worked hard to
gain stature fail and those who are merely born into it succeed?" "How did we get to this point?" To put it bluntly, the Enlightenment came from
the realization of philosophers that "common" people didn’t have to be the way they were because anyone said so, yet they were. It wasn’t just
the French, there was a vast uncorking of new ideas all over Europe, into Russia and carried over into the "New Land." Stemming from the growing
ease of travel, the printing press, the chemical, medical and mechanical advances in industry and other conveniences, a new society of powerful people
was created, the individual, the "person." Modern philosophy was born from realizing the quick, rampant influence of unavoidable change and shortly
thereafter, secret philosophy came along too. For if the masses decide they are going to be aware, if they are going to literally revolt in the
streets to get what they want, then control seekers must find a subversive way to tell the people what they want. And so now, in an American court,
you put your hand on the Bible to pledge your honesty oath and church based movements elect presidents. We are, to this day, still trying to rid
ourselves of this veil.
During the Enlightenment questions were posed of the implications of mixing church and state in ways that go beyond allegiances in courtrooms and
politic in sermons. There was the realization that it was morality legislated and categorization by belief. I like to imagine it this way, for
thousands of years, peoples all over our lovely little planet have been experimenting with types of societies. After all that time, a system began to
be duplicated, by desire or by force, that was able to have control of it’s people while giving them the opportunity to live happy, healthy,
productive lives. The system was, in a word, "Money." ‘You use your skills to earn your living’ rather than, ‘you live off the flora and
fauna.’ This system had been used for quite a while before the enlightenment turned it into the physical manifestation of the middle class. Controls
move from the church to state. Money is worshiped. The lines blur.