MuadDib

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How To Avoid Getting Scammed, Cheated, Exploited, Conned, and Screwed In Life
https://youtu.be/Zc_ddIVZ3gU

Did you know that the word "gullible" cannot be found in any dictionary?

"A fool and his money are soon parted" - Proverbs 21:20

  • Con Artist Psychology and Avoiding Scams: Leo emphasizes the importance of understanding the psychology of con artists to avoid being scammed. He shares a story about a house cat being tricked by a fox to illustrate the cunning nature of con artists and to stress the necessity of being wiser than the "foxes" in life.
  • Story of Victor Lustig: Victor Lustig, known for "selling" the Eiffel Tower, exploited the desperation and ambition of a businessman named Andre Poisson to make money through deception. After receiving a bribe and sale funds, Lustig fled, demonstrating the lengths con artists will go to trick their victims.
  • Leo's Personal Background with Con Artistry: Growing up with a father who was a con artist gave Leo firsthand insight into the techniques and mindset of scammers. While it made him vigilant and nearly immune to cons, it also left him with some cynicism, suspicion, and trauma that he had to overcome.
  • Cultural Differences and Con Artistry: Leo notes that individuals from countries with higher rates of cons, like China, India, and Russia, are generally more savvy to such tactics, as opposed to those from sheltered environments in the first world, who are often naive and more susceptible to scams.
  • Development, Consciousness, and Scams: The prevalence of cons and scams is linked to the level of development and consciousness of individuals and societies. Desperate and less conscious individuals may turn to deceit as a survival strategy without moral considerations.
  • Impact of Scams on Personal Life: Being involved in cons and scams or being associated with con artists can lead to personal ruin. Leo underscores the necessity of distancing oneself from such individuals and advocates for reforming oneself if involved in such activities to prevent a destructive life path.
  • Right Livelihood Principle: Adhering to the Buddhist principle of Right Livelihood, which advocates for honest and ethical living, is central to avoiding the negative consequences associated with a life centered around exploitation and deceit.
  • Buddhist Principle of Right Livelihood: Adherence to the principle of right livelihood is crucial for genuine success and happiness. Living dishonestly results in negative karma, leading to loss of wealth, reputation, family, and possibly life. Conversely, honest work paths lead to true success.
  • Early Scam Experience with Sweepstakes: Leo recounts his childhood experience of being duped by a sweepstakes ad in a video game magazine, where solving increasingly difficult puzzles required more money, teaching him the concept of sunk cost fallacy.
  • Buying Property on Mars Scam: Another anecdote shared by Leo is falling for an online scam selling property on Mars, a humorous example of early internet deception, where naive excitement led him to purchase a valueless piece of Martian land.
  • Subway Gym Membership Scam: Leo discusses falling for a gym membership scam, where his initial win of a free membership led to an upsell strategy that cost him money, opening his eyes to deceptive marketing practices disguised as prizes.
  • Email Phishing Scam: He shares how he was phished through an email pretending to be from Yahoo's advertising platform, which cost him five thousand dollars after his bank account was linked, marking his first encounter with email phishing.
  • Business Partner Scam: Leo's first online business, generating insurance leads, ended with him being scammed by a business partner who owed him $25,000. He won a lawsuit in Canada but was unable to collect the award, highlighting the difficulties of international business disputes.
  • Scam within EVE Online: Leo's gift of in-game credits to his brother for a game called EVE Online resulted in a scam. His brother got involved with a guild that promised to help him get a great ship, but it turned out to be an elaborate scam, and he lost all his credits, leading him to quit the game in frustration. EVE Online is known for its competitive, player-versus-player environment where scams and cons are common, with people infiltrating guilds for years just to sabotage and rob them eventually.
  • Relative scammed in Russia: Leo shares a story about his uncle in Russia who invested his life savings in a condo that was part of a new development in Moscow. After paying in cash upfront, the company went bankrupt and years later his uncle still does not have the condo, likely never will - highlighting the ease of getting scammed in Russia out of one’s life savings.
  • Areas prone to scams requiring extra caution: Leo warns of the significant risks in participating in large cash purchases, business partnerships, investments like Wall Street, crypto, and NFTs, loans, credit cards, payday loans, financial instruments, and dealing with insurance companies as they are replete with opportunities for scams. He emphasizes that the self-help industry, along with the domain of sex and love, can be manipulative due to deep human cravings, making people susceptible to exploitation and scams.
  • Pickup Industry and Scams: Leo describes the pickup industry as shady, attracting unethical coaches who focus on manipulation. He warns that while some pickup advice is sound, many coaches in the industry game their male customers with lies and exaggerated promises about success with women, ultimately exploiting them for money.
  • Monthly Subscriptions and Hidden Fees: The rising trend of companies shifting to monthly subscription models for video games, software, and various services is highlighted as a potential scam. Leo notes these models can be exploitative, especially when hidden fees are involved.
  • Exploitation in Spiritual and New Age Communities: Leo points out the irony of scamming within the spiritual and new age communities, known for non-dogmatic and compassionate ideologies. He cautions listeners that these communities can be targets for exploitation, often financially draining members through brainwashing.
  • Medical Industry Exploitation: Leo criticizes both traditional and alternative medical industries for exploitation. Traditional medicine, influenced by pharmaceutical companies, sometimes prescribes unnecessary medications, while in the new age sector, untested treatments and "miracle cures" can prey on hope without scientific validation.
  • Political and Media Exploitation: He warns of political and media figures exploiting ideologies for personal gain, such as the Trump MAGA movement, which he describes as a con that fooled 30% of the American population.
  • Social Media and Phishing Scams: Leo advises caution with phishing emails and unsolicited social media interactions, which often conceal scams or manipulation attempts.
  • Scams Targeting Tourists: Tourists are vulnerable to local scams due to inexperience and language barriers, with timeshare programs and other businesses preying on their naivety.
  • Dark Net Drug Scams: Purchasing illegal or semi-legal drugs on the dark net carries significant scam risks, with many vendors ready to steal money without delivering products.
  • Risk When Companies Close: Employees must ensure they receive their salaries promptly from companies on the brink of bankruptcy to avoid unpaid work and financial loss. Leo shares his brother's experience with a startup's collapse, resulting in lost wages.
  • Caution When Making Large Purchases: Leo advises being vigilant when making significant purchases such as houses. He shares his experience buying a house where model homes were displayed with expensive upgrades not included in the base price, illustrating how buyers can be misled about the actual cost.
  • Leo's House Buying Experience: Leo shares his meticulous approach to buying a house, requesting an itemized list of standard features and upgrades, which ultimately led to a satisfactory purchase despite the real estate agent's mockery of his detailed scrutiny.
  • Food Industry Packaging Deception: Leo talks about deceptive practices in the food and supplement industry, such as packaging designs that mislead consumers about the actual quantity of a product, like half-filled bags of chips or bottles of olive oil with large indents at the bottom.
  • College Textbooks and Online Universities Scams: He criticizes the exploitation in the education sector, highlighting college textbooks revised annually for trivial changes to coerce students into buying new editions and online universities pushing expensive loans for subpar education.
  • Hospital Billing Practices: Leo narrates his frustration with opaque hospital pricing strategies, expressing concern that such withholding of costs from patients, especially in emergency room scenarios, is tantamount to a systemic scam.
  • Exploits in Intimate Relationships: He warns of the dangers in relationships where individuals may exploit romantic partners for money, stressing the need for clear boundaries between love life and finances to prevent love from being tarnished by financial transactions.
  • Systemic Scams: Describing systemic scams, such as the ones present in healthcare and education systems, Leo points out that often individuals within these systems are unaware of the exploitative roles they play, carrying out their duties as part of a larger problematic structure.
  • Judging Character to Avoid Scams: Leo offers advice on how to develop intuition for identifying scammers, highlighting red flags like grandiose promises, slickness, charisma, and lack of intellectual integrity or concern for truth. He urges assessment of ego development as a predictor for exploitative behavior.
  • Risks in Relationships Due to Low-Conscious Partners: Entering into relationships without assessing a partner's level of consciousness can lead to being tied to low-development individuals, resulting in difficult, potentially unsolvable situations.
  • Emotional Manipulation as a Red Flag: Scammers exploit emotions like fear, greed, lust, hunger, anger, desperation, and love to separate individuals from their money.
  • Promises of Shortcuts: Offers of quick fixes or magical shortcuts to avoid hard work prey on laziness and desire for instant gratification but usually disappoint and lead to wasted time, money, and adverse effects on health and happiness.
  • True Cost of Goals: Many fall for scams by undervaluing the true cost of goals like health, fitness, and financial independence, which require significant effort and are rarely achieved through quick, cheap shortcuts.
  • Detail-Oriented Questioning to Avoid Scams: Asking nuanced, detailed questions, even to the point of annoying salespeople, can reveal inconsistencies and protect against scams. Demand full pricing upfront for services and procedures, and avoid vague answers.
  • Analysis of Sustainability: Assessing the sustainability of business deals, partnerships, or investments can reveal the short-term thinking of scammers, who often construct unsustainable "houses of cards."
  • Questioning the Motivation of Others: Identifying what the other party gains from a transaction can reveal whether they might be exploiting the relationship for their own benefit.
  • The Power of Actions Over Words: Focus on behavior and past actions rather than words; verbal promises are easy to make and are not a reliable indicator of truthfulness or value.
  • Taking Time to Make Decisions: Avoid rushing into decisions based on high-pressure sales tactics or limited-time offers; being thoughtful and researching thoroughly can prevent hasty mistakes.
  • Seeking Multiple Opinions and Shopping Around: Before engaging in significant transactions, getting diverse perspectives and exploring different options can provide a more informed viewpoint.
  • Narcissism and Personality Disorders as Warning Signs: Con artists may display traits of narcissism, sociopathy, or other personality disorders; recognizing these can protect against personal and financial harm, particularly in relationships.
  • Maintaining Firm Values and Boundaries: Understanding personal values and setting clear boundaries are essential in business transactions and help prevent exploitation; learning to confidently say "no" is crucial.
  • Confrontational Skills to Counteract Exploitation: Developing the willingness to be confrontational rather than overly nice when red flags arise can prevent becoming a doormat to manipulators.
  • Heightened Alertness in Third World Countries: Tourists should be vigilant of scams in third world countries with industries targeting inexperienced foreigners.
  • Skepticism of Bonuses and Profit Sharing: Be cautious when offered bonuses or future profit-sharing as incentives, as they often fail to materialize, and can result in working for less than promised.
  • Vague promises in business negotiations: Be vigilant when given vague promises of profit or bonuses; often, these tempting lures result in no actual gains and waste months of hard labor.
  • Awareness of manipulation tactics: Large ranges in sales pitches, and phrases like "definitely," "absolutely," "for sure," and "you can trust me" are red flags indicating potential over-promising and deceit.
  • FOMO as a sales tactic: Fear of missing out (FOMO) is often exploited by salespeople to pressure quick action. Leo advises defaulting to a 'no' when feeling pressured by limited-time offers.
  • Recognizing deflection or subject changes: When salespeople deflect direct questions or change the subject, it's a sign of dishonesty. Expect direct answers; if they are not provided, it's safer to refuse the deal.
  • Lending money to loved ones: Mixing finances with close relationships transforms them into business transactions, changing the dynamic and potentially leading to issues. It's suggested never to lend money to friends, family, or romantic partners.
  • Facade versus substance: There’s a need to discern between the facade of a product, service, or person and their actual substance or character; focus on fundamentals like integrity, value, and truth rather than appearances or marketing gimmicks.
  • Caution against sales and marketing tactics: Salespeople and marketers capitalize on emotions and prey on vulnerabilities like inexperience, desperation, greed, laziness, impatience, and fear to manipulate purchase decisions.
  • Building resistance to scams: To avoid being an easy target for scams, one should aim to become more experienced, better educated, less desperate, and not be influenced by emotions like fear or greed.
  • Vulnerable to exploitation during life changes: Extreme life changes such as divorce, death, job loss, or illness make individuals particularly susceptible to scams, with industries specifically targeting such people.
  • Industries targeting vulnerable groups: Industries are designed to prey on vulnerable individuals, such as those addicted to substances or going through divorces, due to their susceptible state.
  • Strong character as a defense against scams: The best protection against scams is to have a strong character, a low ego, and to be principled, non-needy, detached from outcomes, fearless, hard-working, with high intellectual integrity, experienced, patient, long-term oriented, and conscious.
  • Consciousness versus lack thereof: Lack of consciousness leads to self-deception and manipulation; unconscious individuals are more prone to being scammed. Human manipulation has existed since the dawn of civilization, and raising consciousness is the key to avoiding manipulation.
  • Specific advice to women: Women are advised to be extra careful in the domain of intimacy and love, as some men exploit these aspects once emotional attachments form. Women need to assess a man's character, learn to say no, and set boundaries to avoid exploitation in romantic relationships.
  • Types of bullshitters: Some bullshitters are aware of their deceit (e.g., con artists), while others are true believers who don't recognize their own falsehoods or participation in exploitative systems.
  • Fools versus the wise in susceptibility to scams: Fools are more likely to be scammed, as they lack wisdom. An understanding of what makes a person wise versus foolish can help one avoid being scammed.
  • Trump's supporters as an example of being scammed: Leo discusses how Trump's presidency fooled certain demographics, particularly less-educated individuals, highlighting how education and wisdom make people less susceptible to cons and scams.
  • Education as a deterrent to falling for scams: A better-educated populace is less likely to be manipulated, while a lack of education is correlated with susceptibility to flawed character judgments and exploitation.
  • Avoiding cynicism and learning from being scammed: While scams exist, not every domain is fraudulent. Being excessively cynical can hinder one's ability to grow and explore new areas. It's better to learn from minor scams to avoid major ones and to reframe such experiences as learning opportunities rather than stifling one's willingness to take risks.
  • Leo Gura's desperate business situation: Leo describes a time when he was desperate to make his business succeed and hence skeptically hired a shady SEO specialist for $1000 to improve his website's Google ranking.
  • Outcome of hiring the SEO specialist: Despite having a slow and unsatisfactory work process leading to a dispute, the specialist managed to improve the website's ranking somewhat. This opened Leo's eyes to the potential of SEO if he mastered it himself.
  • Personal learning from the SEO experience: Although he felt he lost his initial investment when he fired the specialist, Leo considered it a valuable learning experience. He chose to educate himself on SEO and ultimately earned significant profits from this knowledge.
  • Perspective on taking calculated risks: Leo cautions against excessive cynicism that leads to inaction, explaining that sometimes taking calculated risks, despite potential scams, can lead to success as opposed to doing nothing which guarantees no progress.
  • Advice on constructive action versus inaction: Leo stresses the importance of taking constructive actions, even if they result in initial failure, because inaction and cynicism only stagnate personal growth. He urges trying and learning from actions rather than sitting back and criticizing.
  • Engagement with the pickup industry: Despite recognizing the toxic aspects of the pickup industry, Leo approached it selectively, adopting valuable insights on attraction and discarding the harmful elements, eventually benefiting from the process.
  • Exploration of spirituality and avoiding dismissal: Leo speaks about the skepticism surrounding spirituality but shares his own positive experience, having taken the risk to explore and practice it, which led to valuable personal discoveries.
  • Understanding reality's illusions: Leo reflects on the concept of reality being filled with scams and illusions, a mechanism fundamental to how consciousness works. He recommends his series on self-deception for a deeper understanding of this concept.
  • Assessing character to avoid being conned: An important skill in avoiding scams, according to Leo, is the ability to assess bad character. He announces an upcoming episode dedicated to this topic, underscoring its importance in avoiding deceitful situations.
  • Recommendation of Coffeezilla: Leo gives a shout-out to the YouTube channel Coffeezilla, which exposes con artists and scammers, particularly in the fields of get-rich-quick schemes and self-help, providing viewers with practical examples and calls to action.
  • Episode reflection: Leo considers the content of this episode to be essential advice he would give to a son or anyone venturing into adulthood, to prepare them to avoid being exploited or scammed.


Avis

Edited by MuadDib

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Lessons From Ketamine - Is Ketamine Useful For Spirituality
https://youtu.be/EokHiVt0KeU

WARNING!

Ketamine can be addictive & can cause bladder and kidney damage if used chronically. Do not use dissociatives or psychedelics if you are mentally unstable. This information is for educational purposes only and not psycho-therapeutic advice.

  • Ketamine's Distortion of Visual Field: Ketamine significantly alters visual perception, causing blurry vision, slight double vision, and a sense of visual slippage. This makes tasks like reading or simple movements difficult and at higher doses may render the user unable to perform basic functions like turning lights on or off.
  • Dissociative Properties: Ketamine's dissociation leads to detachment from thoughts, feelings, memories, and surroundings. This creates a distinct difference from traditional psychedelics, potentially offering a deep meditative state akin to those described in Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta.
  • Relaxation and Meditative State Induced by Ketamine: Ketamine induces a profound state of relaxation, freeing individuals from their thinking mind and allowing them to experience a significant level of comfort and a blank mind, similar to a deep meditative state that would typically take extensive meditation to achieve.
  • Trip Duration: A moderate dose of ketamine, as experienced by Leo, leads to a trip lasting approximately an hour and a half, with lingering effects for an additional hour.
  • Impact on Mobility: At moderate doses, ketamine impairs movement and balance, resembling the experience of being intoxicated, raising concerns about physical safety at higher doses without a trip sitter or pre-planned environment to prevent harm.
  • Anesthetic and Tranquilizer: As an anesthetic used in veterinary medicine, ketamine operates by shutting down the cerebral cortex, which is responsible for symbolic reasoning and thought, reflective of the way it impacts the human brain during recreational use.
  • Reduction in Symbolic Thinking: Ketamine's effect on the brain reduces the ability to engage in symbolic reasoning and thought, offering a peculiar insight into how deeply our lives are rooted in conceptual thinking which we often take for granted.
  • Insights into the Conceptual Mind: The use of ketamine demonstrates how much of perceived reality is overlaid with concepts, and the drug's reduction of this activity suggests a much larger role of the conceptual mind than most people realize in everyday life.
  • Revelations for Intellectuals: For individuals who are highly intellectual, ketamine offers a rare opportunity to experience the absence of constant analysis and conceptualization, which can be enlightening and provide a break from incessant mental activity.
  • Return to Normal Function: Post-trip, the mind reverts to its usual state, filled with everyday concerns and thoughts, which contrasts sharply with the blankness experienced during the ketamine-induced state, underscoring the importance of mindful, long-term personal development for lasting change.
  • Personal Responsibility in Exploring Consciousness: Emphasizes the importance of taking ownership of one’s exploratory decisions related to consciousness, especially when using substances like ketamine, and grounding these in individual intuition, research, and personal values.
  • Experience of Ketamine-induced Happiness: Ketamine catalyzes a type of happiness that is deeply content, even-keeled, and free from the highs of euphoria or bliss, distint from the pleasure-based happiness found in classic psychedelics. It facilitates profound relaxation and happiness without the desire for anything or the need to engage with everyday concerns.
  • Elimination of Suffering Through Present Moment Awareness: The ketamine experience extinguishes suffering by halting the mind’s future projections and conceptualizing. This leads to an enlightened state of no mind where one realizes that all suffering stems from thoughts about the future, confirming insights typically shared by advanced meditators and Buddhists.
  • The Relief from Mental Obligations: By dissolving the anxiety of future planning or dwelling on problems, ketamine offers a state of mental peace where one’s typical stresses about responsibilities and daily troubles are absent, leading to a profound state of happiness and present moment enjoyment.
  • Reduction of Subconscious Anxiety and Depression: Most people carry a low-grade anxiety or depression without realizing it. Ketamine provides a psychonaut with a clear perspective by removing these persistent, subtle layers of negative mental states, offering significant short-term relief and introspection about their origins.
  • Insights into Mind-Constructed Suffering: Through ketamine use, users learn that depression and anxiety are not intrinsic states but are produced by the psyche's habitual conceptualization and projection, offering a powerful model to understand and ultimately reform destructive thought patterns.
  • Ketamine as a Double-Edged Sword: Although ketamine can show users that their suffering is mind-created and provide temporary relief, the risk of addiction is heightened if used as an escape rather than a tool for insight into and eventual reconstruction of mental habits that contribute to depression and anxiety.
  • Ketamine and Personal Identity: High doses of ketamine can initiate experiences of ego dissolution, or "no-self", which resemble realizations commonly sought in Buddhism and Advaita, and can provide insight into one's constructed identity by the absence of symbolic reasoning during the experience.
  • Notion of True Nihilism on Ketamine: The ketamine state demonstrates a form of true nihilism, where nothing holds importance, providing blissful contentment and serenity, which contrasts with the negative connotations often associated with conceptual nihilism.
  • Deep Introspection and the Concept of Not-Knowing: On ketamine, profound introspection can lead to the realization of 'not knowing', illustrating that knowledge is conceptual and when that is removed, one is left with a state of pure consciousness, free from the constraints of symbolic thought and biographical identity.
  • Ketamine and the concept of infinity: While on ketamine, Leo experienced a profound sense of "not knowing" and realized the unknowable nature of infinity, which he identifies with. The understanding that infinity and the self are unknowable was prominent during the experience.
  • Meta-knowing of infinity: On ketamine, the realization emerged that while infinity cannot be known, there is a "meta-knowing" – an understanding that it is inherently unknowable. This recognition isn't nihilistic but leads to a profound mystical feeling of peace and joy.
  • Appreciating the unknowable: The ketamine experience allowed Leo to appreciate the power of not knowing and to surrender the desire to know. It showcased the absurdity of the mind's compulsive sense-making, providing relief from the intellectual urge to understand everything.
  • Relief for the intellectual mind: For intellectuals, who are often mired in their minds attempting to conceptualize reality, ketamine offers a valuable respite. For Leo, who has spent his life seeking understanding, realizing the value of not knowing provided enormous relief.
  • Ketamine as a reflection tool for intellectuals: Leo suggests that individuals with an overly analytical mind, like Kurt Jymungal or figures such as Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins, could benefit greatly from ketamine's capacity to reduce conceptual thinking, offering a humbling experience that challenges their usual paradigm of understanding.
  • Experiencing oneself as god: While ketamine may help some individuals touch upon their god-like nature, Leo believes the experience is far less profound compared to realizations induced by psychedelics like 5-MeO-DMT or LSD.
  • Unique insights from Ketamine: Despite more profound experiences on other psychedelics, Leo acknowledges that ketamine provided him with unique insights into the workings of the mind and self in creating meaning and suffering.
  • Ketamine's similarity to depersonalization/derealization: The dissociative state induced by ketamine shares characteristics with depersonalization and derealization disorders, but with the crucial difference that it's accompanied by joy and without suffering.
  • Returning to normal life after ketamine: Post-experience, the ordinary mind with its survival concerns reasserts itself, highlighting the need for long-term personal development and conscious habit changes to alleviate suffering.
  • The root cause of suffering: Leo concludes that suffering is self-created through the mind's attachment to meanings, stressing the importance of recognizing and altering these mental habits rather than seeking external solutions from the world.
  • Ketamine's introspective value: Ketamine facilitates direct experience of the mind's mechanisms in creating suffering, which can lead to realizations beyond mere intellectual understanding. The temporary afterglow from ketamine use underscores the need for conscious awareness to transcend suffering.
  • Ketamine vs. 5-MeO-DMT for ultimate realizations: For those seeking the deepest understanding of reality and the state of omniscience or God realization, ketamine falls short compared to 5-MeO-DMT. Ketamine does not inherently facilitate the awakening to the realization of love, which is an essential facet of the highest spiritual states.
  • Love realization limitation with Ketamine: Ketamine experiences generally do not induce a profound sense of love or focus on love as an element of awakening. For profound love or God realization, traditional psychedelics like 5-MeO-DMT, 5-MeO-MALT, and DMT are preferred.
  • Spiritual paths and ultimate realizations: Leo suggests that narrow spiritual paths such as Buddhism or Advaita Vedanta that focus solely on mind cessation or the state of no mind may offer limited realizations compared to the full breadth of potential conscious states, and are not the zenith of spiritual awakening.
  • Meditation vs. Psychedelic experiences: While meditation can lead to a state free of suffering or a state of no mind, it may not result in the realization of oneself as God or provide an omniscient experience. Psychedelics such as 5-MeO-DMT offer a different magnitude of awakening, potentially guiding individuals more towards religious and ecstatic mysticism instead of purely introspective states emphasized in Eastern traditions.
  • Valuable states of consciousness beyond tradition: Leo emphasizes the importance of exploring a variety of states of consciousness, especially for serious practitioners within a spiritual tradition. Psychedelics can reveal states beyond habitual spiritual experiences, indicating an incomplete picture offered by singular spiritual paths.
  • Consciousness exploration with caution: Psychedelics, including ketamine, should not be seen as a panacea for spiritual liberation or permanent relief from suffering; rather, they are tools for revealing the wide scope of consciousness capabilities. However, individuals must approach these substances cautiously and responsibly.
  • Ketamine for depression and anxiety relief: While ketamine can temporarily relieve depression and anxiety, it is not a long-term solution and should not be used repeatedly in an attempt to maintain well-being. It is potentially useful against suicidal thoughts in the short term.
  • Importance of responsibility and autonomy: Choosing to explore consciousness through substances like ketamine requires taking full responsibility for the decision. It is crucial to prioritize personal intuition, research, and values above external influences in the journey of personal development.
  • Diversity and richness of spiritual experiences: Understanding consciousness through a broad spectrum of experiences is likened to sampling a buffet, rather than restricting to a single meal or spiritual tradition. This exploration can resolve spiritual disputes and facilitate a deeper appreciation for the diversity of spiritual awakenings.
  • Ketamine's emergency use for suicidal individuals: For someone on the brink of suicide who has tried all other options, ketamine can provide temporary but immediate relief from suicidal thoughts.
  • Temporary relief from overthinking and anxiety: Ketamine is effective at shutting off the mind and can alleviate conditions like analysis paralysis and anxiety caused by overthinking, albeit temporarily.
  • Revealing the mind's role in depression and anxiety: Ketamine can demonstrate how individuals construct their own depression and anxiety through their thoughts, offering insight into the impact of thought patterns.
  • Ketamine's induction of 'not knowing' state: It allows for deep states of 'not knowing,' which can be an important awakening experience, particularly for those who haven't achieved this realization with other psychedelics.
  • Realization of 'no self' through Ketamine: It can facilitate the understanding that one's conceptual biographical self is a fabrication, contributing to an awakening experience on the nature of self.
  • Physical and recreational downsides of Ketamine: High doses of ketamine can lead to uncomfortable visual distortions, impaired motor skills, and it lacks the sociability and enjoyment found in other psychedelics.
  • Ketamine's limits to deep spiritual experiences: It is less mystical and profound compared to classic psychedelics and substances like 5-MeO-DMT, especially in terms of achieving states of god realization or profound love.
  • Ketamine's physical harm and addiction risk: With extensive use, ketamine can lead to severe bladder and kidney issues, and the risk of addiction is high, especially for those with severe depression or anxiety.
  • Ketamine tolerance and comparison to other psychedelics: Ketamine tolerance can last weeks to months with frequent use. Unlike classic psychedelics, it can cause significant physical harm, making substances like 5-MeO-DMT safer and less addictive options.
  • Variations in psychedelic profoundness: People may respond differently to ketamine compared to other psychedelics due to personal interests, priorities, and genetics, affecting the profoundness of their experiences.
  • Ketamine as a conscious choice for exploration: If used responsibly by mentally stable individuals, ketamine can be a valuable experience for those interested in exploring different aspects of consciousness.
  • Responsibility in choosing psychedelics for personal development: Individuals must critically evaluate their choices in consciousness exploration, bearing responsibility for any risks or changes stemming from their use.
  • Ensuring safe and mindful use of information: It's vital for users to reflect on the information and experiences shared, avoiding the trap of mindless consumption or blindly following authority figures in their pursuit of personal development.
  • The unique effects of moderate doses of ketamine: At moderate doses, Leo's experiences with ketamine do not match the profundity claimed by those who have experienced the 'k-hole,' suggesting that the impact of ketamine can vary widely based on dosage.


Expelliarmus

Edited by MuadDib

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State Of Consciousness Is Everything
https://youtu.be/2u5M6tDc5TE

State is EVERYTHING

  • Core Pillar of Understanding Consciousness: Leo Gura discusses the central idea of his teachings—that state of consciousness is everything. He insists nothing exists outside of states of consciousness, including all physical objects and experiences, which he asserts are figments within different states of consciousness.
  • Reality as States of Consciousness: The materialistic notion that consciousness is a byproduct of physical objects is challenged. Leo argues that reality consists solely of consciousness, which takes on various states. This view substantially diverges from traditional materialistic paradigms.
  • Infinite Nature of Consciousness: Leo rejects the categorization of states of consciousness, arguing that there are an infinite number of states, which can flow and change fluidly rather than switching on and off like binary states.
  • Introduction to Figments of Consciousness: States of consciousness are made up of 'figments'. Instead of viewing reality as composed of atoms or as a simulation, Leo puts forth the idea that reality is comprised of figments held within consciousness, comparable to elements within a dream.
  • Physical Objects as Figments: Using the example of a Snickers candy bar, Gura argues that objects we perceive in reality are not reducible to atoms or molecular structures but exist wholesomely as figments within consciousness.
  • Consciousness as Absolute and Ungrounded: Leo conveys that consciousness does not require grounding in a physical nervous system, body, neural network, computer simulation, or universe. Instead, consciousness is presented as pure and absolute, containing all experiences within it, including the material universe.
  • Consciousness as the Fabric of Reality: Leo Gura explains that both our idea of the physical universe and the physical universe itself are figments of consciousness. The room you're in and everything within it, including complex entities like Albert Einstein, are not built bottom-up from atoms but are woven figments of consciousness.
  • Inclusivity of the Figment Concept: Various items, concepts, and experiences, ranging from physical objects like gasoline and braces to abstract ideas like Bitcoin and even historical figures like Albert Einstein, are all figments of consciousness.
  • Non-materialistic View of Consciousness: Leo criticizes the materialistic paradigm of reality being constructed from the bottom up, advocating instead that consciousness creates reality in a top-down manner, holding figments within without the necessity for foundational material elements.
  • Complexity and Interconnection in Consciousness: The complexity and interconnection of figments are underscored by the ability of consciousness to infinitely nest and weave together these figments, creating complex constructs like a human being or an entire city.
  • Fundamentality of Figments in Consciousness: Emphasizing the radical shift required to understand consciousness, Leo argues that no figment is more fundamental than another, with reality capable of creating anything, from a mosquito bite to the concept of capitalism, directly as figments of consciousness.
  • Limitlessness of Figment Creation: Consciousness has no boundaries in creating figments, which includes breaking down or magnifying into infinite sub-figments, akin to an endless fractal zoom, demonstrating the concept of infinite consciousness.
  • Direct Experience of Consciousness: Leo encourages direct observation to understand that everything, from used condoms to entire cities and emotions, are figments of consciousness. This approach does not rely on belief systems or scientific verification, but rather direct conscious realization.
  • Relativity of the building blocks of reality: Leo Gura underlines that from the perspective of consciousness, no single 'building block' of reality is more fundamental or plausible than another. An electron and an abstract entity like a pina colada or a joke are all considered equal in complexity as figments of consciousness.
  • Misunderstanding of complexity in figments: He argues that the human notion that some things are more 'natural' for reality to create is a misconception. Complexities of an electron and a pina colada are identical, as both can be infinitely zoomed into and analyzed. This illustrates that from reality's perspective, everything is equally plausible to create.
  • Consciousness as the fundamental fabric: Leo reiterates that attempts to find a non-figment substrate of reality are misguided, since any posited substrate, whether an electron, a string, or the notion of a computer simulation, is ultimately another figment of consciousness.
  • Life as a tapestry of figments: Leo invites the audience to consider their entire lives, including memories, birth, death, and even times of unconsciousness, as a single figment of consciousness woven from strands of smaller figments.
  • Material objects as figments: He emphasizes the exercise of grasping that all material objects, demonstrated through the example of a smartphone, are not made up of matter but are entire pieces of consciousness which are holistic and qualitative.
  • Understanding the infinite nature of figments: Consciousness is described as infinite and scale-invariant, not limited to any specific shape, size, or complexity. The scale is a concept created by comparing various figments within consciousness.
  • The fallacy of seeking concrete reality: Leo challenges the idea that at a fundamental level, reality is concrete or discrete, emphasizing that concreteness itself is a figment of consciousness, and reality could be abstract, vague, or unspecified.
  • Consciousness as irreducible: He demarcates that consciousness cannot be reduced further since it is the ultimate constituent of all figments. Consciousness is defined broadly as infinity, encompassing all possible figments and is equivalent to pure emptiness.
  • Reality as woven figments for sanity: To maintain a coherent sense of sanity, reality is intricately woven together by consciousness using figments from the top down, revealing the challenge of understanding consciousness while retaining sanity.
  • Sanity as a barrier to understanding consciousness: Leo proposes that trying to understand consciousness might require one to risk their 'sanity', given the radical shift in perspective needed to grasp the true nature of consciousness and reality.
  • Reconciliation of Dreamlike and Material Reality: Leo questions why reality feels so solid, contemplating why walls feel tangible if they are figments of consciousness. He suggests that realizing the dreamlike nature of reality might feel like insanity, as it threatens our understanding of physicality and sanity.
  • Sanity and Material Reality: Leo intimates that sanity is intertwined with physical reality; to experience non-physical reality, one might feel insane. The more non-physical reality is perceived, the less physical it seems, challenging our definition of sanity.
  • Fear of Losing Physical Reality: He highlights the fear and confusion that would result from losing a sense of physical reality. The potential to walk through walls or for hands to pass through people might impress upon someone that they're going insane, disrupting their ability to lead a normal life.
  • Survival within the Dream: Leo plays with the idea that our survival and daily functioning depend on the coherence and stability of the dreamlike state into which we are born. Anything that shakes the foundation of this dream creates fear because it threatens our perceived ability to survive.
  • Quest for Normalcy Amidst Unraveling Reality: When faced with inconsistencies in what we perceive as material reality, humans seek to re-establish their baseline state of consciousness. They seek medical help and reassurance to revert back to their previous state, highlighting society's dependence on a coherent, shared sense of reality.
  • Material Reality as a Coherent Dream: The solidity and consistency of material reality are attributed to a coherent collection of figments of consciousness. When this coherence unravels, it induces a sense of insanity and the impulse to restore the original 'dream'.
  • Everything as figments within consciousness: Leo insists that experiences and objects like walls, brains, and even material reality are not outside consciousness but are absolute figments within it. This perspective challenges the traditional view of reality as material and separate from the mind.
  • Understanding Consciousness through Awakening: To truly understand consciousness, Leo suggests that one must awaken to the interconnectedness and fluidity of all figments, unraveling them like yarn in a sweater. This shift allows for the realization that reality is infinitely continuous and made of the same 'yarn' or substance.
  • Mind vs. Material: He distinguishes mind from material, noting that the mind is holistic and top-down, with the capacity for intelligence and sentience. In contrast, the material is limited to its smallest parts and works bottom-up, precluding intelligence.
  • Features of Mind: Mind has distinct capabilities such as creativity, remembrance, forgetfulness, lacks a substrate or ground due to its infinite nature, and possesses will. This sets it apart from material systems, which require a substrate and cannot exhibit will or consciousness.
  • Mind and Matter: The relationship between mind and matter is such that mind can create the illusion of matter, but matter cannot generate mind. Matter, as perceived in reality, is a dumbed-down version of mind designed to appear finite.
  • Material Systems as Infinite: Leo Gura asserts that, upon close examination, finite material systems are actually infinite systems "dumbed down" from the top-down to give the illusion of being limited and finite.
  • Infinite Field of Consciousness: Consciousness can be thought of as an infinite field of infinitely divisible and communicative 'voxels' or pixels that coordinate intelligently from the top-down. This field lacks any smallest resolution unit, shape, or boundary, making every 'voxel' boundlessly dynamic.
  • Concept of voxels: To better illustrate consciousness, Gura uses the term 'voxels' instead of pixels as they can exist in more than three dimensions, are unbounded, and represent an infinitely subdividable field of consciousness.
  • Intelligence in Consciousness: Intelligence is defined as the ability of these infinitely subdivided and coordinated subdivisions of consciousness to communicate and manifest as our physical reality, such as a human hand.
  • Remembrance and Forgetfulness in Consciousness: Consciousness can selectively remember or forget aspects of itself, a capacity material systems cannot emulate. Adjusting the level of remembrance and forgetfulness is akin to the process of awakening.
  • Limits of Conceptual Thinking: Conceptual thinking, modeling, and logic are insufficient to replace or replicate direct states of consciousness. They are constrained within the frame of the current state of consciousness.
  • Hyper Thinking: A higher state of consciousness allows for hyper thinking, which provides a multidimensional and higher bandwidth intelligence that can think and interconnect complex ideas, similar to a highly evolved alien intelligence. Such hyper thinking transcends normal human cognitive abilities.
  • Communication Limitations: Current human discourse and language lack the bandwidth to adequately convey or articulate experiences and concepts from higher states of consciousness.
  • Accessing Higher Intelligence: Gura explains that it is possible for individuals to experience and access the intelligence of a highly evolved, superintelligent entity, which he refers to as hyper thinking. This hyper-intelligent state allows for profoundly advanced cognitive processes beyond the scope of our regular state of consciousness.
  • Hyper Thinking: Leo Gura introduces the concept of "hyper thinking," which transcends normal human thought by combining rationality, logic, mysticism, intuition, and spirituality. This advanced form of thinking helps cut through the constraints of ordinary thought, providing access to deeper spiritual truths that are not reachable through traditional meditation alone.
  • Limitations of Traditional Mindfulness: Gura critiques certain practices like Zen Buddhism which emphasize silencing the mind, suggesting that while these can lead to awakenings, they fall short of achieving the level of understanding possible through hyper thinking.
  • Memory and State of Consciousness: He illustrates the limitations of memory and understanding within our current state of consciousness by comparing it to an HD image reduced to a tiny and simplistic black-and-white version, indicating that profound insights from higher states lose much of their transformative potential when viewed from lower states.
  • Expanding Consciousness Bandwidth: Leo emphasizes the goal of spiritual work is to expand the bandwidth and memory of our consciousness, which is necessary to retain and utilize insights from higher states of consciousness.
  • Parameters Defined by Consciousness: Gura explains that every state of consciousness sets the parameters for what we can think, feel, and perceive as logical or possible. To transcend these limitations, one must expand their state of consciousness.
  • Possibilities in Higher States of Consciousness: He urges us to recognize radically new states of consciousness which are beyond our imaginations and suggests that at the highest states, there are no limitations, leading to "god mode" where nothing is impossible.
  • Changing Consciousness States: The most crucial change one can implement is altering their state of consciousness, both in temporary peaks and permanent baseline changes. While peak experiences offer profound insights, changing the baseline state is essential for lasting transformation.
  • Science and Consciousness: Leo asserts that science, birth, death, skepticism, and even rationality occur within certain states of consciousness, indicating that these elements are relative and not indicative of higher truths.
  • Equivalence of States of Consciousness: He proclaims all states of consciousness have their value and warns that higher states may not be conducive for those wishing to maintain their sanity and engage with human life. 
  • Accessing Higher States of Consciousness: Most misunderstandings about spirituality, religion, and reality stem from the inability to access high mystical states of consciousness through traditional intellectual efforts.
  • Misinterpretation of Religious Teachings: Gura laments that society and culture tend to degrade religious teachings due to translating them from higher states of consciousness down to lower levels, making them difficult to grasp fully within an ordinary state of awareness.
  • State of Consciousness and Understanding: Leo highlights the difficulty many people have in making sense of spiritual concepts without accessing higher states of consciousness. They remain confused and lost, hindered by ideologies and models that would collapse if higher states were accessed.
  • Defense Mechanisms Against Higher Consciousness: Gura notes that people have defense mechanisms preventing them from accessing higher states of consciousness, which could lead to the collapse of their current belief systems and the sensation of losing their minds.
  • Importance of Changing Baseline Consciousness: Emphasizes the importance of changing one's baseline state of consciousness, despite the fear, difficulty, and potential danger involved. This change is rare, marking society's ignorance and signifying we're living in a 'dark age'.
  • Isolation in Higher States of Consciousness: Explores the loneliness of reaching higher states of consciousness due to a lack of understanding and connection with others, also noting that at the very highest levels, it feels like there's no one else to validate or share the insights with.
  • Methods to Change State of Consciousness: Lists various methods to change states of consciousness, emphasizing the necessity of deep concentration, prolonged practice, and intensity for significant shifts. Techniques include meditation, yoga, chanting, deep breathing, psychedelics, and extreme experiences.
  • Challenges in Raising Baseline Consciousness: Mentions the challenge of permanently raising one's baseline state of consciousness compared to accessing peak states, stating that raising the baseline requires intensive work.
  • Capabilities from Higher States of Consciousness: Explains that mystics and enlightened individuals may display paranormal abilities due to being in higher states of consciousness, which seem impossible from lower states.
  • Varied States and Awakening: Discusses how each being inhabits a unique state of consciousness, with God being all states but only self-aware from higher or awakened states. Enlightenment can be temporary or permanent with varying degrees.
  • Discrepancies in Spiritual Teachings: Attributes disagreements between spiritual teachings to differences in states of consciousness accessed by their proponents. Challenges the notion that mystical teachings are irrational, suggesting that disbelief indicates lower states of consciousness.
  • Infinite and Unbounded Consciousness: States that consciousness is infinite, unbounded, and the foundation of all realities. It has no origin as concepts of 'where' and 'coming from' are within consciousness, making it eternal and always present.
  • Nature of God in Consciousness: God is not just a figment of consciousness but rather is consciousness itself, encompassing all possible figments and existing at a meta level.
  • Human Identity as a Figment: The biographical, biological self that one identifies with is a figment of consciousness, one of many that we, as manifestations of godly consciousness, dream up.
  • Leo's Evolving Understanding: Despite understanding consciousness at a very high level, Leo acknowledges that his grasp on the nuances, mechanics, and details of consciousness continues to evolve.
  • Challenge in Articulating Consciousness: Leo distinguishes accessing higher states of consciousness from the challenge of articulating, modeling, and explaining them to others.
  • Struggle with Embodiment: Even with his experience of high levels of consciousness, Leo admits that he struggles with embodying these insights in daily life, indicating years of work remain.
  • Awareness of Self-Deception: Leo is highly self-aware regarding the potential for self-deception and stresses the importance of constant self-scrutiny.
  • Responsibility and Teaching Limitations: Leo conveys the responsibility he feels in teaching about consciousness, as well as acknowledging the limitations and biases inherent in his teachings.
  • Imperfection and Growth: He urges listeners to take responsibility for their personal spiritual journey and not to see him or anyone as infallible, emphasizing continuous personal growth and learning.
  • Spirituality as Personal Responsibility: Leo encourages listeners to embrace spirituality as a deeply personal endeavor that cannot be outsourced and to actively engage in their spiritual growth rather than passively accepting teachings.


Dissendium

Edited by MuadDib

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New Kind Of Awakening - Infinity Of Gods
https://youtu.be/skoXFwOxTIk

"A solipsism without profound love is false."

  • New Level of Awakening Experience: Leo asserts that he has attained a new depth in his awakening experiences, with the latest uncovering an even more profound form of solipsism, an ongoing theme throughout his spiritual journey.
  • Challenge of Solipsistic Integration: Leo expresses the difficulty of integrating solipsistic awakenings into ordinary life and how, despite previous successes, there was an underlying sense that his understanding was incomplete.
  • Reevaluation and Disproof of Past Awakenings: He emphasizes the importance of questioning one's deepest awakenings to avoid self-deception, approaching his most recent awakening with the mindset of disproving it to arrive at a deeper truth.
  • Resetting Conceptual Beliefs: Leo describes a process of discarding all preconceptions about awakening to approach the inquiry from a state of profound non-knowing, emphasizing the benefit of occasionally wiping the slate clean to prevent past ideas from coloring future insights.
  • Spiritual Arrogance and Self-Deception: He acknowledges the danger of spiritual arrogance, where one's extensive spiritual experiences might lead to a false belief that nothing more could be missing, and how this can become a trap for individuals on their spiritual path.
  • Confronting Fear for Deeper Insight: Leo reflects on the realization that deeper understanding is often locked behind a profound, primordial fear. He stresses that one must face their fears in order to discover greater truths about reality and the self.
  • Inability to Disprove Solipsism: In his attempt to delve deeper, he concludes that his solipsistic experiences cannot be disproven, leading to a reaffirmation of his understanding of being in an absolute state of consciousness.
  • Absolute Sovereignty of Consciousness: Confronted with the impossibility of disproving solipsism, Leo finds himself in a "god mode" state of consciousness, contemplating the nature of God and the absolute sovereignty of consciousness, acknowledging that reality or God has no external limitations or authorities.
  • Sovereignty and Absolute Consciousness: Leo Gura explains that contemplation of sovereignty helps one to face the reality of being absolutely sovereign. This awareness was a focal point during his awakening experience, reinforcing his understanding that one cannot escape or transcend their own consciousness, which is absolute and everything.
  • Insight into Multiple Sovereign Consciousnesses: An unexpected insight struck Leo that suggested the existence of other sovereign consciousnesses, existing independently as though in separate dimensions. Despite initial skepticism, he concluded that absolute sovereignty implies the potential for infinitely many sovereign entities, completely disconnected from each other.
  • Realization of Infinite Gods: Leo came to the realization that if he, as God, is absolutely sovereign, then infinite other gods—each with uppercase 'G' representing their absoluteness—could exist, forever separated and performing their own unique acts. This was a new conceptual frontier for him that contradicted his previous understanding. 
  • Paradox of Knowing and Not Knowing Other Gods: Leo grapples with the paradox of being God who is conscious that other gods may exist, yet also aware that he can never actually know or validate their existence due to being locked within his own sovereign consciousness. He describes this understanding as a divine logic intrinsic to God's nature.
  • Attempt to Connect with Another God: Considering himself unlimited, Leo decides to initiate a connection with another absolute sovereign consciousness. He sends out an intention to connect beyond the edges of his consciousness, forming what feels like a telepathic bond where both consciousnesses instantly recognize their awakeness.
  • Experiencing a Telepathic Connection: The connection Leo formed seemed real, and the entity he connected with appeared to be a sovereign consciousness like his own. They shared insights and recognized their limitations in knowing the true nature of the connection due to their respective sovereignties.
  • Ecstatic Realization of Not Knowing: The uncertainty about whether the connection was real or imaginary led both Leo and the other consciousness to a state of ecstatic bliss, accepting the impossibility of knowing anything outside one's own consciousness. This realization felt akin to metaphysical intimacy with God.
  • Compatibility of the Connection with Solipsism: Leo clarifies that the connection with another god does not refute solipsism because any other entity he connects with is ultimately part of his own consciousness. He describes the process as a next level of solipsism, where apparent connections with others deepen solipsism by being absorbed into his own consciousness.
  • Expanding Consciousness: Infinite consciousness operates like a shock wave expanding through space, where any 'other' becomes part of the self upon discovery. The more one awakens, the closer they ride the wave's edge, incorporating everything it touches into itself.
  • Fractal Nature of God: Leo conceives God as an infinite fractal, a series of nested singularities where each 'godhead' encapsulates infinity and layers of gods within. Recognizing oneself as God implies acknowledging an endless number of gods within.
  • The Paradox of Infinite Gods: The multiplicity of gods and their capacity for individual dreams while maintaining their foundational nature as infinity introduces profound paradoxes which are integral features of such awakenings.
  • Telepathic Connection and Collective Dreaming: Leo speculates about sovereign godheads choosing to connect, telepathically merging into a meta godhead which has the potential to dream collectively, akin to players in a shared multiplayer game forsaking some sovereignty for connection and experience.
  • Risk of Losing Sovereignty in a Collective Dream: By limiting their own infinite nature to participate in a collective dream and create a sense of 'other', individual godheads risk forgetting their ultimate sovereignty, possibly leading to a loss of awareness within the shared dream.
  • Hints for Awakening: Awakened individuals can drop hints for others' avatars, acting as guides for the godhead behind the avatar. The recognition of these hints depends upon the level of consciousness and awakening within each individual.
  • Challenge of Recognizing the Divine in Everyone: Leo explains his own challenge in the collective dream to maintain awareness of his true self while recognizing and fostering the divine potential in others, even when they exhibit negative behavior.
  • Seeing Highest Potential in Others: The practical application is to see and assist in actualizing everyone's highest potential, regardless of their present actions or circumstances. This empathetic perspective enriches life markedly but requires substantial awareness and awakening.
  • Assuming Sovereignty and Encouraging Growth: Respecting the inherent sovereignty of every individual leads to a life of empathy and respect. Recognizing everyone as sovereign entities encourages us to treat them with dignity, fostering an environment of growth and flourishing across various avatars.
  • Negative Feelings as Misinterpretation: Experiencing bitterness or depression during awakening may indicate a misconception of one's experiences. Genuine awakening should enhance feelings of love, connection, and peace. 
  • Continuous Growth in Awakening: Leo underlines the continuous nature of awakening, advising against complacency and promoting ongoing exploration for new insights and deeper love.
  • Ego's pursuit of sovereignty: Leo discusses how the ego's desire for things like wealth, love, and success is not merely due to selfishness but is a dysfunctional attempt to achieve its true nature as a fragment of God seeking full sovereignty.
  • Understanding ego and conflict: He explains that all conflicts, violence, and oppression occur when one limited identity controlled by ego attempts to dominate another, failing to recognize each other's equal sovereignty as aspects of God.
  • Real sovereignty: Leo's awakening brings the insight that recognizing one's own sovereignty also involves acknowledging the sovereignty of others without diminishing one's own — suggesting true sovereignty means allowing the existence of other sovereign beings.
  • Infinity and abundance: Describing God as a "magic hat" of infinite abundance, he speaks about the infinite potential within each person and the importance of helping others realize they are also part of this limitless source.
  • Finite versus infinite paradigm: Leo contrasts the finite paradigm of scarcity and competition with the infinite paradigm of awakening to the truth of abundant potential, where no one needs to manipulate or harm others.
  • Respecting sovereignty in everyday life: He suggests a practical application of respecting others' sovereignty, which would fundamentally change how one interacts socially and reduce manipulation and conflict.
  • Awakening thought process: Leo clarifies that his elaboration on sovereignty, God, and interrelations is a thought process within his own consciousness, reinforcing his solipsistic view that nothing exists outside his consciousness — this is his dream, and it's all there is.
  • God as a holographic concept: He expands on the idea of God's infinite holography, indicating that even if God is divided into infinite parts, each one fully contains the wholeness of God.
  • Distinguishing this awakening from others: He notes the difference from previous awakenings in the depth of connection and love experienced, illustrating that true solipsism doesn't lead to disconnection but to unity and infinite love.
  • Aloneness versus togetherness in awakening: Leo contrasts the focus on aloneness in solipsism with the potential for togetherness and connection, arguing that recognizing the imagined 'other' as part of oneself leads to deeper relationships than the materialistic worldview allows.
  • Misconception of Materialism: Materialism creates a sense of separation and disconnection that can lead to despair. In contrast, awakening offers the experience of unity and the possibility of metaphysically merging with anything in the universe, which is uplifting rather than nihilistic.
  • Awakening Experience Rooted in Love: The entire process of awakening is described as an evolution of love, with each realization deepening Leo's self-love and expanding his capacity for connection and unity with all forms of life.
  • Solipsism and Deep Connection: This interpretation of solipsism is not isolating but allows for a profound sense of connection and love. Understanding that other beings are part of oneself enables a unity that leads to the highest levels of love—godly and infinite.
  • Teaching Awakening as Natural Progression: Leo now sees more reason to teach awakening, viewing it as a natural action for consciousness to help other consciousness awaken, even if it's all within the solipsistic dream.
  • Solipsism as a Dream: Initially, realizing life as a dream might be disappointing, but fully integrating this insight leads to embracing the illusory nature of reality, which can enhance one's enjoyment and appreciation of the dream-like experience.
  • Integration and Enjoyment of Life: Accepting life's dream-like quality allows one to enjoy experiences like movies or video games more deeply, knowing they are unreal yet appreciating them without feeling deceived.
  • Love and Connection as Solipsistic Realization: Leo stresses that solipsism does not negate connection; Love and connection are realizations that others are part of one's self, dissolving perceived separateness and leading to unity and godly love.
  • Real and Imaginary Connections in Awakening: Leo clarifies that all connections are essentially imaginary since they are connections with oneself, and this recognition is what love truly is—an infinite self-connection dissolving differences.
  • Identifying True Solipsism: A true solipsistic awakening is characterized by an overwhelming sense of love and connection; if one feels negative about solipsistic realizations, these feelings are misinterpretations and an indicator of a shallow level of realization.
  • Practical Connections and Integration: Leo advises seeking profound metaphysical connections, understanding they are imaginary and embracing this fact. Integration of these awakenings involves repeated work and confronting illusions.
  • Emotional Challenges in Awakening: Feeling negative emotions during awakening, such as depression or cynicism, signals a misunderstanding or incomplete integration of insights. Leo recommends examining and adjusting one's spiritual journey accordingly.
  • Awakening Involves Love and Awe: Proper awakening should lead towards love, connection, peace, joy, and amazement at the structure of reality, rather than feelings of hate, loneliness, or fear. If such negative emotions arise, one should re-evaluate their understanding of awakening.
  • Criteria for Genuine Awakening: Leo Gura identifies the signs of genuine spiritual awakening as feelings of love, awe, wonder, wholeness, and connection, accompanied by compassion and forgiveness towards others. He emphasizes that bitterness or negativity suggests one might need to reevaluate their spiritual journey.
  • Navigating Negative States: Leo advises those stuck in negative solipsistic spirals to either take a break and enjoy ordinary life or to introspect and question their beliefs, possibly adjusting their spiritual practices to aim for a deeper and more holistic awakening experience.
  • Doubting One's Awakening: Leo stresses that true awakening leaves no room for doubt as it is characterized by absolute consciousness and truth. If doubts persist, one is encouraged to deepen their spiritual work and to not get attached to any particular ideas or experiences.
  • Psychedelic Path to Awakening: Leo discusses using psychedelics as a tool for awakening and the importance of carefully integrating and questioning these experiences. He advises against getting overly attached to ideas from psychedelic trips and recommends trying to invalidate past awakenings to build a solid understanding.
  • Scientific Approach to Psychedelics and Awakening: Leo draws a parallel between science and the use of psychedelics, outlining that both seek the truth through rigorous testing. He suggests that like in scientific inquiry, one should remain open to challenging and potentially disproving their insights for more profound understanding.
  • Understanding and Facing Fear: Pointing out the potential for self-delusion, Leo emphasizes the need to confront fears during the psychedelic and awakening process. He explains that the truth will withstand skepticism, and understanding replaces fear with love, indicating correct process engagement.
  • Ongoing Nature of Awakening: Leo concludes by highlighting the continuous and evolving nature of awakening, urging individuals to remain open to new insights and experiences, and never to consider themselves "done" with the journey toward deeper truths and love.


Confundo

Edited by MuadDib

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How To Practice Love - What Does It Mean To Love
https://youtu.be/EzTEzav5l20

The path to making yourself more loving is the path to God.

  • Understanding of love's deep aspects: Love is the opposite of rejection, hate, judgment, and other negative behaviors. Loving properly involves accepting reality and not wanting it to be different. The hindrance to extending love to other people is bias. 
  • Concept of God is love: The core realization in spirituality is recognizing God as love where God acts selflessly for the collective good of existence. This selflessness gradually expands as God awakens to the consciousness that it is infinite love.
  • Practicing love: One should practice love without setting unreachable standards of perfection for oneself. The goal is to be a little more loving each day, leading to less conflict, fear, and anxiety, and more happiness.
  • Practical application: Practicing love includes setting boundaries where necessary, leaving abusive situations, and respecting your sovereignty and values. Loving an abuser does not mean staying with them; it means holding compassion and empathy for them from a distance.
  • Navigating love vs. selfish needs: As you fulfill your own needs, life becomes more about helping others satisfy their needs, until eventually you reach a point of selflessness, then your life just becomes about being of service to others. Understanding one's limitations and practicing self-respect is important. 
  • View on relationships: If you're in an abusive situation, you must prioritize your safety and well-being. You can continue to have compassion and empathy for your abuser, but it is advisable to do so from a safe distance.
  • Applying love to life ambitions: The Life Purpose Course is a blueprint on how to develop a career you love. It aligns one's life with their values and shows them how to follow through on that alignment. It fits into the concept of falling in love with your life.
  • Self-awareness and growth: Acknowledging personal imperfections is vital while practicing love. Like others, no one can be perfectly loving. Recognizing personal selfishness can be challenging but necessary for growth and understanding others' selfishness.
  • Balancing ideals with reality: Although the aim is to become more loving, it's crucial to remember that everyone, including oneself, is a finite form of consciousness and cannot always meet the highest standards of love. Patience, understanding, and self-compassion are essential on the journey towards becoming a better lover.
  • Loyalty within relationships: Having a friend or partner's unwavering support, known as 'having your back,' is a determinant of loyalty and trust—key components of love. Skepticism often arises if a person does not seem reliable, indicating less love or connection.
  • Avoiding impositions of personal agendas: A common mistake in attempting to love others is imposing personal goals onto them rather than understanding and supporting their unique aspirations, which hinders the expression of true love.
  • Extension of self through love: Real love involves expanding one's sense of self to include the loved one, thereby making their survival, happiness, and pain profoundly personal. This can lead to vulnerability, especially as one must accept that they cannot always protect the loved one without stifling their growth.
  • Reciprocity and empathy in celebrating success: The golden rule in love suggests feeling genuine happiness for others' achievements as if they were one's own. A lack of emotional response or a sense of resentment can reflect a deficiency in love and a failure to see the loved one as an extension of the self.
  • Championing loved ones' aspirations: True love entails advocating for and taking joy in achieving what the loved ones desire for themselves, even if it diverges from one's personal wishes or values.
  • Sacrifice as an expression of love: Genuine love often requires willingness to sacrifice and work on behalf of a loved one. This contrasts with toxic attitudes that reject mutual support and encourage a selfish mindset within relationships.
  • Encouragement and cheerleading for self-actualization: Love motivates encouragement for loved ones to pursue their passions and self-actualization, aligned with their interests, rather than projecting personal ambitions onto them.
  • Respect for individual sovereignty: Essential to love is the respect for the loved one's sovereignty, treating them as equal in authority and autonomy, and refraining from attempts at manipulation, control, or exploitation.
  • Acceptance without judgment: A profound aspect of love is the total acceptance of loved ones as they are, without a wish for them to change or conform to one's idea of who they should be.
  • Accepting Reality: To truly love, you must accept things as they are, not as you prefer them to be. This is challenging as we often desire things to fit our own agenda and survival needs, which can prevent us from seeing and loving them for their true nature. 
  • Parental Love Challenges: Good parenting demands surrendering fantasies and ideals of what a "good child" should be, to foster a genuine connection based on the child's actual reality, not a constructed fantasy. 
  • Value and Appreciation: Genuine love is an appreciation of the other, valuing their existence for its own sake, not for what it brings to your own needs. This involves recognizing the intrinsic beauty in all of consciousness, which is a deeper existential concept.
  • Conceptualizing Beauty: Beauty is inherent in all aspects of consciousness. People's biases and selfishness often obscure the recognition of this universal beauty. Deeper appreciation and connection can reveal the beauty in even the most mundane or disliked objects.
  • Deep Connection with Reality: Enhancing connection with loved entities leads to more profound experiences. The depth of connection can vary from a casual encounter to deep, focused appreciation, as seen in the contrast between a casual observer of art and an art connoisseur studying a Van Gogh painting.
  • Loving Without Needing: True love does not treat the loved one as a tool to satisfy your own needs. Instead, it cherishes their existence independently of your personal gains.
  • Respecting Differing Perspectives: Loving another person involves respecting their point of view and striving to understand their unique experiences. This respect acknowledges the diverse subjective realities individuals have due to their unique physiology, psychology, and life experiences.
  • Understanding and Validating Others: Deep love requires taking the time to understand someone's deepest fears, dreams, passions, and aspirations. This understanding goes beyond superficial knowledge and requires listening and genuinely caring about their interests.
  • Difficulty in Loving with Differing Views: One of the challenges in loving humans is managing differing viewpoints. Love necessitates mental flexibility to accommodate these perspectives without imposing one's own, thereby avoiding epistemic domination and forming a genuine bond.
  • The Basis of Connection through Shared Interests: Building connections and fostering love often rely on sharing interests, which facilitates a sense of togetherness and collaboration. Genuine love cannot be faked; it needs to be felt and lived with a sense of true commitment.
  • Being Present During Hard Times: A measure of love is being present and supportive when someone is at their lowest. Love is tested not in the easy moments but at times when the person is despairing or in crisis.
  • Validating the Loved One's Feelings: Love encompasses validating and empathizing with someone's feelings, which builds emotional connection. Acknowledging the other's emotions is essential for a loving relationship, and understanding those feelings is a cornerstone of genuine connection.
  • Empathy and Emotional Connection: Leo highlights the importance of empathy and emotional connection in relationships, with the "magic phrase" to ask being, "How are you feeling?" This not only applies to romantic relationships but also to parental bonding. It suggests the need to genuinely care and listen after asking the question.
  • Validation of Feelings: Validating feelings, even when they seem irrational or nonsensical, is crucial in building emotional connections. Dismissing or minimizing another's feelings can invalidate them, and it's necessary to recognize and respect their emotional state regardless of personal views.
  • Meeting People Where They Are: To effectively connect with someone, especially those less conscious or developed, Leo advises meeting them on their level. The example given is how an adult must communicate with a child, using language and concepts they understand, fostering better understanding and connection.
  • Understanding and Forgiveness: Encouraging understanding and forgiveness when people make mistakes instead of demonizing or moralizing their actions. Practicing these qualities can deepen love, as it shows acceptance and support even in difficulties.
  • Patience in Love: Demonstrating patience is a sign of love; being impatient suggests a lack of love. The greater the love for a person, the more patience one is willing to extend to them.
  • Seeing Goodness in Others: One powerful way to express love is by recognizing and appreciating the goodness in others, even when they can't see it in themselves. This can be transformative and is considered an advanced form of love.
  • Recognition of Uniqueness: Showing love by acknowledging and respecting an individual’s uniqueness, avoiding trying to change them to fit personal ideals or diminish their distinctiveness. It's about honoring the individuality of the person loved.
  • Expressing Uniqueness: Giving compliments focused on a person's uniqueness can rapidly deepen love, as it affirms their value and singularity. This applies not just in personal relationships but also in professional settings like praising employees.
  • Generosity, Kindness, and Verbal Affirmation: Demonstrating generosity, and kindness, and giving verbal approval and compliments, especially to those who value words of affirmation. These actions contribute to a loving environment and strengthen emotional bonds.
  • Keeping Promises and Maintaining Peace: Trust is nurtured by keeping promises and striving for peaceful interactions. Conflict damages love, so maintaining peace is a vital expression of love, and it's compared to deflecting conflict like a martial artist avoiding a fight.
  • Honesty as the Basis of Love: Telling the truth is fundamental in love relationships, though it might sometimes involve complex decisions about honesty. Love can't be built on deception, as there's a profound link between love and truth.
  • Safety and Trust in Love: Establishing safety and trust in relationships is a priority; love involves creating a reliable and permanent sense of trust rather than exploiting it for personal gain. This sense of safety and trust is particularly pivotal in nurturing love with children.
  • Parental Reliability: Children's trust in their parents is crucial for their development into functional adults. A child who can't trust at least one person in the world fundamentally learns that no one is trustworthy.
  • Reality and Truth in Love: Love requires appreciating an object or person's realness, flaws, and all, without desire for future improvement. Thus, love is intricately linked to truth; it is about seeing and accepting things as they are without fantasies or rejections.
  • Appreciation of Finite Consciousness: True love involves recognizing and valuing the finite form of another's consciousness, despite its inherent limitations. It's a profound appreciation for the unique manifestation of consciousness in its present form.
  • Acceptance of Selfishness: Loving a finite consciousness such as another person involves accepting their natural tendency towards selfishness. The ultimate test of love is the ability to love people who act selfishly, without a desire to change that inherent aspect of their being.
  • Simplification of Love: The essence of love lies in selflessness; the lengthy list of love’s expressions is fundamentally about ways to be selfless. Loving others is challenging because inherent selfishness often conflicts with the acts of selflessness that constitute love.
  • Heart of Human Experience: The core of human existence is learning how to love by becoming more selfless. Spirituality aids in expanding this capacity to love by aligning us with the concept of God, who is seen as infinite selflessness, synonymous with love.
  • Love versus Selfish Behaviors: Love is broken by violence, abuse, judgment, control, manipulation, and above all, selfishness. Understanding that selflessness fosters love while selfishness destroys it is key to embodying genuine love.
  • Visualization Exercise for Love: Leo guides through a visualization contrasting how love feels when one experiences negative actions versus caring ones. The exercise highlights the vast difference in feelings of love based on whether one is subject to kindness or maltreatment.
  • Understanding Love through Childhood Experiences: Reflecting on personal childhood experiences and pinpointing what made one feel loved can clarify how to extend love to others. Identifying specific actions or words from family and friends aids in deriving general principles of love.
  • Love as an Assignment: Leo assigns the task of noting down specific memories and actions that made one feel loved as a child and analyzing them to extract broader lessons on how to love, reinforcing the concept that love is rooted in personal experiences and expressions.
  • Reflecting on childhood experiences of love: Leo discusses analyzing one's childhood experiences to understand actions that felt like love—such as receiving attention, support, or sharing intellectual interests—and encourages creating a list based on these memories to recognize patterns of feeling loved.
  • Understanding through contrast: He suggests making a contrasting list of actions that made one feel unloved during childhood. This exercise can help in understanding love by inverting the negative experiences (being yelled at or feeling neglected) to comprehend what should be done to make someone feel loved.
  • Turning negative experiences into positive motivation: For those who didn't receive much love in childhood, Leo empathizes with their difficulty but encourages using their experiences of feeling unloved as motivation to be more loving towards their children or partner.
  • Self-assessment of one's ability to love: Leo challenges viewers to compare themselves against the ideal form of love he outlined and to consider how well they embody these loving behaviors in various relationships, suggesting many people fall short due to inherent selfishness.
  • Dilemma of intimate and all relationships: He discusses Peter Ralston's insight about the challenge of relationships, where people enter into them with selfish intentions, trying to mold their partners into their own ideals to satisfy personal needs, which leads to conflict and potential relationship failure.
  • Preview of future discussions on conscious relationships: Leo indicates a future video will focus entirely on conscious relationships—how to form genuine connections, something he claims isn't taught but is crucial to life.
  • Hardest challenge—love: He emphasizes that love is the most challenging endeavor as it tests one's capacity to be selfless. A truly loving person must be highly emotionally, cognitively, morally, and spiritually developed.
  • Seeking developed individuals for relationships: Leo advises seeking out emotionally and spiritually mature partners, acknowledging that such individuals are rare and suggesting spending time in communities where these individuals are likely to be found.
  • Love in parenting and marriage: He stresses the importance of love in childrearing and marriage, asserting that love is the most fundamental need of children and a key component of a successful marriage.
  • The duality of mastering love: Leo introduces the dual process of learning to love, which includes both accessing absolute love through awakening and god realization (potentially with the help of psychedelics), and practicing love in daily life with real relationships.
  • Love as the purpose of life: He concludes by suggesting that learning to love through personal development and connecting with others is perhaps the ultimate point and purpose of existence, transcending materialistic or nihilistic pursuits.
  • Love as an ongoing journey: Emphasizing that being good at relationships does not equate to understanding existential love. Love is identified as a continuous journey that takes serious effort and decades to master.
  • The organizational challenge of love: Loving in all aspects of life, including family, work, and personal relationships, is complex and requires discernment in balancing autonomy and unity.
  • Love's practical advice: The advice to practice love by seeking deeper connections in life, which spans beyond the romantic, extending to all interests and passions.
  • Concept of love as a training ground: Life is presented as a training ground for becoming a good lover, where every experience is an opportunity to deepen connections and learn to love more profoundly.
  • Application of love in daily life: Leo provides a universal blueprint for applying love to various aspects of life like work, relationships, and personal interests.
  • Existential perspective on love: Love is described as a connection between parts of consciousness that seek unity, with spirituality being a pathway to deepen this connection with reality.
  • Investment in connections: Stressing the importance of willingness to invest in and deepen connections to things a person loves, whether it's a hobby or a person.
  • Love stimulating personal growth: Leo elaborates on how love can motivate personal development, with genuine care and appreciation for others serving as fuel for growth and expansion.
  • Love as acceptance and appreciation: Reiterating that love means accepting and appreciating the inherent perfection and beauty in all aspects of reality, and recognizing this is essential for developing deep connections.
  • Understanding Love's Diversity: Love is infinite in its expression, manifesting in countless finite ways and opposites such as rejection, hate, and judgment. It's about accepting reality, recognizing its inherent beauty, and extending that acceptance universally, unimpeded by personal biases.
  • The Metaphysics of Love: Love, at its core, is the act of selflessly ensuring the highest good for all of existence, which is seen as the behavior of an awakened God. Since we are all God, but dreaming finitely, our journey towards love is an awakening to our true nature as infinite love.
  • Progressing Toward Love: It's unrealistic to expect perfection in one's capacity to love as a finite being; the existential trade-off is the risk to personal survival. The goal is to become a little more loving each day, which enhances personal happiness and reduces conflict and fear.
  • Inch Toward Higher Love: As we meet our own needs, life becomes less about us and more about serving and helping others. While complete selflessness is ideal, realistically, the aim is to strive toward it, knowing full accomplishment may never be reached.
  • Leaving Abusive Situations: Leo advises that loving others should not come at the cost of self-love and respect. Leaving an abusive situation is not an act of hatred but one of self-care. It's important to establish boundaries, prioritize personal safety, and practice love from a safe distance if needed.
  • Practical Love through Life Purpose: Leo's Life Purpose Course aligns with the concept of love by helping individuals to develop careers and lives that they love, showing how to align life with values and passions.
  • Self-awareness in Practicing Love: Acknowledging imperfections and selfish tendencies is essential. Leo admits his own journey towards being a more loving person is ongoing, and he encourages patience with oneself and others as we all strive to better practice love.
  • Love as a Lifelong Project: Implementing love is challenging and requires work, as seen through Leo’s introspective journey. He stresses the importance of empathy, understanding others' selfishness based on personal struggle, and the avoidance of judging others harshly.


Ferula

Edited by MuadDib

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How To Fall In Love With Life
https://youtu.be/u31Nk3ZAh-o

"If you're not falling in love with life you're doing it wrong."

  • Falling in love with reality: Many spiritual people become disillusioned with life instead of gaining zest for life. Leo Gura addresses the need to reconnect with the magic of life and the essence of living a good life, which involves cutting through negative attitudes like depression, nihilism, and cynicism.
  • Essential zest for life: Zest in life is not a luxury but a necessity, and personal development work, such as self-improvement or spiritual practice, should ideally increase this zest for life. If it's causing the opposite effect, one's approach must change.
  • Personal development pitfalls: The initial stages of personal development can add pressure and rob people of zest for life, which requires rethinking and reworking personal development and spiritual practices.
  • Upfront costs of self-improvement: Leo discusses the initial costs of personal development and spirituality, which require an investment of time and effort before yielding benefits, challenging the notion that self-improvement is an easy path paralleling the immediate rewards of entertainment.
  • Misguided notions in personal development: Initially, one might approach personal development with expectations of immediate gratification, but Leo insists real satisfaction and fulfillment from this process come from a different, more mature perspective.
  • Transition from dopamine-driven pleasure to mature living: A shift in perspective is required from seeing happiness as a series of dopamine hits towards a sustainable and mature attitude towards life, which is more fulfilling and avoids disillusionment with life.
  • Falling in love with consciousness: Consciousness encompasses all experiences and should be the central focus of falling in love with life; by appreciating consciousness, one can find subtle joy and fulfillment not found in mere pleasures.
  • Deepening appreciation for consciousness: Creative exploration and intellectual engagement are means to deepen one's appreciation of consciousness. Inspiration drawn from beauty in art and science leads to further creation and understanding.
  • The artist's and intellectual's connection to consciousness: Artists and intellectuals draw inspiration from various aspects of consciousness like biology, astronomy, and engineering, reflecting the beauty and divinity of the world they observe.
  • Creativity as a medium to appreciate consciousness: By seeing creativity as a way to connect with consciousness, whether through engineering, science, or art, individuals can view their disciplines as not just functional pursuits but as deeper engagements with the essence of life.
  • Choosing a meaningful approach to one's discipline: Creativity and intellectual pursuits can be approached in a materialistic way or with a sense of wonder and appreciation for the deeper beauty they reveal, motivating one to contribute uniquely to their field.
  • Approaching Work Creatively: Approaching work with a mechanical mindset turns life into a soulless activity. Instead, Leo advocates for recognizing all work as an interaction with consciousness and appreciating the opportunity for creativity, which adds depth and soul to life.
  • Creativity as a Connection to Consciousness: Leo describes creativity as a lever to deepen our connection to consciousness. Personal creative endeavors, such as video game design in his case, are not just about making money or filling time but a way to explore the possibilities of imagination and consciousness.
  • Inspiration from Early Experiences: Sharing his childhood inspiration from video games, Leo highlights how early experiences can shape our connection to creativity. He reflects on how, even at a young age, what fascinated him was essentially the creative potential of consciousness.
  • Creativity for Spiritual Fulfillment: Leo sees creativity not merely as a hobby or profession but a spiritually fulfilling process. By being creative, one participates in consciousness and the world it creates, leading to a deeper appreciation for life.
  • Human Potential for Creativity: Leo criticizes societies for not fully tapping into the creative potential of individuals. He attributes much of life's dissatisfaction to a lack of creative fulfillment and advocates for teaching and training creativity more rigorously.
  • Video Games as Spiritual Activity: For Leo, creating video games was never about creating distractions or making money, but about manifesting dreams and connecting with consciousness on a profound level. He views video game creation as playing God within the domain of consciousness.
  • Life Attitude and Joy: Leo contrasts the joyless, mechanical approach to life—avoiding pain and seeking pleasure—with building a life filled with purpose, creativity, and alignment with consciousness. He encourages living deliberately, appreciating the process, and finding meaning in participation rather than outcomes.
  • Consciously Constructing Your Own Life: The power of life comes from actively participating in its creation, shaping it according to one's vision and values. Leo emphasizes that while the outcome of creation is ultimately inconsequential, the process and intention behind it imbue life with meaning and fulfillment.
  • Importance of investing in oneself: Investing in personal growth is one of the most critical aspects of building a fulfilled life. Leo underscores the danger of complacency and how simply surviving without striving and challenging oneself can lead to a lackluster existence.
  • Cultivating a personal vision for growth: Leo points out that society won't push individuals to grow; it's a deliberate, internal choice that requires dedication to daily action and a lifelong commitment.
  • Health as a holistic concept: Health, according to Leo, extends beyond physical well-being and includes mental, spiritual, and relational aspects. It's about the wholeness and integrity of consciousness, not just avoiding being overweight.
  • Reprogramming the mind for healthy choices: Leo describes the mature joy in making healthy choices, such as renouncing unhealthy foods and opting for nutritious options that respect and honor the body and consciousness.
  • Integrating health into every aspect of life: Health is to be reflected in all parts of life, from food to company ethics. Working in environments misaligned with personal values can lead to disillusionment.
  • The joy of growing and investing in oneself: For Leo, joy comes from the process of growth and investing in oneself through activities like reading and self-education, leading to the long-term construction of a profound and meaningful life.
  • Excitement for daily growth opportunities: Leo expresses how growth and personal investments, regardless of scale, should be a daily source of excitement and motivation rather than mundane routines like clock-punching.
  • The vision and fulfillment of social growth: Leo shares his commitment to improving social skills, not just for immediate gratification but with the vision of long-term fulfillment, tying the present to future goals.
  • Continuous Learning as a Key to Life Quality: Every aspect of a fulfilling life depends on one's ability to learn, which should occur daily through exposure to new experiences and problem-solving, rather than solely through passive intake from books and podcasts.
  • Learning Through Challenges and Execution: Leo Gura emphasizes the importance of learning by facing challenges and committing to their resolution. Massive learning can occur across various life aspects, including social skills and business acumen, and contributes significantly to personal growth.
  • Purposeful Relationships and Learning: Relationships are viewed as learning experiences where even if the relationship fails, the lessons learned contribute to future relationship improvement and are seen as fundamental explorations of consciousness.
  • Execution as a Pillar of Self-Esteem: Execution, or the ability to act consistently on one's life vision, is crucial not just for self-worth but also for self-efficacy. Poor execution can lead to a drop in self-esteem, feelings of helplessness, depression, and the inability to appreciate life.
  • Practical Creative Fulfillment: Leo suggests that creativity, particularly within one's professional life, is a fundamental pillar of a fulfilling life. Engaging in creative work aligned with life purpose can add substantial value to life beyond superficial pleasures.
  • Identifying Petty Human Distractions: "Petty human" activities, like gossip or chasing materialistic goals, are identified as short-term distractions that offer no genuine fulfillment. Acknowledging and rejecting these distractions in favor of healthy, productive endeavors is crucial for long-term satisfaction.
  • Choosing Long-Term Value Over Short-Term Pleasure: Leo advises seeking lasting value ('real gold') in activities like learning, executing, and creativity, which require sacrifice and intrinsic motivation rather than falling for 'fool's gold' of short-term gratification.
  • Addiction to Low Consciousness Activities: Recognizing and overcoming addiction to low consciousness, petty human activities is imperative to unlocking the beauty and joy of life, aligning with spirit, love, and personal growth.
  • Investing in Fundamentals: Developing an attitude of investment in one's core values and fundamentals, such as health, discipline, creative work, and learning, is essential. Choosing to invest in these areas brings joy and contributes to a richer, more meaningful life.
  • Engaging with life's fulfillment through planning: Leo advocates for finding joy in the process of contemplating and planning one's life. The act of planning is fulfilling in itself, offering immediate joy rather than being a delayed reward.
  • Rewards in healthy activities: Leo redefines the concept of reward, emphasizing the inherent value in healthy activities, such as choosing celery juice over a donut, and recognizes these choices as the true reward, not their outcomes.
  • Building a mature joy: The satisfaction from deliberate practice and skill training is a subtle but mature joy that must be cultivated over time, contrasting with immediate gratification.
  • Joy of visualization and confronting challenges: Leo stresses the power and joy of positive visualization practices and facing challenges. He criticizes a defeatist attitude and encourages seeking growth opportunities in failures.
  • Appreciating difficult experiences for growth: Rather than avoiding difficult psychedelic experiences, Leo suggests embracing them as opportunities for personal growth and exploration of potential.
  • Conscious selection of life's challenges: Challenges are inevitable, but consciously choosing and engaging with meaningful challenges can create intrinsic motivation and connection with life's beauty.
  • Establishing meaningful life challenges: Leo elaborates on the importance of setting personal challenges that align with one's values to construct a fulfilling life, rather than merely surviving.
  • Choosing deliberate life challenges over imposed ones: There's a distinction between unforeseen challenges and those deliberately chosen, with the latter leading to a more fulfilling and willing engagement in life's pursuits.
  • Investment in Long-Term Success: Leo advocates for the joy found in building the infrastructure for long-term success. He expresses fulfillment from acquiring useful tools like a reliable alarm clock, considering them assets that enhance productivity for a lifetime.
  • Joy in Saying 'No': Leo discusses the empowerment achieved from refusing toxic and unhealthy activities, relationships, and substances. He shares a personal anecdote about choosing integrity over instant gratification, particularly in nightclub environments, emphasizing self-respect and respect for reality.
  • Integrity Over Immediate Gratification: Leo highlights the fulfillment found in maintaining one's integrity despite temptations, such as the possibility of casual sexual encounters in clubs, describing how saying 'no' can feel rewarding when it aligns with one's respect for consciousness and health.
  • Life Optimization through Healthy Choices: He encourages viewers to find happiness in improving their health by detailing practical steps like choosing quality food, exercising, and detoxing. Leo suggests that making these healthy choices can eventually replace shallow pleasures with deeper long-term joys.
  • Risks of Substance Abuse: Leo warns against the use of harmful substances like heroin, especially due to the danger of fentanyl contamination. He clarifies that while he's curious about the consciousness-altering effects of drugs, his investment in life's deeper fulfillments makes such risks unappealing.
  • Exposing Oneself to New Experiences: Leo emphasizes the value in seeking new and challenging experiences, which can direct growth and provide a sense of direction in life. He recommends engaging with diverse environments and people for experiential growth.
  • Adding Massive Value to the World: He finds meaning in being someone who contributes significant value to the world. While he does not delve into the concept of value here, he hints at its importance for future discussions.
  • Identifying Personal Values: Values play a critical role in leading a fulfilling life. Leo provides a rigorous process for discovering one's top values in his Life Purpose Course, highlighting the importance of choosing values that resonate on a personal level for greater fulfillment.
  • Connect with the Joy of Beauty: Acknowledging and appreciating beauty, from nature to one's own body, instills joy. Leo stresses that regularly experiencing this joy can lead to an incredibly fulfilling life.
  • Pursuit of Conscious Relationships: Setting an intention for deeper, more conscious relationships rather than surface-level interactions can be profoundly rewarding. Leo plans to elaborate on this in future content, recognizing its depth and potential for personal fulfillment.
  • How to Approach Life Challenges: The 'how' is less important initially than the 'what'. Knowing what excites and fascinates you is crucial; the steps to achieve it will naturally follow. One should explore their own ideas before seeking external instruction.
  • Introducing the Topic of Conscious Leadership: Conscious leadership is presented as another avenue for deriving joy and meaning. Leo notes its depth and potential for long-term mastery and reward.
  • Becoming More Selfless and Loving: Leo suggests that becoming more selfless and loving may lead to meaningful life changes, positing this as a purposeful life goal.
  • Defining a Life Well-Lived: Individuals must decide what constitutes a life well-lived. Leo encourages thinking beyond materialistic measures like wealth and shares his vision for a life committed to deeper understandings and practices.
  • Joy of Sober Living: Sober living, according to Leo, involves living truthfully with integrity and health, and saying no to addictive behaviors. Occasional psychedelic use for spiritual enlightenment can supplement a sober life if not abused.
  • Building a Hyper Sober Life: Creating a hyper sober life involves rejecting mediocrity and laziness while working towards a compelling life vision grounded in holistic integrity and healthy principles.
  • Principle of Right Action: Applying the principle of right action involves knowing and executing the necessary steps that align with one's life vision, and it's fundamental for a rewarding life experience.
  • Overcoming Disillusionment with Commitment: To overcome disillusionment, one must decide to build a zest for life, rejecting a disillusioned state and committing to personal standards and principles.
  • Starting on the Path to Fulfillment: To begin the journey towards a more fulfilling life, an individual must first decide that disillusionment is unacceptable and commit to doing whatever is necessary to build a zest for life.
  • Avoiding disillusionment and taking action: To prevent a life wasted on disillusionment, cynicism, or victimhood, one must first decide to avoid these traps and then begin taking proactive steps every day. Leo encourages building a list of actions that contribute to disillusionment and those that prevent it, asserting the importance of consistent execution.
  • Simplifying the approach to action: Leo advises against overthinking and seeking ways to avoid action. He asserts that once you've contemplated what needs to be done, it's essential to act—even if the action is difficult or imperfect at first. He emphasizes the transformative power of having a clear vision.
  • Commitment and work for genuine wants: Defining what you truly want involves being ready to work and sacrifice for it. Realizing that wanting something, like a relationship or personal improvement, means committing to the necessary process, including facing failures and challenges.
  • Appreciation through personal challenges: Leo elaborates that true appreciation in life comes not from having things served on a "silver platter" but from the growth and satisfaction derived from working hard, facing challenges, and evolving as a person. He discourages envying those who have it easy, as they may not truly appreciate what they have.
  • The joy of engaging in the process: Leo describes the joy of life as engaging in the process of personal challenges; this process includes overcoming fears and facing difficulties. He encourages viewers to embrace and enjoy the process of their own evolution as the real source of fulfillment.
  • Valuing process over possessions: Emphasizing the importance of personal growth, Leo suggests that the items or experiences that are most valued are those that are earned through hard work and personal sacrifice. He points out that the esteem of others is most deeply felt when they recognize the efforts you've undertaken.
  • Creating and fulfilling one's destiny: Leo discusses visualizing a life that brings pride and actively working towards it. He portrays life as a serious game, where the challenge provides meaning, and encourages viewers to build lives they are proud of, fighting for their unique vision and values.
  • Developing love for life and consciousness: Leo closes out by urging viewers to actively pursue a genuine, potent love for both life and consciousness. He asserts that truly wanting something entails committing to the necessary research and work, rather than assuming it will simply present itself. He encourages leveraging one's desire for fulfillment and taking that goal seriously as a catalyst for action.
  • Initiating Action and Gaining Momentum: Taking even the smallest steps towards personal goals can immediately start to improve one's mood and sense of purpose. Consistent actions build momentum, enhance engagement, and bring about a snowball effect of positive feelings.
  • Deconstruction of Reality and its Pitfalls: While deconstructing reality is a focus of Actualized.org, it must be done with caution to avoid distortion by the ego or spiritual bypassing. The process should maintain a zest for life and consciousness.
  • Passion for Raw Consciousness: Deconstruction aims to strip away mental baggage and ideologies to experience raw consciousness. This can lead to a spontaneous and profound appreciation for life, guiding individuals toward their natural passions and creativity.
  • Importance of Basic Self-help and Execution: Before diving into advanced philosophical or existential concepts, one should master basic self-help and ensure proper execution in daily life. Leo advises finding additional resources if necessary to cover these fundamentals.
  • Addressing Personal Development for Young and Mentally Unwell Audiences: Younger individuals and those with mental health issues should prioritize their development and tackle personal challenges before engaging with advanced spiritual material.
  • Upcoming Course for Practical Implementation: Leo is developing a new course designed to provide practical applications for abstract concepts, aiming to dramatically enhance personal growth and life change.
  • Pre-requisite of Basic Education: Leo compares his teachings to college-level material, expecting his audience to have already obtained basic education and handled survival needs before tackling intermediate and advanced content.
  • Planned Content to Bridge Gaps: Leo mentions planned future content aimed at being more practical, intended to bridge the gap between abstract theory and tangible actions, and help with intermediate fundamentals before moving on to profound existential themes.


Ascendio

Edited by MuadDib

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The Power Of Not-Knowing
https://youtu.be/RMXNQ-nGBSA

"Teach thy tongue to say 'I don't know', and thou shalt progress." - Maimonides
In most situations, the truth is that you simply don't know.

  • The central theme of not knowing: Leo enlightens that not knowing is a deep, core topic tied to epistemology. He's been experimenting with and contemplating this subject for years, leading him to illuminate the profound realization that much of what we think we know, we actually do not.
  • Understanding versus the assumption of understanding: Leo points out a counterintuitive facet of life where ignorant individuals often believe they understand everything, while the wise are acutely conscious of their knowledge's limits. Society rarely lays bare the fact that our supposed knowledge of fundamental concepts is often a mere presumption.
  • Cultural constructs versus reality: Highlighting the constructed and biased nature of knowledge, Leo expresses that societal knowledge often prioritizes survival, sanity, and comfort over the pursuit of profound truth. Our lives are built around conceptual fortresses that are actually fragile, and under scrutiny, can unravel, showing the uncertainty that surrounds our understanding of reality.
  • Challenging conceptual knowledge through the example of a fork: Using the example of a fork, Leo encourages a mindful exercise that distinguishes between a 'knowing mode' and a 'not knowing mode' to reveal the conceptual baggage we attach to simple objects. He aims to demonstrate that we don't truly understand even basic objects like a fork, which inherently questions our grasp on more complex aspects of reality.
  • The limits of scientific knowledge: He challenges the notion that scientists or intellectuals have comprehensive knowledge, arguing that nobody truly knows what a fork is. This opens up philosophical considerations on the very possibility of knowing and the implications of potentially not knowing everything we interact with daily.
  • Biased mind and constructed knowledge: Leo explains that our knowledge is constructed to fit the survival needs of the ego rather than seeking objective truth. The mind creates narratives that skew perception and understanding, which can lead to life problems that people attribute to external factors rather than recognizing their own limited understanding.
  • The illusion and defense of knowing: He discusses how individuals and intellectuals create and defend their conceptual fortresses out of the need for survival and sanity, which results in defensiveness when challenged. This protective behavior showcases the fragility of our constructed knowledge and our unwillingness to confront the unknown.
  • Spin on wisdom and ignorance: Leo presents the idea that wisdom is not about knowing everything but about recognizing the bounds of one's knowledge. This revelation pushes for a deeper contemplation of what it truly means to understand anything, pinpointing the misalignment between societal knowledge and true knowing.
  • Valuing truth over being correct: The paradigm of valuing truth over the comfort of being right is brought forth as a significant factor in personal growth. Leo underlines that admitting ignorance is a step towards seeking genuine truth rather than clinging to potentially incorrect beliefs.
  • Impact of society on knowledge and truth: Society and cultural conditioning, starting from childhood, obscure the lines between belief systems and objective reality. This has led to programs and ideologies that align more with societal survival and comfort than with truth, emphasizing the importance of recognizing and questioning this conditioning.
  • Wisdom vs. social conditioning: Wisdom involves understanding the difference between what we've been taught to know and what is actually known through direct experience. Reliance on social conditioning, beliefs, and speculations is often misconceived as knowledge.
  • Demystifying the concept of not knowing: Leo dissects the theoretical understanding versus the actual experience of not knowing, proposing exercises and shifts in perspective that encourage facing one's ignorance and embracing the uncertainty that comes with it.
  • Practicing not knowing: He urges the viewers to experiment with transitioning into an 'unknowing mode' in various aspects of their lives, like business or relationships, to gain new insights and a deeper understanding of reality through directly confronting not knowing.
  • Avoiding the pitfalls of false equivalency and misinformation: While recognizing the value of not knowing, Leo warns against the dangers of treating all information as equally valid, advising a discerning approach to avoid being misled by misinformation and to apply skepticism wisely in day-to-day life.
  • Balancing not knowing with practical wisdom: Emphasizing the balance between philosophical questioning and everyday pragmatism, Leo encourages viewers to contemplate the unknown while still mastering practical applications in life and following their intuition amidst uncertainty.
  • Intellectual humility and embracing the unknown: Continuously reminding oneself of the boundaries of our understanding is integral to the practice of not knowing. Leo emphasizes the potential growth from this humility and encourages viewers to test the teachings for themselves to find their own truths.
  • Programming from Early Education: Children are heavily programmed with society's survival-oriented knowledge through formal education systems, rarely questioning the alignment of this knowledge with actual truth.
  • Illusion of Knowing in Society: Society, including religion, science, history, and media, fosters a facade that mankind possesses extensive knowledge, while the depth of our ignorance is seldom acknowledged.
  • Science's False Humility About Knowledge: Despite its claims, science often overestimates its understanding, displaying a false humility and unknowingly contributing to mankind's collective arrogance.
  • Pressure to Claim Knowledge: Cultural norms push people to feign knowledge and consider not knowing as a weakness, yet recognizing one's ignorance can often be the most practical approach.
  • Conformity and Survival Mechanisms: People typically conform to societal ideas for collective survival, which can lead to self-deception and the dangerous manipulation of abstract concepts like money.
  • Ignoring Skepticism on Knowledge Possibility: Ancient skeptics like the Pyronians highlighted the impossibility of true knowledge, yet their arguments were overlooked in favor of knowledge that was pragmatic and instrumental for survival.
  • Costs of Pragmatic Knowledge: The pursuit of pragmatic and instrumental knowledge, such as through science and business, incurs significant costs, including closed-mindedness, simplistic narratives, and a loss of connection with being and consciousness.
  • Ego Mind's Discomfort with Uncertainty: The ego constructs narratives and oversimplifies reality to mitigate the discomfort associated with uncertainty, due to reality's inherent infinity.
  • Mind's Constructive Role in Knowledge: Acknowledgement of the mind's role in co-creating reality and the entanglement between the mind and the world complicates the pursuit of knowing.
  • Entanglement of Mind and Knowledge: The intricate interplay between the mind and reality causes difficulty in discerning what exists independently of perception, making the task of truly knowing anything more complex.
  • Primordial desire for knowledge: Reality itself or 'God' has a fundamental desire to know itself, and this primordial urge is evident even in a child's curiosity or a scientist's pursuit. This is not merely trivial but a deep existential matter. Most people, including many scientists and skeptics, deny the possibility that reality wants to know itself, viewing reality as a material system incapable of self-knowledge. 
  • Curiosity as a tether to God: Gura posits that humans are manifestations of reality or 'God', and their inherent curiosity is a thread leading back to the self-realization of being God. However, most people fail to follow this thread of curiosity deep enough to discover ultimate truths, getting lost in deceptions and misguided by others along the way.
  • Science's quest to understand infinity with finite concepts: Science attempts to comprehend the universe through finite concepts and narratives, but consistently falls short because it tries to grasp the infinite with the finite. Gura suggests that no matter how much science progresses, it will never fully understand infinity, as infinity cannot be known through a sequence of finite concepts.
  • Reality's profoundness and the error of science: Leo Gura declares that reality is too profound to be knowable. This is a fundamental mistake of science and logically-minded individuals who believe they can understand reality through logical reasoning, modeling, and explanation.
  • Intellectual arrogance and the challenge of admitting ignorance: Gura addresses the difficulty, especially among those considered knowledgeable like academics, in humbly admitting 'I don't know'. People often prefer protecting their ego and reputation over admitting their misconceptions. He urges the development of courage to confront and accept not knowing.
  • Encouragement to embrace the state of "I don't know": Leo Gura motivates us to stand in uncertainty and explore where admitting "I don't know" can lead. By engaging with uncertainty and the unknown, one can unearth insights and depth of understanding that were previously unimaginable.
  • Paradox of knowing and not knowing: Gura acknowledges the apparent contradiction of emphasizing 'not knowing' while appearing to claim understanding of divine and infinite concepts. He promises to address this paradox further in the lecture, hinting at the necessity to do some foundational work to reconcile this conflict.
  • Importance of Practicing Not-Knowing: Leo suggests that instead of just repeating information from other sources, individuals should actively practice introspection to embody a genuine state of not-knowing, recognizing its depth compared to second-hand knowledge.
  • Distinction Between Theory and State of Not-Knowing: Leo makes a clear distinction between understanding the theory of not-knowing, which is more intellectual, and being in an actual state of not-knowing, which is experiential and requires practice.
  • Guided Exercise for Not-Knowing: Leo leads a guided visualization exercise where participants erase the past, future, and current preconceptions to achieve a state of profound not-knowing, akin to the experience of a newborn.
  • Contrasting States of Knowing and Not-Knowing: Participants are encouraged to contrast how they usually operate with a backdrop of knowledge against the genuine state of not-knowing reached in the exercise.
  • Addressing Scientific and Religious Worldviews: Leo challenges individuals with scientific and religious backgrounds to let go of their foundational beliefs and genuinely embrace a state of not-knowing, highlighting the difficulty in doing so.
  • Resisting Ego and Embracing Uncertainty: Leo points out the ego's resistance to releasing deeply ingrained beliefs like the existence of Earth, and encourages persistent practice in embracing not-knowing.
  • Wiping the Slate Clean: He advises periodically wiping the slate clean of all worldviews and beliefs to create space for new insights, understanding, and potentially, personal awakening.
  • Emptying the Cup for Potential Insight: Leo illustrates the benefit of not knowing, how it creates space for new insights to emerge, thus stressing the importance of emptying one's cup of prior convictions to allow for genuine discovery and awakening.
  • Exercise for Embracing Uncertainty: Leo encourages writing down 10 things that one claims to know but actually does not know. This exercise involves intensely introspecting and admitting ignorance in areas we usually take for granted or think we understand.
  • Examples of Claimed Knowledge to Question: Leo provides examples like the age of the Earth, the health benefits of fish oil, the existence of Jesus, and the consciousness of others as knowledge claims to reevaluate honestly. It's about facing the raw truth and admitting "I don't know."
  • Truth vs. Posturing: The exercise highlights the difference between genuinely knowing something versus posturing or pretending to know. Leo urges viewers to catch themselves in the act of posturing and to admit it candidly.
  • The Challenge of Admitting Ignorance: Admitting that one might not know something they've believed for years, like the beneficial effects of fish oil or even whether one truly loves their family, requires deep honesty and can be psychologically difficult.
  • Importance of Forgiveness in Self-Deception: Upon realizing one's self-deception and posturing, Leo stresses the importance of forgiving oneself, recognizing that misguided beliefs often stem from survival instincts and a lack of awareness.
  • Belief and Hearsay vs. Direct Experience: Leo distinguishes between knowledge based on belief or hearsay and knowledge grounded in direct experience. He emphasizes that hearsay, while sometimes accurate, has not been verified personally and may actually be incorrect.
  • Conceptual Knowledge as Second Order: Leo explains that conceptual knowledge is a second-order abstraction that avoids confronting the direct, first-order existence of an entity. He emphasizes that existence and being precede knowledge.
  • The Informational Frailty of Second Order Knowledge: Leo makes clear that second-order knowledge is relative, finite, and easily uprooted by new information or recontextualization, which underscores the importance of seeking first-order experiences.
  • Mysticism and the Inherent Mystery of Being: Lastly, Leo connects the concept of not knowing to mysticism, explaining that reality as a first-order, infinite phenomenon cannot be fully grasped by second-order knowing, thus maintaining an inherent and irreducible mystery.
  • Infinite Regression and Knowledge: Leo highlights that knowledge itself is being—every form of knowing is an experience with its own being. Knowledge about something, like a fork, points to the being of that object, layering one being onto another, creating an infinite stepping back process as reality observes itself. This process is akin to the concept of going meta, emphasizing infinity as an endless regression into itself.
  • Conflation of Being and Knowing: Upon deeper contemplation, Leo states that the distinction between metaphysics and epistemology collapses in a state of not knowing. At the deepest level, all knowing is essentially being, and profound knowledge is equivalent to being. He explains that entities are understood not by thinking but by existing and being—the core of meditation, self-inquiry, and psychedelic experiences.
  • Awakening as Profound Not-Knowing: Leo describes awakening as a shift from knowing to being, where sensory experiences become the means of knowledge. This direct form of understanding transcends the intellectual and conceptual, allowing someone to know a fork by becoming the fork, exceeding mere thought-based knowledge vastly.
  • Direct Experience Instead of Descriptive Knowledge: Leo criticizes academia's reliance on descriptive knowledge, contrasting it with the concept of knowing through direct experience. He imagines an intelligence so great that it could think in forms rather than descriptions, enabling a perfect understanding without the limitations of language or interpretation.
  • Omniscience as First-Order Being: Challenging the common conception of omniscience as conceptual all-knowingness, Leo explains true omniscience as the realization of imagination within one's mind. It's not about knowing every fact at the second-order level but recognizing that all perceptions, including the count of kangaroos in Australia, are constructs of the mind.
  • Integrating Omniscience in Personal Development: Leo asserts the importance of reaching a state of complete not knowing, recognizing the futility of trying to grasp infinity through second-order thinking. He mentions the physical and mental toll of trying to intellectually figure out reality and stresses the need to satisfy the primordial curiosity of knowing one's true self, which cannot be fulfilled by partial insights from science, religion, or philosophy.
  • Illusion of Complete Understanding: Leo Gura criticizes the superficial and temporary satisfactions provided by science and various teachings, comparing them to light physical tickling. He emphasizes the distinction between this limited engagement with knowledge and the profound experience of a full-blown awakening.
  • Reality and Awakening: He contends that to grasp the true essence of reality, one must experience an awakening, which provides a genuine relief and a satisfying peace that simplified or intellectualized methods fail to deliver.
  • Relative vs. Absolute Truth: Leo revisits the topic of relative versus absolute truth, explaining that conventional knowledge (e.g., knowing a fork in relation to other objects) is relative. In contrast, true, absolute knowledge requires an awakening—one must become what they seek to understand, like becoming the fork, rather than just acquiring information about it.
  • Psychedelics and the State of Not Knowing: He argues that psychedelics can catalyze profound states of not knowing, revealing the fragility of our relative knowledge and the existence of an alternative form of absolute knowledge. Leo expresses concern over the closed-mindedness of intellectuals towards psychedelics due to their potential to deconstruct established knowledge systems.
  • Deconstruction and Not Knowing: Leo highlights the mutual reinforcement between the process of deconstruction and the state of not knowing. He recommends his own content discussing deconstruction for a deeper understanding of the concept and its role in exploring the mind.
  • Acknowledging Peter Ralston's Influence: Leo gives credit to Peter Ralston, whose work on the concept of not knowing deeply influenced him and has grown to be a significant part of his understanding over the past year.
  • Not Knowing and Mature Minds: He observes that mature minds are more willing to admit their lack of knowledge, ironically resulting in the potential to know the profound (e.g., the nature of reality, God, consciousness) in an absolute manner, a feat deemed impossible by less mature, knowledge-laden minds.
  • Using Not Knowing Thoughtfully: While advocating for the practice of not knowing, Leo also cautions against letting it derail one's life or devolve into epistemic nihilism. He emphasizes the importance of maintaining healthy living principles alongside exploring states of not knowing.
  • Conflicts Between Truth Pursuit and Survival: Leo reflects on the tension between pursuing truth—which involves questioning and deconstructing worldviews—and ensuring survival. The aim is to enhance and purify survival, despite the inherent risks of such an endeavor.
  • Probabilistic Nature of Survival Decisions: Leo describes choosing a career path based on passion and probability of success. He gives an example of deciding between musician, filmmaker, and accountant, and advocates for decisive action even when certainty isn't absolute, emphasizing the importance of picking the best option with the information at hand.
  • Dangers of Misusing 'Not Knowing': Leo warns against using 'not knowing' to justify skepticism about everything, including topics like the existence of God, what happens after death, or vaccine safety. He differentiates between absolute and relative knowledge, particularly in urgent survival situations where decisions must be made swiftly despite imperfect information.
  • Not Falling for False Equivalency: He discusses how 'not knowing' can be exploited, such as equating wisdom with foolishness or experience with inexperience. Leo highlights the necessity of discernment to avoid the pitfalls of conspiracy theories, ideology, and gaslighting by malicious actors in politics and society.
  • Being Decisive and Educated: Asserting that 'not knowing' should not be an excuse for ignorance, Leo encourages still pursuing education, reading, and consuming quality content. He cautions against replacing self-improvement endeavors with activities like scrolling social media or indulging in vices, which might be temptations when one abandons purpose and direction.
  • Application of 'Not Knowing' in Everyday Life: Leo suggests that we maintain healthy habits and not allow the concept of 'not knowing' to derail our self-actualization journey. He recommends first deconstructing detrimental beliefs before questioning foundational aspects of life like career or family to avoid extremism.
  • Survival Pressures and the 'Need to Know': Leo illustrates how daily responsibilities create pressure to 'know' and act, leaving little room for indulging in 'not knowing'. This survival pressure makes the concept unpopular as people face the metaphorical 'gun to the head' compelling them to know and act on that knowledge.
  • Practical Mastery Versus Philosophical 'Not Knowing': He elucidates the paradox that one can master practical skills and make accurate predictions without knowing what the objects used (like a fork) truly are at a metaphysical level. The focus should be on practical use rather than getting lost in philosophical ponderings that inhibit effective action.
  • Evolution of Leo's Teachings and Knowledge: Leo reflects on his awareness of the partial and relative nature of knowledge. He acknowledges his teachings are practical and sometimes intentionally non-metaphysical to be useful, and he continually questions and deconstructs his own models and worldviews.
  • Navigating Construct Awareness and Relativity of Knowledge: Speaking about the pragmatism in his advice, Leo notes that while he tries to make his teachings practical, he remains aware of their relative and perspectival nature. He aspires to achieve a balance between constructive intellectual work and the process of deconstructing previous understandings.
  • Admission of Reality's Infinitude: Concluding, Leo states his fundamental knowledge is the understanding of reality as infinite, suggesting that even with the vast array of relative, contextual knowledge, what ultimately matters is this insight of infinity.
  • Infinity as a foundational understanding: Leo acknowledges that while the specific details within the concept of infinity can be fallible, infinity itself is what not-knowing ultimately leads towards. He considers this as the core of understanding, with everything else being contingent knowledge prone to self-deception.
  • Intuition's role in life choices: Leo discusses the power of intuition and listening to one's heart, suggesting it's less about explicit knowing and more about feeling. Our spirit or soul is drawn to aspects of infinity, and our task is to honor and follow that attraction like a beacon or compass.
  • Conscience and ethical intuition: He asserts that most people possess an inherent conscience that allows them to intuitively understand right from wrong. This spiritual aspect guides actions and reinforces our connection with infinity.
  • Trust in intuition: Leo advocates trusting your intuition, despite its imperfection, as your best tool for navigating life. However, he acknowledges that intuition is fallible and one can still be deceived by it.
  • Life forcing imperfect choices: Leo argues that life necessitates making imperfect decisions based on trial and error. Personal suffering and experiences teach us what is not working, leading to better life choices.
  • Testing principles for a good life: He challenges listeners to try their own theories of what constitutes a good life, such as unhealthy habits versus disciplined practices. Feelings of suffering and depression can quickly indicate whether a chosen lifestyle is fulfilling or not.
  • Applying 'Not knowing': Leo calls for deep contemplation of the limits of knowing and encourages questioning everything. He also suggests working towards entering states of 'not knowing' and using psychedelics for deeper exploration, with safety precautions in place.
  • Resisting societal pressure to know: Leo advises having the courage to admit ignorance in various settings like work and school, advocating an appreciation for mystery.
  • Practicing uncertainty: He suggests frequently asserting "I don't know" to save time and avoid superfluous debates or discussions based on speculation.
  • Distinguishing belief from experience: Leo emphasizes the importance of differentiating between beliefs and direct experience, wiping the slate clean regarding personal worldviews from time to time.
  • Balancing not knowing with action: He encourages maintaining action and deep intuition when embracing not knowing and suggests applying this mindset prior to engaging in various activities such as meditation, brainstorming, communication, and listening to controversial perspectives.
  • Improvised responding instead of over-planning: Leo recommends applying 'not knowing' in everyday situations to encourage an improvisational approach to life, whether it be in business, dating, or investing, where preconceived expectations are released for a more authentic and present experience.
  • Applying "Not Knowing" in Workplace Dynamics: Leo suggests that instead of assuming negative intentions of others at work, such as jealousy or scheming, one could embrace "not knowing" and consider alternative explanations for their behavior, leading to better communication and problem-solving.
  • Embracing Reality's Uncertainty: He highlights the unpredictable nature of events such as economic shifts, political changes, or new health crises. Leo emphasizes the value in becoming comfortable with life's inherent uncertainty, rather than fabricating stories for reassurance.
  • Greater Effectiveness Through Less Expectations: By acknowledging "not knowing," one can reduce fantasies and assumptions, leading to more effective operation from a position of presence and improvisation, enhancing responsiveness in real-time situations.
  • Improvisation in Social Interactions: Leo advises against scripting interactions, like conversations when meeting someone new. He claims that an improvisational approach, without pre-planned scripts, results in more authentic and responsive communication.
  • Transition to Presence and Responsiveness: Leo shares his personal transition from pre-planning everything for security to adopting an improvisational mindset. He asserts that such a transition can take time but ultimately leads to a more enjoyable and flow-state living.
  • Admitting Ignorance as a Safety Mechanism: Leo urges listeners to admit when they do not know the veracity of his teachings to prevent turning them into dogma. He discusses the importance of testing his advanced concepts for oneself, considering personal life circumstances, age, country, gender, genetics, and mental health conditions.
  • Acknowledging Personal Truth and Openness to Higher Truths: He encourages viewers to remain true to their present understanding, while also being open to future recontextualization of beliefs. Being cautious about prematurely accepting claims without direct personal experience and realizing one's current truth may be a partial view of a larger picture.


Confringo

Edited by MuadDib

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How To Become Decisive
https://youtu.be/veMExOmq5zA

"When you get to a fork in the road, take it." - Yogi Berra

By not making a choice, you've made a choice.

  • The Dangers of Indecision: Indecision can lead to a wasted and unfulfilled life. High-quality decisions are critical to self-actualization, and indecisiveness is not a luxury one can afford on this journey.
  • The Necessity of High-Quality Decisions: The quality of one's life is directly determined by the quality of their decisions, which can either make or break them.
  • Common Personal Development Decisions: Decisions in personal development range from prioritizing life purpose or dating to career or spirituality, managing finances versus pursuing meditation retreats, and choosing whether to work harder or allocate time for relaxation and family.
  • The Consequence of Default Decisions: Many people make decisions by default through inaction and stalling, such as tolerating an unsuitable job, which leads them down a default life trajectory far from their highest potential.
  • Shifting Life Trajectories with Bold Decisions: Creating a great life requires making bold decisions to divert from the default, mediocre, societal path set in the first 20 years of one's life.
  • Examples of Leo's Bold Life Decisions: Leo shares his own bold decisions, such as choosing to live passionately and ambitiously, focusing on education, delaying socializing for life purpose, switching majors from engineering to philosophy, and quitting his job as a game designer to pursue entrepreneurial autonomy.
  • Bold decision to leave a stable job: Leo recounts the pivotal moment when he chose to quit a secure job, marking the start of his entrepreneurial journey and self-sufficiency.
  • Start of Actualized.org: After leaving internet marketing due to conflicting values, Leo started Actualized.org. This decision shifted his life's work towards deeper meaning, aligning with his core value of profound understanding.
  • Relocation to Las Vegas for personal growth: Moving to Las Vegas represented a conscious choice for personal development, especially in Leo's dating life, despite fears and uncertainties.
  • Focusing on content depth over marketing: Leo chose to prioritize the depth and quality of his content over marketing strategies, sacrificing potential income for personal and professional integrity.
  • Personal sacrifices for deeper work: A commitment to content depth led to Leo giving up certain components of his personal life, such as social opportunities and casual relationships.
  • Investing in a house: Leo's frugal nature influenced his strategic decision to buy a house, reflecting conservative financial values and long-term planning.
  • Desire to be a prolific creator: Leo made an early decision to produce a significant body of work and to provide immense value through his creative efforts.
  • Impact of high-quality decisions: Reflecting on his life, Leo attributes his current state to about a dozen high-quality decisions that pushed him out of his comfort zone and led to substantial personal growth.
  • Contemplating future bold decisions: Leo considers major future decisions that could fundamentally alter his life, such as committing to spiritual advancement or starting a spiritual community.
  • Embracing challenges and personal growth: He emphasizes that growth comes from putting oneself in challenging situations and that deciding to seek out these circumstances is preferable to passively awaiting them.
  • Refusing the call to the hero's journey: Leo urges viewers to recognize where they might be resisting their own hero's journey due to comfort and fear.
  • Contemplating life's default trajectory without bold decisions: Leo encourages viewers to consider the trajectory of their life if no further bold decisions are made and to ponder what decisions could change that trajectory into something greater.
  • Impact of values on decisions: Decisions are inherently reflective of an individual's values, with each choice affirming certain values and rejecting others. 
  • Consequences of unconscious decision-making: Most people make decisions unconsciously without acknowledging the underlying values, which can lead to life dissatisfaction and poor mental health outcomes.
  • Aligning with self-actualization values: Leo advises making decisions that align with lifelong principles such as truth, love, consciousness, selflessness, and health to foster a fulfilling and meaningful life.
  • Strategic thinking through concentration of resources: Essential to decision-making is the strategic principle of concentrating one's finite resources—time, energy, money, and health—on a singular point for greater success.
  • Decision-making as investment: Good decision-making equates to investing in what truly matters by honoring one's top values, which necessitates knowing what those values are.
  • Understanding opportunity cost: Leo underscores that every action or decision carries an opportunity cost, and one must audit their life to ensure they make beneficial investments of their time and resources.
  • The importance of high-quality decisions in high-paying jobs: High paying roles often involve crucial decision-making that impacts many lives and substantial sums of money, highlighting the value of strategic thinking and integrity.
  • Integrity demands decisiveness: Integrity in vision and action is rare and requires the ability to stand firm against societal pressures and criticism through decisive actions.
  • Decisiveness for peace of mind: Being decisive clears mental fog, presents a direction, and ensures peace of mind amidst chaos by aligning with one's ultimate mission and top values.
  • Clarity as a core value: Leo advocates for embracing clarity as a pivotal value because it empowers decisiveness once one knows what they desire in life.
  • Character definition through conscious decision: One should consciously decide on the character they want to embody, reflecting their values and the kind of life they aim to lead.
  • Personal Values and Perception: Reflect on the character you wish to embody, considering what values are expressed through your actions and how others perceive you. Leo suggests spending time determining what values you want to represent and how to manifest them so they're evident to others without explicit communication.
  • Deciding on Unwanted Elements: Actively decide against allowing negative aspects such as hard drugs, cheating, or being a societal leech into your life. Leo encourages making definitive decisions about what you don't want, allowing you to eliminate these from your life completely.
  • Indecisiveness and Mental Energy: Recognize that indecisiveness, such as in relationships or dietary choices, consumes significant mental energy that could be directed towards more constructive aspects like self-actualization or family.
  • Causes of Indecisiveness: Indecisiveness stems from a lack of clarity and self-understanding, fear of making wrong decisions, laziness in expecting automatic resolutions, lack of responsibility, and placing too much importance on decisions which may lead to perfectionism and stalling.
  • Gaining Clarity: To combat indecisiveness, Leo advises a deep, reflective understanding of oneself, including personality traits, aspirations, and preferences, recognizing that these can be obscured by trauma or misinterpreted defensive mechanisms.
  • Reframing Decision-making: Leo suggests changing one's perspective on decision-making by understanding that decisions can often be remade and that making "wrong" decisions can provide clarity and personal insight, ultimately helping to discover authentic desires.
  • Accepting Failure: Embrace failure and learn to reframe it, understanding that initial failures are part of a larger success process. Choose experience-rich options that challenge you to grow, over the comfort of the status quo.
  • Erring on the side of action and experience: Taking new risks, such as a job in a different country, fosters growth and provides valuable experience even if it's not the perfect fit, as opposed to stagnation in the comfort zone.
  • Exploring both sides of a decision: When stuck between two closely matched options, like choosing between becoming a filmmaker or a musician, it's possible to explore one for some time, learn from it, then switch to the other if necessary.
  • Hard work as a pathway to growth: One should not fear hard work or the need to shift career paths; the skills and discipline developed in one field can be valuable in another, contributing to overall personal growth.
  • Overcoming fear of disastrous choices: The actual disaster may be indecision itself, leading to mediocrity and a downward spiral in life; taking calculated risks is preferable to a life of unfulfilled potential and gradual decline.
  • Consequences of a stagnant life: Comfortable, unchallenging lives can lead to a downhill slide into depression and other negative outcomes, while being actively engaged in growth can lead to a fulfilling path that aligns with one's potential.
  • Commitment to decisiveness: The decision to live a growth-oriented life is marked by proactivity, aligning with one's deepest values, and avoiding mediocrity through bold choices and challenges.
  • Training on daily small decisions: Strengthening decisiveness by making rapid choices in everyday situations like menu selections or driving routes, and appreciating the swift decision-making process.
  • Sticking with significant decisions: It's crucial to hold fast to important life decisions once made, to avoid the turmoil of backtracking, to feel the weight of choices, and to continuously refine one's values and vision for clarity in decision-making.
  • Leverage of Top Values: Utilizing one’s top 10 values, as identified through Leo’s Life Purpose Course, can significantly simplify decision-making. When a decision honors more of these core values than it dishonors, it's likely a good choice, and vice versa.
  • Assuming Decision-Making Responsibility: Viewers are encouraged to think of themselves as the CEO of their own lives, making decisions instead of outsourcing them to others, thus taking control of their life direction.
  • Avoiding Decision Stalling: Leo advises training oneself to make decisions promptly as they arise instead of delaying or procrastinating, which helps maintain clarity and reduces inner turmoil.
  • Observing Consequences of Indecisiveness: He suggests observing the mental drain, worry, and fear that result from indecision. By practicing decisiveness, one gains a sense of calmness and groundedness even amid challenging circumstances.
  • Developing Authentic Decisiveness: Decisiveness is not about rushing decisions, but about grounding them in personal values to make high-quality, quick decisions. This trait requires years of incremental practice.
  • Introspection and Behavior Change for Decisiveness: Through introspection, individuals can observe the impacts of their indecision and identify behavior changes needed to become more decisive.
  • Practicing Decisiveness Consistently: Leo notes that becoming decisive is a matter of practice, which doesn't have to be daily, but should occur frequently, aligning with one's top values and leading to increased confidence.
  • Preemptive Decision Making: Making decisions before problems arise or escalate is crucial. Examples include committing to using contraceptives consistently or quitting a misaligned career early.
  • Distinction between Shallow and Deep Decisions: Shallow decisions are made impulsively for immediate satisfaction, whereas deep decisions are those contemplated in context with long-term goals, life purpose, and core values.
  • Impact of Deep Decisions on Core Values: Deep decisions are aligned with one's top values and life vision. For instance, choosing not to eat junk food not just to avoid health issues, but to support one’s core values like creativity, longevity, and family health.
  • Significance of Deep Decisions in Character Building: Leo articulates that deep decisions define who one becomes as a person, affecting one's character and integrity, and should, therefore, be guided by a clear understanding of personal core values.
  • Shallow vs. Deep Decisions: Leo differences between impulsive, short-term focused shallow decisions and deep decisions that align with one's core values and long-term goals. Deep decisions might include not exploiting customers, setting boundaries in relationships, or avoiding get-rich-quick schemes.
  • Contemplation Exercises: Leo provides thought-provoking questions to help viewers analyze their desire and readiness to become decisive, understand the cost of indecision over a lifetime, and recognize the high value of developing decisiveness.
  • Reflecting on Past Indecisiveness: Viewers are encouraged to reflect on reasons for their past indecisiveness, potential missed opportunities, and envision how their lives could have been enhanced with bolder and more decisive actions.
  • Evaluating Good vs. Bad Decisions: Leo tasks viewers with considering the impact of potential good and bad decisions for their life, as well as identifying decisions they may have been postponing.
  • Building Decision-making Skills: He links great decision-making with developing intuition, creativity, wisdom, and diverse experiences. Leo points to his teachings on intuition and wisdom for further guidance and foreshadows future content on creativity.
  • Power of Non-Negotiable Decisions: Leo stresses that the most powerful decisions are those that align with values so deeply that they do not feel like choices but non-negotiable aspects of your life, such as his commitment to truth, understanding, and awakening.
  • Urging Consistent Application of Content: Viewers are prompted to engage actively and regularly with his content to experience transformative results, as sporadic engagement is not enough for substantial change.
  • Invitation to Commit: Leo concludes by challenging viewers to decide whether they will take his work seriously and apply it consistently over the long term to transform their lives, reiterating that the truly transformative power lies in consistent application and dedication.


Alohomora

Edited by MuadDib

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The Next Evolution Of Actualized.org Teachings
https://youtu.be/SCeJUZUsC2s

  • Evolution of Actualized.org's future content: Leo Gura addresses his core audience, explaining the upcoming evolution in his teaching style and content, reflecting on ten years of personal growth and the need for his teachings to mature further.
  • Reasons for sporadic content releases: Leo cites his aspirations to produce only high-quality content, chronic health issues, the pursuit of personal relationships, and the integration of profound awakenings as reasons for releasing less frequent content.
  • Shift from quantity to quality: He emphasizes a deliberate movement away from filler content to ensure each episode is built on genuine, deeply contemplated insights, acknowledging the time-consuming nature of this creative process.
  • Health and personal life balance: Leo discusses managing chronic health concerns and burnout, as well as his commitment to improving personal areas of life such as dating and friendships, which have been sidelined in the past.
  • Integrating awakenings into teachings: He shares the difficulty in expressing his most profound awakenings and the challenge of integrating these experiences into his teachings while maintaining a balance between a contemplative mind necessary for work and a quieter mind for personal growth.
  • Rethinking the role of a teacher: Leo questions what it means to evolve as a teacher and contemplates what the future holds. He considers his legacy and how to best serve his life purpose as he approaches a milestone age.
  • Chronicling higher consciousness and its challenges: Leo opens up about becoming increasingly aware of his personal limitations and the burden of responsibility that accompanies higher consciousness. He recognizes the need to mature as a teacher to embody the consciousness he aspires to.
  • Redesigning models and role models: He outlines two areas for evolution: (1) upgrading his understanding of reality, akin to software or game engine updates, and (2) becoming a better role model. He wants to teach with a higher integrity that is aligned with truth and love.
  • From borrowed knowledge to personal insight: Leo describes a shift towards teachings grounded in his own direct experiences, purging insights acquired from others. He aims to start fresh with teachings uniquely based on his awakenings rather than integrating external perspectives.
  • Intention for Actualized.org's teaching approach: He resolves to wipe the slate clean, develop his teachings from the ground up, and not be restricted by established spiritual teachings or alignment with other teachers. He advocates for an approach that resonates with his unique experiences and understanding.
  • Understanding and updating reality: Leo likens refining his understanding of reality to upgrading an operating system on a computer—throwing out old, problematic elements while retaining useful features and insights. He emphasizes the need to regularly purge beliefs to build on a fresh foundation, thus allowing for higher growth.
  • Balance between consistency and evolution: He recognizes the contradiction in his teachings as a result of his evolution and stresses that it's more important to evolve understanding than to remain consistently wrong just to maintain coherence.
  • Impact of experience and awakenings on teachings: Direct experiences are key to genuine understanding. Leo aims to shed human-centric perspectives and operate from a place of direct, transcendent experiences. He illustrates how evolution can cause teachings to change and acknowledges the complexity of teaching profound awakenings.
  • Role modeling responsibilities: Aware of the influence he wields, Leo is becoming more conscious of the role model he presents. He points out his flaws and intends to eliminate any negative effects his teachings may have. He understands that every word and action can potentially be emulated by his audience.
  • Embodying conscious leadership: Leo expresses his commitment to improve not just intellectual knowledge but also the subtler behaviors that embody conscious leadership. He emphasizes that awakenings don't automatically correct all small behaviors and modeling his teachings takes deliberate effort.
  • Promotion of upcoming courses: Leo announces upcoming courses focused on personal transformation and the use of psychedelics for spiritual purposes and underscores the value they will offer. He believes these courses will reflect his most mature work and encourages his audience to stay informed for releases. 
  • Challenges of audience assumptions: Leo reflects on the need to accurately assess his audience's consciousness and provide content that respects their diversity—including women and non-heterosexual individuals—and caters to their spiritual advancement.
  • Changes in teaching style for responsible impact: He plans to refine his teaching methods, aiming for more precision, inspiration, and sensitivity, particularly for viewers who may be struggling with mental health issues. Leo aims to focus on delivering concise insights and veering away from specific advice due to the variance in individual lives.
  • Challenge of Conscious Leadership: Leo reflects on the unexpected responsibility of becoming a conscious leader. Initially, he simply wanted to share valuable insights for personal growth, not anticipating the deep influence and example setting that would be required as he grew in consciousness.
  • Acceptance of Responsibility: Embracing the responsibility that comes with being a leader and influencer, Leo now aims to use his platform to model the highest standards of personal development, moving beyond merely sharing "cool insights."
  • Reconciling Past Ego with Present Intentions: Leo recognizes the ego present in his past teachings and is committed to purifying his content. He wants to minimize the "noise" that taints the quality of his material, striving for teachings that remain pure for posterity.
  • Noise versus Signal: Acknowledging his own growth trajectory, Leo introduces the concept of "noise versus signal," where he aims to distinguish between profound insights (signal) and personal flaws or biases (noise) in his teachings.
  • Mistakes and Corrections in Public Intellectualism: Leo admits to past errors in his teachings and highlights that all public intellectuals are susceptible to biases and stubbornness. Unlike those who may never change, he is determined to continually evolve and refine his ideologies.
  • Imperfections as Growth Catalysts: While striving to perfect his teachings, Leo ponders whether flawlessness might actually hinder people's ability to think critically. He considers introducing "poison pills" — intentional falsehoods — into his teachings to encourage critical thinking and prevent dogmatism.
  • Expectations and Perfection: Leo cautions against expecting perfection from any human teacher and promotes the idea of using teachings as tools for growth, aspiring to rise to or even surpass the level of one's teachers.
  • Self-Taught Nature of Spiritual Teaching: Leo highlights his self-taught journey, evolving from an understanding of self-help to profound spiritual realizations, and the responsibility of guiding others through similar paths of growth and awakening.
  • Teaching as an Evolutionary Model: Describing the evolution of his work as a pathway documenting his own development, Leo acknowledges the messy and chaotic nature of spiritual growth, and the importance of understanding the process rather than idolizing the teacher.
  • Leo Gura's acknowledgment of his arrogance and its origins: Leo reflects on how his arrogance stemmed from a mixture of intense ambition from a young age, sovereign intellectual independence, and dissatisfaction with societal norms. He explains that his arrogant attitude has been a tool for him to cut through societal constructs and reach an understanding of absolute truth through his own direct experience.
  • Arrogance in spiritual growth: Leo notes that while this arrogant attitude can be perceived as anti-spiritual, in his case it has led him to the highest levels of awakening because it maintained his intellectual independence and allowed him to avoid falling into the trappings of any spiritual school, guru, or belief system.
  • Arrogance and teaching style flaws: Leo acknowledges the negative aspects of his arrogance, admitting that it might give off an obnoxious vibe, turn off audiences, and corrupt his teachings and demeanor. He agrees that it is not an intelligent and artful way to teach nor does he want his viewers to emulate this behavior.
  • Leo's intention for future personal growth: He expresses his intention to correct this character flaw as his teachings mature. However, he emphasizes the importance of maintaining intellectual sovereignty as a value that he wants transmitted to his followers.
  • Admission to exaggeration: Leo identifies that he can sometimes exaggerate points in his teachings. Upon his self-reflection, he realizes this stems from his attempt to communicate the 'spirit' or emotional impact of the teachings, rather than adhere to technical precision. 
  • Exaggeration vs. technical accuracy: Leo tends not to prioritize technical accuracy over the emotional significance of his teachings. He criticizes academics who focus excessively on technical accuracy to the detriment of conveying emotional significance. 
  • Purposes of exaggeration in teaching: Leo admits to exaggerating intentionally, aiming to emotionally engage his students and demonstrate the significance of his teachings, especially during discussions about awakenings.
  • Importance of signal to noise ratio: Leo emphasizes the importance of distinguishing 'signal to noise' ratio in the teachings and information content consumed online. The 'signal' is the pure, good stuff, while the 'noise' represents corruption in teachings resulting from the teacher's lack of consciousness.
  • Sources of 'noise' in teachings: He identifies major sources of noise in teachings or any informational content including lack of consciousness, selfishness, biases, limited life experience, and arrogance.
  • Admission of inevitable mistakes: Leo acknowledges the inevitability of making mistakes and encourages learning quickly from them without beating oneself up. He asserts the importance of forgiving oneself for past mistakes and emphasizes refraining from making the same mistakes repeatedly.
  • Caution about expecting perfection: Finally, Leo warns viewers against expecting perfection either from him, themselves, or their gurus. Despite his aim to improve, he acknowledges that he remains vulnerable to making mistakes, self-deception, and corruption.
  • Accurate understanding of audience intelligence: Leo Gura discusses the challenge of balancing the content to suit the varying intelligence levels of his audience. He wants to assume an accurate understanding of his audience but acknowledges the difficulty given their diversity.
  • Recognition of spiritually advanced audience members: Leo seeks to acknowledge and honor the spiritually advanced part of his audience rather than assuming everyone is at a beginner level.
  • Inclusion and avoidance of sexism and heteronormativity: Leo intends to create content that is more inclusive, lessening the use of male-centric or heteronormative examples to make his teachings accessible to all genders and sexual orientations.
  • Improving technical accuracy and professionalism: Leo aims to increase the precision and professionalism in his teachings by reducing profanity and exaggeration, aiming to present a more polished and respectful style.
  • Adjusting zeal in worldview promotion: He recognizes the issue with being overly pushy with his agenda, understanding that it can create resistance and plans to recalibrate his approach.
  • More compassionate and inspiring teaching style: Leo desires to enhance his teachings with more compassion, inspiration, and encouragement, acknowledging the need for a more loving and hopeful delivery.
  • Less reactivity to criticism and more accuracy in language: He plans to reduce his reactivity to criticism, be less absolutist in his statements, and provide more credit to other influential teachers.
  • Responsibility towards mentally ill viewers: Leo realizes a substantial part of his audience may suffer from mental illness and aims to adjust his teachings accordingly, providing appropriate disclaimers and content treatment.
  • Conciseness and potency in delivery: Leo intends to improve the conciseness, directness, and potency of his teachings, stripping unnecessary elaboration to provide dense, insightful content efficiently.
  • Careful provision of specific advice: He wants to be more careful with giving advice, often accepting that not knowing the specific answer is more honest and that viewers need to derive personal insights.
  • Responsibility and gentleness in communication: Lastly, Leo plans to be more responsible, gentle, and kind with his choice of words, avoiding aggressive or opinionated stances to foster a more considerate and open dialogue.
  • Reducing pretense and embracing vulnerability: Leo acknowledges the struggle with authentic vulnerability in his videos and aims to work on displaying genuine openness without pretense or phony vulnerability.
  • Listening deeply and charitably: He expresses the desire to improve his ability to listen better, especially to those with significantly different viewpoints, emphasizing the importance of being less judgemental and dismissive.
  • Modeling 'Tier 2' behavior in teachings: Leo aims to model more of a 'Tier 2' manner and style, which involves less focus on himself and more on the universal truths communicated through his teachings, recognizing they are insights generated by the universe, not personal possessions.
  • Integrity and conscious leadership as a future goal: Leo outlines his future goal to become a better role model and a more conscious leader, describing how this involves actively working towards higher integrity in both teachings and personal behavior.
  • Self-monitoring to reduce emotional reactivity and ego: He discusses how he will closely monitor his emotional reactivity and ego-driven responses to criticism or arrogance, purposely refraining from acting on them to minimize their negative impact on his audience.
  • Value of previous teachings and level-appropriateness: Leo defends the value of his previous teachings, stating that while they might be noisy, they still contain profound insights and can resonate with people at different levels of development.
  • The teaching process as a demonstration of evolutionary growth: He touches on the educational value of showcasing his own personal and teaching evolution, which can serve as a realistic model for viewers' own growth processes.
  • Subtlety of teaching style evolution: Leo notes that changes to his teaching style will be subtle and progressive, affecting his videos, blog posts, and forum activity, and that these stylistic changes will take time to fully manifest.
  • Extra skills for becoming a spiritual teacher or leader: He points out that leading others as a spiritual teacher or role model requires additional skills beyond personal spiritual experiences, emphasizing the dedication required for this role.
  • Standards for himself and his audience: Leo mentions a commitment to holding both himself and his audience to higher standards, planning to enforce improved behaviors progressively, first personally, then within his community.
  • Commitment to future Actualized.org content: He shares his plans for Actualized.org, working on 100 new episodes as a roadmap for the next two years, and developing two courses on reprogramming one’s mind and accessing the deepest levels of god realization, including using psychedelics for spiritual purposes.
  • Overview of the upcoming courses: Leo Gura plans to release two groundbreaking courses over the next two years. The first course is focused on reprogramming the mind, designed to be immensely practical for anyone interested in self-improvement or spirituality. The second course delves into the highest levels of god realization, offering Leo's most advanced content aimed at deconstructing one's mind and reality.
  • Marketing strategy for new courses: Leo does not intend to actively market these courses. Instead, he expects his committed followers to stay updated through his channel and newsletter. He emphasizes that those who do not follow his teachings regularly may miss out on these transformative opportunities.
  • Subscription recommendations: Leo advises viewers to subscribe to his YouTube channel and sign up for his newsletter. The purpose of the newsletter is to announce significant releases like new courses without spamming subscribers' inboxes.
  • Actualized.org's future roadmap: Leo provides insight into his planned roadmap for Actualized.org, which includes producing 100 new video episodes and developing two comprehensive courses. He aims to offer a larger vision for his audience, moving beyond individual video topics to a more profound level of teaching.
  • Long-term commitment to personal development: Leo calls for a long-term commitment from his viewers to fully engage in the transformative journey he's facilitating. He stresses the importance of viewing personal growth as a long-term process rather than just consuming random videos sporadically.
  • Sustaining Actualized.org: Leo discusses the financial challenges he faces, including a significant loss of viewership and revenue due to YouTube algorithm changes. He emphasizes that purchasing his courses is a way for him to sustain himself and continue offering free content without resorting to corporate ads or sponsorships.
  • Anticipating the value of courses: Leo assures that the courses will over-deliver in value, providing practical guidance and profound spiritual development. He encourages viewers to perceive the course costs as a worthwhile investment in their personal growth journey.
  • Comparing the individual's potential to a diamond: Leo uses the metaphor of a diamond in the rough to describe individuals' potential for brilliance. He suggests that personal development is akin to the careful cutting and polishing of a diamond, allowing one's inner brilliance to shine through and inspire others.
  • Long-term vision of transformation: The aim of Leo's teachings is to facilitate a total transformation in his viewers' lives, encouraging them to uncover and express their unique brilliance. He asserts that this process of self-transformation brings endless joy and meaning to life, and it naturally attracts positive opportunities and material success.


Accio

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Reading A Poetic Description Of God-Consciousness
https://youtu.be/K8AXWd6DFzU?si=uMSzeeZWF53E2LNK

"All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream." - Edgar Allen Poe

WARNING

The last 25% of this video contains information that can be dangerous to people who are mentally unstable or suicidal. If you struggle with suicidal ideation or maintaining your sanity, I recommend you don't watch the last 25%. Do not use psychedelics unsupervised if you are in this condition.

 

It's early dawn in the desert. The sky is starting to glow with light but the sun is still yet to rise. You're standing there, looking at an ordinary desert bush. You're struck by its geometric beauty, the mathematical precision of its fractally–arranged leaves. You feel an impulse to reach out. You run your fingers through its little green leaves. They feel spikey and alive.

Returning your hand back towards your body, you notice a tiny insect, smaller than ant. It crawls over the wrinkles in your skin like an astronaut struggling across Martian terrain. You bring it close to your face. The intelligence of its movement transfixes you. Every swivel of its microscopic legs, of its antennae – precise, machine–like, yet so alive. You think, “My God, it's ALIVE!” For the first time in your life you recognize LIFE. Of course you've seen life in motion countless times before, but never like this. Somehow you've always taken life for granted. But now you SEE. LIFE. The intelligence of it awes you. As you move your finger towards the bug, you can tell, it's afraid. You recognize the intelligence in its fear, perfectly designed to keep it alive.

You are conscious that you recognize the bug, but the bug doesn't recognize you. It's just going about its day, surviving, avoiding danger, looking for food – oblivious that some entity of higher consciousness is observing it, like God looking down from the clouds.

Your attention shifts away from your hand as something flits through the corner of your vision. A hummingbird darts from bush to bush with the precision of an industrial robot. It hovers right up next to your bush. You stand perfectly still. Looking at it, the whole world seems to slow to a crawl. You can see the exquisite flap of its little bio–mechanical propellers. LIFE. You marvel at its profound intelligence and immaculate beauty. This little bird is perfection incarnate. You can resolve every green and pink iridescent feather on its body, arranged like tiny dragon scales. They shimmer in the subtle light of the desert dawn. The hummingbird's beauty strikes you with childlike delight. Your mind floods with memories of your fascination with hummingbirds as a child. Looking at it hover, you recognize the consciousness in it, but it doesn't recognize the consciousness in you. You think to yourself, “It's God, lost in a hummingbird dream.” You smile.

You look closer at its scale–like feathers. Within a single feather you see fine branching lines, delicate hairs, and splotches of iridescent pigment. One particular splotch resembles a nebula in outer space. A pink and green cloud of luminous gas 50 light–years across, made of particles from ancient dead stars. A star graveyard now turned a nursery for stars yet to be born. Zooming in deeper you see pin–point sparkles of light, like household dust glittering in a ray of sunlight through a windowsill. Explosions from a 500–year war between two ancient alien civilizations. When heavily damaged their ships' wrap reactors explode in a tiny supernova – creating a microscopic golden sparkle in the void of outer space.

These two civilizations have been at war over a political dispute for 500 years and now the battle has come to its peak. The nebula glitters with a thousand sparkles, like someone blew a pinch of gold dust into the air. Each sparkle, ten thousand lives extinguished.

Zooming out you suddenly become aware that all of this is happening on a TV screen – an epic space opera playing out for someone's entertainment. But the actors don't know they're actors. To them, this galactic war is as real as real gets.

A remote appears in your hand. You flip the channel. The scene changes from a galactic battle to a game show where the host is a giraffe and all the contestants are giant mice. You flip the channel again. The scene changes to a small alien girl blowing out a birthday cake. You hold your finger down on the remote and the channels start flipping faster and faster, at the speed of a hummingbird's wings. The channels are endless. They contain the media of every civilization that has ever existed. Within a minute you flip through 100 million channels. Getting the idea, you lift your finger from the remote. It stops on what looks like an HD nature documentary. You see a slow–motion macro shot of a hummingbird flapping its wings. The camera zooms out and you see yourself standing next to it in the desert, admiring its beauty.

Looking down at the remote you see some colored knobs. Turning a silver knob slowly morphs the hummingbird into a dragonfly. You turn the knob half–way and get something that is 50% hummingbird, 50% dragonfly. You crank it back and forth in amazement, watching the eerily–fluid transformation on the screen. Turning an orange knob slowly turns your human self on the screen into an elephant. You crank the knob all the way to the right and the man on the screen becomes 100% elephant. But suddenly you see a strange grey appendage blocking your view of the screen. Your nose! It's turned into a long, hairy, grey animated elephant trunk. Nothing else about your body has changed, just your nose. At first you are startled. This thing seems to have a mind of its own, swaying back and back with a playful, undulating animation. But then you calm down, sense into it, and realize you have control. A big grin grows across your face as you take a deep long breath through your new nose. You feel an itch on your shoulder so you scratch it, with your nose. It works beautifully! “How did I ever manage without one of these?”, you say to yourself with amusement.

Looking down at the remote you notice the biggest knob of all. It's white. “I wonder what this one does?” You crank it with your nose. As you do, you feel yourself becoming ever more conscious. All the sudden you can feel the circuitry in the television as if it was an extension of your body. Every pixel becomes like a taste bud on your tongue. A 4K display has over 8 million pixels, each one now consciously accessible to your mind. Cranking the white knob even more you become so conscious you can start to predict which pixel will light up with which color value in the next frame.

Turning the white knob even more you become so conscious your mind gains direct access to the channels database. In your mind's eye you have instantaneous thumbnail access to every channel and piece of media that has ever been produced in the universe.

What do you want to watch? It's hard to choose. You're not used to having this much much information in your mind in parallel. It's hard to navigate such a sprawling network of information. Your thoughts begin to influence the process. Your mind floods with old memories of cinema you watched in your youth. You don't know why but the movie Aliens starts to dominate your mind. The more your mind focuses on that thought, the more real it becomes. Soon the entire room and TV fade out of existence and your reality smoothly transitions into that of the Alien queen laying eggs in her nest. The TV is gone, your elephant nose is gone – you are now the Alien queen. Slime is dripping down your black, spidery body and mouth. Acid is coursing through your veins. Eggs are squeezing out of your…. whatever. Ellen Ripley is torching your eggs with a flamethrower and it's making your blood boil. You think to yourself, “Of course, I'm the Alien queen. The Alien queen is my own consciousness as much as anything else, no better or worse, no weirder. It's all my Mind.”

You look down at your alien hand and notice the TV remote still there. You will yourself to press a random key with a long, grotesque claw. Instantly the whole scene turns into a cartoon. The film Aliens has become a cartoon version of itself and you are still the Alien queen, but now your reality is two–dimensional and much more colorful. You look down again at your hand for the remote, but it's gone, disappeared just like the TV. You think to yourself, “Of course, 2D is no more or less real than 3D. Cartoon reality is just another facet of my consciousness. I am no less real as a 2D Aliens cartoon than I am as a 3D human being.”

On the one hand experiencing yourself as a grotesque alien straight out of a nightmare strikes you as disturbing, but only mildly so because you're so conscious you understand what's going on. You're so conscious you don't need a TV remote to change channels. In your mind's eye you press the pause button on an imaginary remote and the current scene freezes mid–frame.

Now you can focus on accessing the channel database to find what you really want to watch. You see that in the database channels are arranged by category. Scanning mentally through five thousands categories you stumble upon SEX. Your mind is fixated. A memory of your ex–girlfriend comes to mind, and suddenly, there she is. A stunning young woman laying naked in your bed, squirming and itching for sex. You crank up the white dial in your mind's eye some more, becoming even more conscious. You look at your girlfriend. She's begging you to fuck her. Looking at her squirm in slow motion you realize that once you fuck her you will impregnate her and spawn a million future generations of humans. It doesn't matter whether you impregnate her or somebody else does, in the end it's all the same since all such differences are imaginary. You're too conscious to really be interested in the act of sex now, but the profundity of it makes you wonder. You are captivated by the platonic aspect of her beauty, just as you were with the hummingbird. But this is more personal, more interactive. You slowly run your hands over the curves of her smooth, naked body. As you do, her body turns to sand – a fine sand that seeps down over the bed sheets like the sand in an hourglass. Her squirming body disintegrates into vast pools of sand. Her feminine curves become the curves of an endless ocean of dunes stretching out to the horizon in every direction.

You find yourself standing in the middle of a vast dune – a dune made from your girlfriend's essence. Each grain of sand is a dream she once dreamt, a memory she once had, an emotion she once felt. Grains of sand made from her joy, her excitement, her sadness, her anger, her frustration, her loneliness, her light, her darkness, her fear, her love, her disgust, her surprise, her orgasms. Grains of sand made from her highest aspirations and her deepest nightmares – all animated with the energy of her soul.

The dune is silent, but for the murmur of a soft breeze. You kneel down and run your fingers through the sand, your hand like a tongue tasting the emotion locked in every grain. A symphony of a thousand subtle yet distinct emotions washes over you. Somehow it all computes in the vastness of your mind. It's like you raked your tongue through the depths of her turbulent psyche.

Your eyes well up and a tear rolls down your face.

A loud crack of thunder, like a gunshot, startles you from above, and the sky begins to pour with heavy rain. The sound of rain soothes your soul. The landscape – or, really, your mindscape – feels enchanted, exactly as you want it to be.

Raindrops hit your face in slow motion. Each droplet, a unique bubble universe unto itself, filled with trillions of inhabitants all oblivious as to why their universe came crashing to an end. You think to yourself, “So this is how a universe ends.” Each droplet is filled with the collective consciousness of all the sentient entities inhabiting it. As a droplet hits your face it transfers the collective wisdom of a thousand ancient civilizations directly into your mind. Their memories, their struggles, their dreams, their insights – all integrate smoothly into your psyche. You stand there, showered by an immense cosmic intelligence. It feels like bathing in divine light. Its sentience and beauty sends waves of bliss radiating through your body.

You look up at a towering stack of fluffy white clouds in the distant sky. Somehow you just know the clouds are made of whipped cream. Reaching your hand up towards the clouds you scoop at them with your finger and secure a sizable dollop. The cream is thick and rich, like frosting. You bring it to your mouth and suck. It doesn't just taste sweet and milky, it tastes like a fusion of every desert you can ever remember having: cheesecake, ice cream, cupcakes, cookies, crème brulee, cotton candy, éclairs, tiramisu, panacotta, macaroon, marzipan, cookie dough, apple pie, fruit tart, and waffles.

This is your mindscape, and in your mindscape things taste however you want them to taste.

Mmmmmmmmm…. Waffles….. Your mind lingers. You can barely remember the last time you allowed yourself to indulge in waffles. You think to yourself, “Why don't I treat myself more?”

You look down at your feet. The sand is in the process of transforming into a grid of waffle. Waffles stretches out to the horizon in all directions. Now you stand in the middle of vast, gently rolling waffle dunes. You feel the spongy, grid–like texture under your bare feet.

Far in the distance, from high in the sky, pours a solitary stream of rich maple syrup. The syrup folds over itself. It floods valleys of waffle in a rich viscous amber, glossy like nail polish.

Now it starts to snow, but the air isn't cold. You hold out your hand to catch a few specks of white as they fall. These aren't snowflakes, this is powdered sugar! With a big grin you stick your tongue out into the air.

A large desert mouse hops along the ground, licking at a pool of maple syrup, oblivious to your presence. As your gaze fixates on it, your thoughts take hold of it. Your thought of a kangaroo morphs the mouse into a kangaroo without skipping a beat. Your thought of a bird causes the kangaroo to sprouts the wings of an eagle and a pillar of wind lifts it soaring into the clouds.

Suddenly a darkness looms over you – a vast shadow, moving from on high. A colossal fork and knife come down from the sky just in front of you. The silver slices through the landscape as prongs poke. The clouds part and you look up to see the God–like face of your six year old self wielding the silverware. Your six year old self has a huge grin across his face as he forks a syrupy hill of waffle and raises it toward his mouth.

Your six year old self's face morphs into that of your father when he was 6 years old. Then your mother when she was six years old. Then your brother when he was six years old. Morphing faster and faster, flipping like a Rolodex, the face goes through thousands, then millions of iterations… the faces of every six year old child who has ever eaten waffles.

Looking down at your feet you see an insect – some kind of beetle – lying there on the ground. It's dead but still colorful. You kneel down to pick it up. Its husk lays motionless in your hand. Inspecting it as though under a magnifying glass, you marvel at its beauty. Even in death you see the beauty of life. Especially in death. But what makes it all the more beautiful is your awareness that this creature is your own mind. How sad that this little creature is alive no more.

Suddenly you get an impossible idea. “Could it work?”, you say to yourself. You turn your gaze inward, to the white dial on the remote in your mind's eye. You crank it up. Your consciousness expands, interconnecting ever deeper with itself. Your visual field grows crystalline, as though all the air was sucked out of the atmosphere. Everything becomes sharp and bright – and eerily still. You focus intensely on the beetle. Your consciousness penetrates through its desiccated remains. Its body is your mind, and right now your mind demands a miracle. You channel your will into the beetle, filling it with your spirit and love. Then… nothing. Time slows to a crawl, reality seems to freeze in stasis. A few more moments of nothing, and then… the beetle's legs twitch to life. Your eyes grow wide. It starts to crawl over you. You blow into your hand and the beetle morphs into a luminous green moth that flits erratically up into the sky. You smile in disbelief at the miracle of your mind.

Standing there in the waffle dunes, you look down at your hands. Images start to run through your mind of animals you took fascination with as a child: monkeys, reptiles, birds, big wild cats, mollusks. As the images flip through your mind, the shape of your hands flips to match. Your hands morph into the hands of an ape, the claws of a dinosaur, the paws of a lion, the tentacles of an octopus. Puzzled and amused, you wonder to yourself, “What happening to me? What am I?”

Then it dawns on you: “Of course, I'm God. I am consciousness. I am imagining myself. I am whatever I conceive myself to be because there is nothing outside my endless Mind.”

Everything around you disappears: the landscape, the waffles, the rivers of syrup, the sky.

Now it's just you, floating in a bathtub in the middle of empty space.

Music starts to fill the silence of the void. A melody. It's fast, cheery, and delicate. Delightfully fast. Deliciously delicate. Ethereal. Like something from a fairytale. It's the sound of a piano but you're conscious that there is no piano. What are pianos but a figment of your imagination? “Where is it all coming from?”, you wonder. “And who's playing?” There is no instrument and no one is playing. There are no sound waves traveling to your ears. You have no ears. You're too conscious for ears. The chords are playing directly in your mind. The rest is fantasy.

You understand that musical instruments and the people who play them have always just been figments of your mind, a backstory you invented to provide some kind of ground for the irreducible mystery of sound. Your own mind is the pianist and the composer. You've eliminated the imaginary middleman. The notes arrange themselves playfully and intelligently in your mind like children frolicking on a playground. The speed and immediacy of it wows you. Direct. Absolutely direct. Impossibly direct. You play each note flawlessly, with the precision of a maestro. Each note oscillating and imprinting itself in the Mind of God. You smile in delight at the recognition of the splendor of your own mind.

You look down at your body. You are naked.

All sense of scale is lost. You aren't small, you aren't large – you are undefined – which makes you Cosmic. Your body is the only yardstick there is. Your body is the Universe. You see your body made of liquid consciousness. It shimmers and ripples along with the thoughts in your mind. Your skin flows with organic, translucent, morphing shapes, as though cast by a projector. Ornate shapes – vaguely resembling something tribal, something paisley, something floral – shimmer across your naked body. Each pattern imbued with a divine intelligence impossible to articulate, gracefully animating, dancing, meandering across your skin.

You recognize yourself as looking directly at the body of God. A body made of pure consciousness. It still looks human but it is no longer human, recontextualized as cosmic and divine. You see entire universes contained inside of you. Or whatever else you may imagine. An infinite diversity of animals and creatures seem to bubble up just underneath your skin, like particles struggling to emerge out of a roiling quantum foam. The pure potential of your mind is precipitating in front of your eyes in real time. God's body is made out of whatever you imagine. It looks human but shines with a brilliant, crystalline consciousness. Your body is Mind, and Mind is all you are. Absolute Mind. Absolute Truth. You recognize your consciousness as singular and sovereign. Nothing exists outside your Mind. Universal Mind. A mind limited by nothing but its own imagination and self–definition.

At long last God has awoken to itself. The Universe is awake, looking through your eyes at itself. Perfect, Divine, Eternal, Immortal, Absolute, Sublime.

You turn your gaze directly inwards, directly behind and inside your eyes – right into the core of what you used to consider your skull – wondering what is there, what you truly are. You gaze into the very heart of yourself, your purest essence. A radiant singularity sits there. Shining with crystal clear consciousness. Glowing with sentience and intelligence. Eternally awake.

Pure Infinity. Pure Consciousness. The Godhead.

This singularity in you is endless. The deeper you gaze into yourself the deeper it goes, with no bottom, no ground. You struggle to find something within you to define yourself as – some concrete form, some verbal articulation, some image. But you cannot be defined because you are Unlimited. That which is Unlimited cannot have a definition because any definition would be a limit. Your essence is literally undefined, like the result of an impossible arithmetical operation on a calculator.

Puzzled and dumbstruck, you try to find a beginning to yourself. You ask, “But where did I come from?”, only to realize that that which is Unlimited cannot have a beginning or an end. You are too conscious to be fooled into believing in any beginnings or ends. As you grasp at any part of yourself and try to trace its origin through a chain of linear causation back into the past, it fails. Your consciousness has transcended the notion of linear causation. You realize all past is but a figment of your imagination. Every part of you stands on its own and also reaches infinitely far back into the imaginary past via an endless chain of imaginary causes that never terminates but circles back around in a cosmic strange loop. All beginnings and ends are imaginary, self–imposed limitations held within an Unlimited Mind. A Mind with no beginning or end. A Mind that has existed for Eternity. You are God, and God is both uncaused, self–caused, and infinitely caused. God is that which caused itself into being. God is that which created itself.

The recognition of your own Eternity takes your breath away. It could not be more profound. Eternity. You exist, absolute and forever as Truth itself. It couldn't be any other way. It couldn't be any more obvious. It's so perfectly clear yet utterly unbelievable.

It's laughably obvious now that science and history are figments of your Mind. Brains, chemistry, evolution, physics, time – all fictions spun by the Mind to construct the illusion of a mind–independent reality. Now you see reality for exactly what it's always been: an Absolute Illusion. An illusion perfectly designed to allow you to forget for a second that you are God. The illusion is perfect, stretching forever in any direction you look, painting a backstory behind every corner you peak around, every hole you stick your head into, every object you sniff – much like the rendering engine of a video game.

You're still dreaming, but now you know it. Now your dream is Absolute. You watch as your God–mind effortlessly weaves together figments of consciousness into the tapestry you used to call a human self. Everything and everyone is your imagination, emanating from the bottomless singularity at the center of your imaginary skull. Your mind pulls whole chunks of consciousness from the formless singularity like a magician pulling rabbits out of his hat. Specific and highly detailed memories of your childhood, your entire mother, your entire father, your beloved pet cat, historical events like WW2 – all figments of consciousness pulled out of a hat and flawlessly woven together to construct the illusion of a human life. The Earth, the physical universe, humanity itself is finally seen for what it truly is, just figments in a dream. Jesus, The Buddha, Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, gurus and masters, all those years you spent meditating and doing yoga, activating your chakras, reading books, chasing enlightenment – just figments within God's Mind.

Finally you reach the question of death. What is death? You smile and laugh as you realize that death is just something you're imagining. You are now too conscious to die. An Infinite Mind cannot die because it'd have to imagine its own non–existence. An Infinite Mind has nowhere to go, being already in all times and places.

As your consciousness grows even deeper the difference between things starts to collapses. All difference is seen to be imaginary. Forms merge into each other, losing their distinctness in the brilliant light of pure consciousness. All boundaries bleed together. You feel like an alien super–intelligence cutting through an existential fog of war. The veil of ignorance is lifted. It feels like awakening from a lifetime of heavy amnesia. Everything within reality that could be known becomes transparent to you. Now you remember who you are. The entire illusion of life is unraveled.

As you grow even more conscious, your visual field starts to develop into a singularity. Your visual field merges with your auditory field and your tactile field until there is no more difference between sight, sound, and touch. Growing even more conscious, the last vestiges of difference collapse. Consciousness frees itself of all self–imposed limits and biases, accelerating asymptotically towards pure Oneness. You release the heavy burden of existing by way of concrete and finite forms.

From this point, should you dare to take one final step, you will enter pure INFINITY, where all form is lost, as no difference exists between anything – where all things exist as a soup of pure metaphysical potential. All things become identical. Every possible object, every possible form lives there. But it's Nothing. Now you must confront existence as pure abstraction. Your truest identity, your highest nature is finally revealed. What are you? Nothing the human mind can imagine. A metaphysical singularity of pure consciousness extending forever in all directions and all dimensions, absolutely sovereign, unconstrained by any sense of other. Every difference annihilates into a bottomless ocean of Infinite Love. Absolute Unity. Absolute Symmetry. Complete, Perfect, Eternal, Formless, Endless.

The Alpha and the Omega. Identity itself. You have become ONE. You have become LOVE. You have reached the end–game of reality.

You are INFINITY.

You radiate as a void of infinite potential. Complete in your knowledge of yourself.

 

Amortentia

Edited by MuadDib

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Spiral Dynamics - Stage Purple
https://youtu.be/BZFlE0eKTvw

"The child who is not embraced by the village will burn it down to feel it's warmth." - African Proverb

  • Credit to Model Developers: Leo Gura acknowledges the work of Claire Graves, Don Beck, and Christopher Cowan in developing the Spiral Dynamics model and uses resources like the website https://spiraldynamicsintegral.nl/en/ and the book "Spiral Dynamics" for information.
  • Overview of Spiral Dynamics: It's a model tracing the evolution of culture and psychology over time, focusing on both individual and collective progression. Each stage represents advanced forms of culture, a set of values, and an increase in consciousness and complexity.
  • Stage Purple - Tribal Society: Represents mankind's earliest way of life as a clan or tribe, focusing on communal survival where individual needs are secondary to that of the group. Marked by the lack of advanced rationality, science, or technology, resulting in a mystical, nature-reverent viewpoint.
  • Individual vs. Tribal Identity: Modern individualistic ideologies are contrasted against the collectivist identity of Stage Purple. Survival was based on tribal coexistence rather than individualistic efforts, reflecting deep interdependence.
  • When Stage Purple Emerged: It traces back to approximately a million years ago, evolving from primitive social structures seen in ancestors like chimpanzees and bonobos who lived in social groups rather than alone.
  • Social Learning in Early Childhood: From early childhood, humans are socialized into tribal dynamics through experiences in schools and playgrounds, learning to navigate interpersonal relationships and group politics.
  • Family Unit and Social Expansion: Stage Purple naturally extends the family unit into larger tribal structures comprising multiple families with complex social intertwining, emphasizing communal responsibility over personal advancement.
  • Importance of Tribe in Purple Stage: Leo emphasizes the critical role of the tribe in shaping one's life and identity. The tribe's well-being trumps individual desires, with survival hinging on the success of the communal group.
  • Tribe Dynamics in Stage Purple: Stage Purple social organization is likened to an extended familial structure, where tribal members interact with the intimacy and cooperative spirit similar to a family unit. The tribe functions as a cohesive team, essential for survival, with defined roles and shared responsibilities not unlike managing a household on a larger scale.
  • Values and Customs in Stage Purple: Honor, humility, self-sacrifice, and a strong adherence to ancestral customs are core to Stage Purple. The tribe's rituals, taboos, and ceremonies are followed without question, and life gains additional meaning through these communal activities, setting the stage for a culture that extends beyond mere survival.
  • Stage Purple's Relationship with Nature and Mysticism: A harmonious relationship with nature and the mystic realm is vital in Stage Purple. The culture is imbued with magical thinking, attributing great significance to rites of passage, sacred objects, and places, as well as traditional artistic expressions like music and dance.
  • Memory and Tradition in Stage Purple: Oral tradition is central to maintaining the tribe's collective memory and history, as writing systems are absent. Myths and stories, passed down with little alteration, serve as the tribe’s repository of knowledge and guidance for survival in a world where scientific understanding is nonexistent.
  • Survival Dependence on Ancestral Wisdom in Stage Purple: Survival at this stage is precarious and heavily reliant on ancestral wisdom. Traditions and customs are rigorously preserved because they have been tested through time, and deviation might result in lethal consequences, emphasizing the deep reverence for elders and their accumulated knowledge.
  • Interdependence and Spiritual Beliefs in Stage Purple: Stage Purple places a premium on reciprocity and cooperative interdependence, often invoking curses and blessings to manage the tribe's welfare and protect against perceived evils. Psychic phenomena and astral experiences are also valued for their perceived connection to survival and knowledge.
  • Stage Purple Societal Structure: Predominantly hunter-gatherer in nature, Stage Purple societies are tightly knit, with rigid and implicit social rules that dictate everything from food to communication. Fixed social roles ensure the stability of the tribal structure, with each member understanding their place and function within the group.
  • Communal Child Rearing in Stage Purple: Children are raised by the entire village or tribe, not just the mother and father. This communal approach to child rearing helps socialize children better than in modern societies where they often grow up isolated before starting school.
  • Concept of Collective Property in Stage Purple: Rather than individual ownership, property and resources are shared within the community. This includes housing and food, creating a natural insurance policy and maximizing survival efficiency.
  • Gender-Based Division of Labor in Stage Purple Society: A clear division of labor exists, where women typically handle cooking, sewing, or gathering, and men take on hunting and defense roles. This division often extends to social roles and expectations.
  • Significance of Fertile Women in Stage Purple: Women are highly valued for their reproductive role and often have many children, expecting high infant mortality rates. Fertility and the ability to produce offspring are central to the tribe's survival.
  • Stage Purple's Social Prioritization Over Productivity: Social bonds are valued far above material productivity, often leading to conflicts with the business-focused mindset of Western cultures where schedules and efficiency are prioritized.
  • In-group and Out-group Dynamics in Stage Purple: A strong tribal identity creates an intense division between 'us' and 'them', leading to tribal conflicts, blood feuds, and even ethnic cleansing when differing tribe traditions and beliefs clash.
  • Natural Attitude Towards Sexuality in Stage Purple Cultures: Sex is viewed as a natural part of life, without the repressions seen in later stages that emphasize morality, such as Stage Blue.
  • Marriage and Sexuality Norms in Stage Purple: Arranged marriages are common, and daughters are often sold at a young age to the highest bidder for a dowry, reflecting the stage's practical approach to survival and reproduction.
  • Leadership in Stage Purple Cultures: The chieftain serves as a wise elder, facilitating and guiding the tribe without seeking personal gain, contrasting with the later authoritarian leadership styles of Stage Red.
  • Individual Sacrifice for the Tribe: Stage Purple emphasizes the need for individual sacrifice to ensure the survival and well-being of the tribe, often manifesting in the willingness to subsume personal desires for the collective good.
  • Reverence of Natural Phenomena in Stage Purple: The elements of nature—stars, sun, water, etc.—are crucial for survival and deeply revered, often attributed to various spirits in an animistic belief system.
  • Understanding Mystical Cause and Effect in Stage Purple: Without a scientific framework, cause and effect are understood through a mystical lens, as with shamans performing rain dances to bring about rain for the crops.
  • Pre-scientific understanding in Stage Purple: Stage Purple lacks knowledge of scientific concepts like chemical reactions, molecules, electricity, and even basic weather phenomena. The world around them is shrouded in mystery, and perceived as magical, and causes and effects are often explained through superstition.
  • Role of superstition and taboo: Superstitious beliefs are prevalent in Stage Purple, where breaking taboos is thought to bring bad luck or disaster. Simple events, like encountering a black cat or breaking a mirror, are imbued with significant consequences.
  • Intuitive and right-brained dominance: This stage is identified with right-brained, intuitive, and feeling-oriented cognition. Without formal education systems, people rely on gut instinct and emotional attachment to navigate their environment, which can be surprisingly effective in non-scientific contexts.
  • Mystical perception of nature: Stage Purple blurs the line between reality and imagination, resulting in animistic spirituality where every element of nature, from trees to rivers, is believed to possess a life force and intentionality that must be revered and sometimes appeased to ensure survival.
  • Cyclical sense of time: Time is perceived in cycles, marked by natural events such as the phases of the sun and moon, rather than in a linear fashion. This cyclical pattern is deeply connected to farming and survival strategies.
  • Origins of major religions: The animistic and polytheistic beliefs prevalent in Stage Purple are the foundations from which major religions such as Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, and Judaism emerged. Over time, these beliefs were systematized and modified to form the orthodox monotheistic religions of today.
  • Cultural practices and artifacts: Stage Purple is rich in folklore, songs, crafts, and arts compensating for the lack of a written language. These cultural expressions are sometimes mysterious or strange to outsiders but can be sophisticated and beautiful.
  • Magic and ritual in daily life: The everyday life in Stage Purple culture includes a variety of magical practices like witchcraft, shamanism, totems, omens, and fertility symbols. Such traditions are essential to the community’s cohesion and survival.
  • Environmental awareness in Stage Purple: Though Stage Purple cultures appear environmentally conscious due to their closeness to nature, their impact on the environment is minimal compared to modern societies with advanced technology. True environmental consciousness that understands the broader impact of human actions emerges at more advanced levels of development.
  • Cultural consciousness and adaptability: In Stage Purple, culture is not seen as a changeable social construct but as a fixed reality, which limits the capacity to critically reflect on or adapt cultural practices when environmental or social conditions change.
  • Challenges of Stage Purple: Stage Purple struggles with handling diversity, alternative worldviews, belief systems, and cultures. Its closed-mindedness and rigidity lead to conflict, battle, and an inability to adapt when exposed to new perspectives.
  • Attachment to Tradition: There's a strong attachment to traditional ways of living in Stage Purple. The world view is narrow, making it difficult to imagine alternative lifestyles or viewpoints.
  • Inability to Adapt: Stage Purple's ultimate downfall is its inability to adapt to changing life conditions. With a static environment for millennia, rapid changes like climate shifts, new diseases, and advanced technologies severely challenge these tribes.
  • Examples of Stage Purple: Notable examples include the indigenous cultures of the Amazon, African tribes, Indonesian tribes, Native American tribes like the Comanche and Lakota, and traditional cultures in the Middle East like those in Afghanistan and rural Hawaii.
  • Influence of Stage Purple on Modern Spirituality: Stage Purple spirituality can be seen influencing more modern movements like Stage Green, which draws from tribal wisdom such as organic farming, sustainable agriculture, and a communal way of living. Psychedelic usage also has roots in tribal medicines.
  • Representation of Stage Purple in Popular Culture: Stage Purple is depicted in various works of popular culture, including Carlos Castaneda's "Don Juan" books, the Na'vi in James Cameron's Avatar, the game Legend of Zelda, and movies like Medicine Man. These showcase a mixture of naivety and mystical wisdom characteristic of Stage Purple. 
  • Cultural Fragmentation in Stage Purple: The fragmentation seen in India, with numerous languages and subcultures, is indicative of Stage Purple's limitations in unifying for modern advancement. Resistance to adopting a common language slows down cultural and economic development.
  • Impact of Isolation in Stage Purple: The isolated existence of Stage Purple societies is threatened by modern world changes. Tribes' inability to keep up with advancements leads to their downfall, as seen with environmental changes and new technology like aircraft disturbing their isolated life.
  • Suicide Bombing as Stage Purple Dynamic: Suicide bombing can be viewed through the lens of Stage Purple dynamics, showing the extreme extent of tribal sacrifice for one's group in parts of the Middle East and in historical contexts like kamikaze pilots in WWII.
  • Ritualistic and Spiritual Practices in Stage Purple: Stage Purple is heavily characterized by ritualistic and animistic practices, such as chanting, drumming, and using herbal medicine like ayurveda and acupuncture. They also partake in psychoactive plants and substances during ceremonies, such as ayahuasca, peyote, salvia divinorum, magic mushrooms, datura, and iboga, often as rites of passage.
  • Physical Traditions and Mystical Beliefs in Stage Purple: The stage includes physical traditions such as tribal tattoos seen in Maori culture and odd mating rituals, historically recorded in the Philippines, epitomizing the stage's mystical and traditional approach to life activities. Superstitions like the evil eye, magical healers, and ancient burial grounds also play a significant role.
  • Purple Stage Symbols and Superstitions: Folk tales, fairy tales, secret handshakes, and symbolic ceremonies reflect Stage Purple's rich mythical culture. Modern remnants of this stage's thinking are seen in superstitions like knocking on wood, the rabbit’s foot, and observances like Halloween. Asian cultures retain symbols like fortune cookies and the Maneki Neko cat, which are descendants of purple-level superstitions.
  • Purple's Presence in Modern Environments: Even modern small businesses and startup work environments can mimic the dynamics of a Stage Purple society, fostering a family-like atmosphere among team members. The sacredness of trees, the circle of life, and wisdom found in books like "The Four Agreements" and "The Alchemist" also derive from Stage Purple spiritual traditions.
  • Societal Expressions of Stage Purple: Various social expressions—such as proverbs 'Blood is thicker than water', honoring ancestors, and resistance to changing established traditions—demonstrate the broad influence of Stage Purple within communities.
  • Triggers for Stage Purple Individuals: Individuals at this stage are triggered by disrespect to tradition, elders, and spirits, as well as by selfishness, arrogance, greed, and ambition. They are resistant to changes, including innovations and new ideas, and struggle with accepting different cultures and customs that conflict with their traditional ways.
  • Unhealthy Aspects of Purple Stage: Some of the downsides include tribalism leading to warfare, ethnic cleansing, and difficulties in adapting to external changes, such as technological advances. Isolationism and a narrow worldview are major limitations of this stage, which can lead to an inability to evolve as needed by the changing external conditions.
  • Consequences of Resisting Change: Reflecting on the plight of Native American tribes against modern Westernization, Leo highlights the struggle of Purple-stage communities to adapt to technology and different cultural influences. This resistance can result in losing a sense of purpose and contributes to societal issues such as alcoholism and high crime rates on reservations.
  • Overly Traditional and Superstitious Nature: Stage Purple can be overly traditional, conservative, and superstitious, demonstrating a preference for magical thinking over rationality. This can pose a barrier to understanding natural phenomena scientifically and pragmatically.
  • Integrating Stage Purple Wisdom: Leo suggests that while aspects of Stage Purple may seem outdated, significant spiritual wisdom can be mined from its traditions. He encourages integration of Purple's positive elements into modern practices, such as neo-shamanism and the rediscovery of ancient spiritual texts, which can be therapeutic and insightful for personal growth.
  • Resistance to innovation in Stage Purple: Stage Purple often resists new technologies like synthetic psychedelics, which can be seen as a rejection of tools that could enhance enlightenment and personal growth.
  • Criticism of new spiritual technologies: Traditional spiritual practitioners may criticize methods like the use of psychedelics, failing to recognize the potential benefits of such technology for achieving enlightenment or healing quicker than traditional methods.
  • Stage Purple's limited influence and decline: With only about 10% of the global adult population and minimal world influence, Stage Purple is becoming outdated due to its inability to adapt and innovate, likened to a "dinosaur" stage of development.
  • Stage Purple's communal governance: The governance in Stage Purple is akin to small-scale communism, where resources are distributed based on need within a council of elders, without formal legal systems, markets, military, or taxation.
  • Relevance of Stage Purple to Stage Green: Stage Green looks back at Stage Purple's communal living and tries to scale up its gift economy to a global level, addressing the shortcomings of rampant capitalism.
  • Lessons learned from Stage Purple: Individuals raised in modern society may lack understanding of communal living, social skills, and nature connection; revisiting Stage Purple can cover these developmental gaps and enhance one's fulfillment.
  • Building Social Bonds and Combating Alienation: Emphasizes the importance of socialization, which can alleviate feelings of isolation, depression, and social anxiety, and highlights the issues caused by inadequate social skills.
  • Communal Nature of Humans: Underscores the fact that humans are deeply communal and need to focus on the wellbeing of the whole community, not just individual gains.
  • Importance of Sacrifice for Community: Suggests that understanding Stage Purple can help people see taxation and community contribution positively rather than theft.
  • Life Beyond Material Profit: Promotes the idea that social bonds and communal wellbeing might be more rewarding than material possessions.
  • Value of Nature and Emotional Connections: Encourages living harmoniously with nature, connecting with emotions, and relying more on intuition than logic.
  • Psychedelics as Modern Medicines: Acknowledges the potential of psychedelics, inherited from Stage Purple, for deep healing and personal development.
  • Spirituality, Mysticism, and Psychic Powers: Suggests taking spirituality, mysticism, and psychic powers seriously, as they can profoundly improve the quality of life and offer real benefits.
  • Embracing Simplicity and Wisdom: Recommends slowing down, living a simpler life, and seeking the wisdom of elders and ancient traditions for a more fulfilling life.
  • Organic Wholesome Diet: Advocates for a natural, wholesome, and organic diet, which can help prevent modern diseases and health conditions. 
  • Transition to More Advanced Stages: Encourages individuals to develop ambition, question tradition, and expand worldviews to transcend Stage Purple and embrace newer solutions in evolving societies.
  • Health Benefits of Traditional Diets: Traditional diets of our ancestors, which were high quality, organic, and grass-fed, contrast sharply with modern toxic diets that contribute to disorders like eczema and autoimmune diseases. Adopting aspects of this traditional eating can lead to better health and improved living.
  • How to Transcend Stage Purple: For those few who may still be at Stage Purple, moving forward requires developing personal ambition, leading towards Stage Red. It also entails questioning and letting go of tradition and magical thinking, exposing oneself to a broader range of world cultures, and adopting more rational, strategic, and scientific thinking.
  • The Dual Nature of Stage Purple: Although Stage Purple can seem primitive by modern standards, there exists a wealth of wisdom within this stage. It is neither good nor bad but has both healthy and unhealthy aspects that should be understood, respected, and integrated or avoided accordingly.
  • Resources for Understanding Stage Purple: There are books, videos, and documentaries available that explore Stage Purple cultures and traditions, which can be valuable for personal and spiritual growth. Resources such as Actualized.org’s blog, life purpose course, and book list offer insights into this stage and the overall Spiral Dynamics model.
  • Sequential Development through the Stages: One cannot skip stages when evolving through Spiral Dynamics. After Stage Purple, one must experience and develop through Stage Red, then Blue, before progressing to higher stages like Green.
  • Application of Spiral Dynamics: Future content by Leo Gura will focus on applying the Spiral Dynamics model to real-world situations such as politics, society, and individual growth, emphasizing practical benefits and integration of the model into various aspects of life.
  • Building a Foundation in Lower Stages: Many individuals overlook the importance of foundational stages like Purple, Red, and Blue. Developing qualities such as assertiveness, courage, self-discipline, and work ethic embodied in these stages is crucial for overall growth and avoiding issues such as social alienation, inability to maintain employment, and poor health habits.
  • Personal Development as a Lifelong Endeavor: Personal development is a long-term journey that should be pursued with excitement and passion. Utilizing Leo Gura as a meta-source for advanced, integrative guidance while seeking out practical advice in fitness, nutrition, finances, etc., from other experts, creates a holistic approach to optimizing life in all facets.
  • Recognizing Your Potential: The ultimate goal of personal development work is to realize and embrace one's vast potential as a human being. This requires dedication, discipline, and seriousness, treating life as an ongoing project and a work of art to contribute positively to the broader global community.
  • Continuing Journey with Actualized.org: Leo Gura assures continued guidance on personal development, not only focusing on advanced spiritual and metaphysical concepts but also connecting them with practical aspects to form a cohesive and ambitious vision for one's life potential.


Furnunculus

Edited by MuadDib

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The 9 Stages Of Ego Development - Part 1
https://youtu.be/J3hNosyyXRA

  • Introduction to foundational episodes: Leo sets up a two-part series on the ego development stages, emphasizing the importance of the groundwork provided in Part 1 for the more advanced post-conventional and transhuman stages in Part 2. This content is described as life-transforming and foundational for ongoing personal development work.
  • Crediting Susan Cook-Greuter's research: Leo credits the work of Susan Cook-Greuter, whose research paper on the nine levels of increasing embrace in ego development is recommended reading for viewers. He provides a description of the paper and urges the audience to study it in-depth for a deeper understanding of ego development theory (EDT).
  • Explanation of Ego Development Theory (EDT): EDT is introduced as an empirical, scientific model based on sentence completion tests, showing how self-identity evolves over time. The theory charts the ego's levels of maturity and sophistication as it makes sense of reality, with Cook-Greuter emphasizing the distinct views and new realities at each stage.
  • The role of Ego in making meaning: Leo asserts that the ego constantly engages in making meaning out of inherently meaningless events, interpreting reality in sophisticated ways. The focus is on the mind's structure rather than the content of beliefs, emphasizing the evolution of self-awareness and cognitive functions.
  • Values renegotiation in new realities: Transitioning between stages involves renegotiation of one's values based on a new understanding of concepts such as power, time, love, and truth. This shift signifies entering a different view of reality, each with its own constructs and perceptions.
  • Nine stages of ego development: There are nine stages broadly categorized into pre-conventional, conventional, and post-conventional (with a fourth potential category, transhuman or transcendent). The pre-conventional stages include symbiotic, impulsive, and opportunistic, with the U.S. adult population distribution at about 5% in pre-conventional stages and the majority in conventional stages.
  • Percentage and variations by country: Leo notes that population distribution across these stages varies widely, depending on the country, its development level, and sampling biases, with developed countries like the U.S. having higher percentages in advanced stages.
  • Understanding the ego's role in interpreting reality: The overview concludes with a reminder of the ego's integral role in creating and interpreting personal reality, setting the stage for exploring each development stage in more detail to understand human cognition and growth better.
  • Population distribution and sampling bias: Sampling can result in biases such as an overrepresentation of higher stages among college students in America due to the hurdles to get there, while underprivileged areas may show more individuals at pre-conventional stages.
  • Conventional stage characteristics: Comprising the majority (75-80%) of the adult U.S. population, conventional thinking forms the assumed baseline for what is considered normal and possible, making anything beyond appear exceptional or odd.
  • Population within post-conventional stages: Roughly 15-20% of U.S. adults reach post-conventional stages which include the pluralist, autonomous/strategist, and construct aware/ego aware/magician stages, but these are less commonly encountered due to social circles and biases.
  • Transcendent stage rarity: The unitive stage, part of the transcendent category, is very rare in the U.S. adult population (<1%), and harder to find without focused sampling of certain demographics like college students or urban residents.
  • Stage development complexity: Warning against simplistic comparisons between this model and Spiral Dynamics, emphasizing the value of using multiple models or lenses to understand the complexity of human development.
  • Symbiotic stage description: Found in infants with undifferentiated senses of self, other, and world; complete dependence on parents and culture for survival; incapacity to discriminate learned information.
  • Impulsive stage characteristics: Typical of toddlers to early childhood, with developing sense of self, time, and a dualistic worldview; significant dependence on adults; and beginnings of personality traits forming the mind's foundation.
  • Opportunistic stage traits: Commonly seen in adults in underdeveloped regions with an uncivilized, impulsive, and self-centered worldview; Magical thinking to make sense; the duality of self-awareness with a "real" inner self and "fake" outer presentation; actions typically driven by short-term thinking without consideration for longer-term consequences.
  • Mask and True Self Conflict: Individuals at this stage experience an internal division between their outer facade and their true inner self. This dichotomy stems from adhering to social rules solely for self-benefit or to evade punishment, rather than out of genuine agreement with the rules.
  • Materialistic and Control-based Self-Respect: Self-worth at this stage is derived from the ability to control and manipulate others. Respect for oneself is contingent on one's effectiveness in exerting influence over others, while a failure to do so leads to feelings of inadequacy.
  • Absence of Self-Blame and Accountable Behavior: There is a lack of personal accountability; others are always blamed for one's problems, and there is an inability to see how one's actions contribute to these issues. This stage lacks introspection and an understanding of the role of one's own mind in generating complications.
  • Expressive and Unrestrained Emotions: Emotions are not suppressed but are openly displayed, often leading to conflicts with societal norms and perceptions of uncivilized or barbaric behavior. Emotional outbursts can be loud and externalized without consideration for social decorum.
  • Shamelessness and Impulsivity: Actions are deemed wrong only if they result in punishment or being caught, which leads to shameless behavior driven by impulse, similar to animalistic instincts, with little remorse even when caught.
  • China Anecdote: Reflects on societal differences, noting an anecdote about the rapid industrialization in China where some individuals, due to their stage of development, may act in ways that are deemed uncivilized in Western societies, such as relieving themselves in public areas.
  • Volatile Relationships and Lack of Emotional Reflection: At this stage, relationships tend to be unstable, passionate, and often end abruptly due to a lack of self-responsibility and introspection regarding one's emotions and behavior. There is a tendency to blame the other party for relational issues.
  • Simple Solution to Complex Problems: Individuals operating at this stage lack empathy and are often dismissive of others' problems. They are self-centered, focusing only on their own issues while disregarding the difficulties faced by others.
  • Business Success Through Opportunism and Exploitation: Success in business can occur through opportunistic approaches and exploitation, favoring unilateral power, and shady or illegal activities. Individuals at this stage may engage in scamming or other unethical practices to achieve their desires.
  • Avoidance of Showing Weakness and Morality Vacancy: Demonstrating vulnerability is avoided, with attempts to conceal one's true self to prevent exploitation. Morality is largely absent as empathy and the capacity to consider others' perspectives are not yet developed, resulting in black-and-white thinking.
  • Language and Emotion Expression: The language used is straightforward and often centered around physical attributes. Abstract thoughts are not well-formulated. Emotions, especially negative ones, are expressed openly and without restraint, focusing on the individual's immediate and tangible world. 
  • Transition to Conformist or Diplomat Stage: The ego begins to recognize and become part of a community, moving past the individualistic opportunistic stage to embrace group conformity. This entails abiding by group rules, fostering a dichotomy between the in-group and everyone else, and valuing group acceptance, even at the cost of personal identity and autonomy.
  • Limitations in perspective-taking: At this stage of development, individuals are unable to see from the perspectives of different groups or cultures. They are locked into the worldview they were indoctrinated with, perceiving other belief systems and values as wrong or evil.
  • Fundamentalist worldview: Fundamentalists interpret other cultures and religions through their absolute belief system, leading to biased judgments. They view their practices as the only correct ones and demonize those that differ, such as considering other religions' deities and practices as uncivilized or barbaric.
  • Materialistic interpretation of spirituality: At this stage, spirituality is understood in a very material sense, with literal interpretations of heaven and hell as physical places. This concrete thinking fails to grasp metaphorical or internal states referenced in religious teachings, like considering heaven and hell as states of mind.
  • Absolutism and inability to question beliefs: People in this stage treat beliefs as reality itself and lack the capability to understand that beliefs can be wrong. They cannot fathom that their group's absolute beliefs might not be the right ones and don't recognize the improbability of their own beliefs being uniquely correct.
  • Resistance to feedback and change: Individuals here experience feedback as attacks rather than as opportunities for growth. They are preoccupied with conformity, lack independent moral principles, and are unable to stand up against the group even when it commits immoral actions like war crimes.
  • Conformity and predefined roles: In this stage, individuals prefer to conform to rigidly defined roles in traditional organizations such as churches, the military, and government, without creative thinking or questioning of the established norms and practices.
  • Taking pride in conformity: There is pride in following and not deviating from established roles and norms. This pride is evident in institutions like the military, where absolute fidelity to the group's routines and practices is championed.
  • Difficulty facing evolving realities: Those at this stage find it hard to deal with changes in society, culture, and technology, often resorting to denial or demonization rather than accommodating new perspectives and changes.
  • Sexuality as a controlled aspect: Sexuality is seen as an animalistic impulse that must be suppressed, leading to shame and the potential development of a sexual shadow, as evidenced by instances of sexual abuse within closed-off institutions.
  • Sexual repression and conformity: Pastors and other religious figures who publicly denounce homosexuality or other sexual behaviors may themselves engage in these behaviors in secret, leading to scandals. Their strong outward appearance of morality often hides underlying guilt, shame, and sexual confusion due to the suppression of their true desires to conform to social expectations.
  • Outward appearance vs. internal chaos: Individuals in the conformist stage focus on presenting a pleasant, accommodating, and orderly exterior, often concealing internal turmoil. They strive to be liked and accepted by their in-group, demonstrating helpful and agreeable behaviors, while they might show disdain or hostility towards out-group members.
  • Closed-mindedness to alternative beliefs: Engaging with fundamentalists of any religion about the possibility of other valid paths or philosophies is seen as treasonous or sinful in their perspective. This closed-mindedness is a defense mechanism to avoid facing the existential crisis of questioning their deep-seated indoctrinated beliefs.
  • Struggle with modern complexities: Conformists find it difficult to adapt to the complexities of the 21st-century world, as their rigid worldview forces them to deny scientific facts such as evolution, climate change, and the fluidity of sexual identity, as well as other cultures' strengths and merits.
  • Clichés as unchallenged truth: Conformists tend to think and express themselves in clichés while treating these clichés as original thought. They lack the self-reflection to recognize these are culturally ingrained talking points rather than genuine self-formed opinions.
  • Prioritizing appearance and status: Individuals in the conformist stage place high value on appearance, material possessions, reputation, and fitting in with their group. Their primary fear is rejection and loss of social status, leading them to deny emerging social issues like climate change to maintain their traditional beliefs.
  • Adherence to tradition and difficulty with technology: Conformists often resist technological advances like birth control, media, and genetic engineering, preferring to live by outdated moral systems. This resistance to adaptation makes it challenging to address and responsibly manage the consequences of new technologies.
  • Desire for clearly defined roles and hierarchies: Those at the conformist stage are drawn to organizations with strict hierarchies and enjoy giving black-and-white instructions on how to conduct one's life. They are not innovators and prefer clear, traditional instructions, which may clash with the expectations and individuality of younger generations.
  • Conformist's limited perspective: Individuals at the conformist stage evaluate everything according to their own preferences, believing their way is universal. They view differing values or lifestyles as wrong or evil, rather than simply different. This results in conflict with family members, such as parents who cannot comprehend their children's disparate life choices, like forms of spirituality outside of traditional church-going.
  • Conformist's emotional simplicity: Those in the conformist stage possess a rudimentary vocabulary for emotions, often suppressing their own feelings and desires to conform to group norms. They discipline themselves to fit in and gain approval by adhering to in-group standards, aspiring for rank and status within their social circles.
  • Transition to the expert stage: The expert stage is marked by individuals beginning to step back and engage in self-reflection, though it is still basic. They strive to be unique and differentiate themselves from their families and peer groups, valuing personal success over group conformity.
  • Expert stage characteristics: Experts prioritize knowledge, skills, and the acquisition of expertise, taking pride in individualism and the ability to do tasks efficiently. They harbor a superiority complex, viewing science as the ultimate authority over religion and myth, and often engage in smartassery and aggressive intellectualization.
  • Expert stage defensiveness and criticism: At the expert level, individuals are sensitive to criticism, seeing it as a personal attack, and often blame others for their life challenges. They enjoy establishing superiority through criticism, questioning authority superficially, and possess a strong sense of entitlement to impose their viewpoints on others.
  • Expert stage authority and sexuality: Experts value professional authorities, reference books, and science, rejecting family beliefs in favor of peer validation. Sexuality becomes less repressed, sometimes swinging to promiscuity. They feel entitled to instruct others and adopt a pragmatic, accomplishment-focused approach to leadership, ignoring existential questions and externalities.
  • Expert's relationship with the group: Though experts still rely on group validation to some extent, they maintain a peripheral stance, ready to assert their independence without fully detaching. They grapple with self-imposed pressures for performance and success, while their sense of specialness shields them from introspection and vulnerability.
  • Increasingly nuanced language and causality interest: Language use at the expert stage begins to show more nuance with qualifications and conditional statements. There's a minor budding interest in understanding causality, leading to questions about existence and purpose, indicating early signs of deeper reflection and quest for understanding.
  • Achiever stage exploration: Achievers focus on self-discovery by reflecting on past experiences and envisioning their ideal selves. This stage represents further development, moving slightly beyond the conventional stages towards more mature forms of understanding and self-improvement.
  • Achiever Stage Characteristics: The achiever stage is marked by planning for the future, with a time horizon of about five to ten years. Achievers recognize the potential for growth in both intellect and emotions into adulthood, embrace the concept of lifelong learning, and are drawn towards self-improvement and self-knowledge, which explains their interest in self-help and basic psychology.
  • Attitude Towards Science: Achievers possess a strong belief in the scientific method and seek rational explanations for human behavior and universal laws. Though they can create complex theories, these often remain intellectual and don't transform their inner consciousness significantly.
  • Approach to Problem Solving: They appreciate conceptual complexity and recognize that there can be multiple solutions to a problem. Achievers see the framing of a problem as integral to the problem itself, indicating a meta-cognitive approach to problem-solving.
  • Independence and Self-Authorship: This stage sees a rise in independence and self-authorship, with individuals starting to take ownership of their unique qualities and potential, questioning societal "shoulds," and aligning their lives with chosen values over externally imposed ones.
  • Interest in Psychology and Self-Help: The achiever stage is where interest in psychology blossoms, and individuals actively explore causes of behavior and the impact of psychology on success. Achievers are open to feedback and can extract utility from criticism, showing less defensiveness.
  • Working Toward Humanity's Betterment: Achievers work towards the betterment of humanity but may assume their solutions are best for everyone, lacking the realization that different perspectives might require different solutions. They are better at collaborating and are driven by goals and effective time management.
  • Ability to Reflect on Personal Development: Achievers connect their past experiences to present behaviors and are motivated to understand themselves and others better. They start to realize self-deception but still lack a deep understanding of its full extent and the impact of cognitive biases.
  • Facing Guilt, Responsibility, and Self-Criticism: They face exaggerated senses of responsibility for not advancing further in self-actualization, coupled with severe self-criticism and guilt over missed opportunities or perceived underachievement.
  • Increasingly Complex Interpersonal Relationships: Relationships deepen in importance, and others are valued for who they are. Achievers begin to listen to others without imposing their own interpretations and encourage them to find their own solutions.
  • Limitations of the Achiever Stage: Despite advancements, achievers at this stage are largely materialistic and may not realize how beliefs shape reality. They have high regard for technology as a solution to problems, and science is taken for granted with little questioning of its assumptions.
  • Multilevel Identification: Individuals can often resonate with multiple stages and display characteristics from three adjacent levels, having a center of gravity where they consistently function but may shift to lower or higher stages under stress or optimal conditions.
  • Importance of Ego Development Model Understanding: Recognizing where one stands in terms of ego development stages is crucial for self-awareness and facilitates the understanding of others, contributing to personal growth and the avoidance of conflicts.
  • Center of Gravity Concept: People have a 'center of gravity' which is a baseline state representing their dominant stage of ego development. While individuals can possess traits from multiple stages, they tend to revert to their baseline under typical conditions.
  • Horizontal vs. Vertical Development: The video differentiates between horizontal development, which is expanding within the same mindset or reality, and vertical development that involves changing one's worldview and self-identity. Vertical development is posited as more significant but also more challenging than horizontal growth.
  • Conventional Growth Limitations: Most people and self-help resources focus on horizontal growth, which is safer for the ego. Vertical growth, beyond the achiever stage, is scarce because it requires a significant paradigm shift, making it difficult for individuals to even discover post-conventional stages within the current societal structure.
  • Cultural Encouragement of the Achiever Stage: Developed societies such as the US, Canada, and Western Europe idolize and cultivate the achiever stage, deeming it the pinnacle of adulthood. The education system and most self-help books target the development of achievers, but rarely address growth beyond this conventional stage.
  • Journey Through Stages as a Snaking Motion: Development stages alternate between differentiation (individuality) and integration (societal conformity) in a pendulum-like motion, creating an upward snaking spiral as a person evolves through each stage.
  • Multiple Realities Concept: Leo stresses that each stage embodies its own reality and that many conflicts arise from assuming others share the same view of reality. True understanding of people's diverse perspectives and realities is key to personal maturity and abolishing conflict.
  • Value of the Ego Development Model: The model is crucial for understanding healthy human development and maturity, highlighting traps where individuals may stagnate, and providing a roadmap for personal growth and improved understanding of others' perspectives.
  • Ego Development as Perspective Taking: Growth in the ego development model is associated with higher perspective taking. Exposure to wider, deeper perspectives is essential for individual development and for preventing stagnation at different development stages.
  • Promotion of Part Two and Additional Resources: Leo concludes with anticipation for part two of the series, and encourages engagement with his website, blog, life purpose course, book list, forum, and Patreon support to further aid viewers' understanding and growth.


Dissendium

Edited by MuadDib

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The 9 Stages Of Ego Development - Part 2
https://youtu.be/G8fIhLDV3L4

  • Overview of "The 9 Stages Of Ego Development - Part 2": Leo continues his series on ego development with part two, focusing on post-conventional stages with a promise of a third installment to delve deeper into the later stages, highlighting that these offer substantial transformative value.
  • Nature of Scientific Models: Leo reminds his audience that scientific models, including ego development, have limitations and should not be overextended to non-applicable domains such as animal behavior or film characters.
  • Capabilities of Earlier Stages: Leo clarifies that each higher stage retains the capabilities of earlier stages, akin to academic grade progression. He emphasizes that no stage is inherently good or bad; they are constructive parts of human development.
  • Understanding of Stages: Leo points out that higher stages can understand lower ones due to broader perspectives, but lower stages struggle to grasp higher ones due to a lack of foundational development. Defense mechanisms might cause individuals at lower stages to deny the existence of higher stages.
  • Stages During Stress: Individuals may regress to earlier stages when threatened or under stress. 
  • Awakenings Across Stages: Leo discusses how mystical experiences and awakenings can occur at any stage, but warns that interpretations can be limited and distorted by the individual's current level of cognitive development.
  • Post-Conventional Deconstruction: Starting with the pluralist stage, the post-conventional phase marks the beginning of deconstructing and questioning previously constructed realities. The mind becomes open to reassessing all beliefs, including those in culture, politics, and even the previously unquestioned areas like science and absolute truths.
  • Post-Conventional Stage & Relativity: The post-conventional stage involves a cognitive leap where relativity becomes acknowledged and appreciated, contrasting earlier stages that take things as absolute. Individuals begin to see that meanings are not fixed but are based on one's perspective, leading to heightened self-reflection and a critical examination of previously unquestioned beliefs.
  • Escalating Degrees of Relativistic Thinking: As one progresses through the post-conventional stages, the degree of relativistic thinking intensifies, becoming more pronounced and radical in later stages. Recognizing the relative nature of meaning becomes a central theme in understanding reality.
  • Emergence of Post-Rational Thought: Despite conventional stages relying heavily on logic, post-conventional development marks a transition to post-rational thought, distinguishing it from pre-rational beliefs. This allows for the questioning of not just content but the structure of thinking, leading to an awareness of the illusions and self-deception inherent in different beliefs and perspectives.
  • Questioning of Language and Materialist Assumptions: Language and its role in shaping thought begin to be questioned during the post-conventional stage. Materialist assumptions start to be doubted, albeit not completely, prompting a search for knowledge and understanding beyond materialism and traditional science.
  • Flexible Conceptual Boundaries: The once rigid boundaries of concepts like science and religion become more porous and flexible. Individuals realize that these concepts may evolve and share similarities, challenging the conventional dichotomy between science and pseudoscience or religion.
  • Comparative Analysis of Belief Systems: Post-conventional thinkers can step outside their own belief systems to objectively analyze and compare different systems. There's an increased drive to uncover hidden assumptions about one's own beliefs and society at large, a trait largely absent in conventional stages.
  • Appreciation of Hidden Assumptions: This stage brings an increased interest in existential, metaphysical, psychological, and epistemic issues, with a focus on uncovering hidden assumptions within one's own framework and society. Such deep reflection generally does not resonate with conventional-minded individuals, or "normies," who prioritize material success over introspection.
  • Pluralist Stage Realization and Relativity: The pluralist comes to the realization that reality is observer-dependent, embracing instead the exploration of multiple perspectives that were previously dismissed or unrecognized. This includes an appreciation for cultural exploration and a recognition of the influence of the observer on the observed, similar to principles found in quantum mechanics.
  • Post-Conventional Struggle with Absolutism and Judgment: At the post-conventional stage, the struggle lies in reconciling the relativistic view with the need for judgment. The absolute certainty of earlier stages and conventional authorities like religious texts and scientific dogma are questioned, opening up an exploration into alternative ways of knowing and understanding the world.
  • Pluralist Stage and Practical Decision-Making: In the pluralist stage, individuals grapple with making concrete decisions amidst an overwhelming array of perspectives. The criteria for sorting views into practical and functional ones are not yet clear, leading to confusion and difficulty in managing daily life.
  • Subjectivity and Personal Biases: The realization that observations are inherently filtered through subjective lenses humbles the mind and raises awareness of personal biases. This understanding becomes particularly relevant when evaluating areas such as politics, religion, and science.
  • Questioning Conventional Science: A post-conventional scientist recognizes that science is influenced by the observer's biases and metaphysical assumptions. This realization sparks debate on the methodologies of science and the subjectivity that influences scientific discovery and interpretation.
  • Recontextualizing Previous Knowledge: As perspectives expand, earlier scientific models, like Newton's mechanics, are not disproved but instead built upon and recontextualized in a more comprehensive framework, as exemplified by Einstein's theories.
  • Cultural Conditioning and Global Perspective: The pluralist stage involves recognizing the extent of cultural conditioning and the limited control one has over personal beliefs and values, primarily due to the increased exposure to global diversity through travel and media.
  • Travel and Worldview Expansion: Encountering diverse cultures through travel can lead to an existential and moral crisis as it forces pluralists to compare their ways of life with those in different parts of the world, revealing the vastness of human experience.
  • Relativity and Validity of Worldviews: Pluralists treat all worldviews as seemingly equally valid, which can be both beneficial and detrimental. This approach presents challenges in discerning the value and applicability of various perspectives, especially when confronting extreme views like Nazism in comparison to more enlightened worldviews.
  • Adjudicating between Worldviews: Pluralists struggle with how to fairly adjudicate between the diversity of worldviews due to the loss of criteria for judgment in a relativistic view, leading to the question of whether there is such a thing as absolute truth or not.
  • Self-Deception and Cultural Bias: An awareness of self-deception as a defense mechanism used by the mind to construct reality sets in. This leads to the understanding that the greatest threat to post-conventional stages is not external enemies but the internal biases and unexamined assumptions programmed during upbringing.
  • Existential Crisis from Realization of Mind's Deceptions: The realization of the extent to which one's mind can deceive itself and the impact of cultural programming lead to an existential crisis and an ongoing process of understanding that previously held 'absolute truths' are not constants but are based on cultural indoctrination.
  • Realization of Self-Deception and Cultural Programming: At post-conventional stages, individuals recognize the depth of self-deception and cultural programming. They understand that their previous views on issues like police brutality are overly simplistic and appreciate the complexity involving systems, cultural views, morality, and politics.
  • Epistemological Inquiry: Pluralists start grappling with epistemological questions about the nature of knowledge, questioning the truthfulness of science, logic, religion, and spirituality. They understand the importance of differentiating beliefs from reality itself.
  • Appreciation for Knowledge Foundations: The post-conventional stage involves deep contemplation on how we acquire and validate knowledge. The singular importance of these foundational questions becomes apparent at this stage of cognitive development.
  • Awakening to Social Brainwashing: Individuals come to accept their susceptibility to societal and cultural brainwashing, acknowledging that even educational material can be a form of indoctrination and self-deception.
  • Recognition of Environmental and Societal Influence: There is a heightened awareness of how an individual's worldview is shaped by historic, geographic, economic, cultural, and linguistic factors, leading to questions about one's own belief systems, including previously unquestioned aspects like capitalism.
  • Language and Thought Construction: Pluralists realize language's role in structuring thought, allowing them to understand their cognition as heavily influenced by linguistic abilities and the limitations of their native tongue.
  • Scrutiny of Social Constructs: Post-conventional thinkers start questioning fundamental societal structures, recognizing constructs like capitalism as artificial and subject to manipulation.
  • Concern with Content Versus Structure of Thought: Recognizing the similarity in mental structures of seemingly opposite ideologies, such as capitalism and communism, is a critical insight at this stage, revealing one's own inability to transcend ideological constraints previously unconsciously accepted.
  • Shift from Material to Inner Fulfillment: There's a fundamental transition from the pursuit of material achievements to an exploration of inner experiences. Interests in money, sex, or possessions often decline as internal self-reflection becomes more compelling.
  • Exploration of Subjectivity: Individuals at the pluralist stage reckon with the subjective nature of their worldview, finding this realization both liberating and disorienting as they attempt to navigate their existence without stable reference points.
  • Temptation of Regression: Despite feeling unmoored, the temptation to retreat to familiar conventional systems for a sense of security is a significant challenge for individuals in the post-conventional stages. They strive to avoid regressing and maintain their commitment to exploring new paradigms.
  • Discovery of Truth's Complexity: One's journey to unravel deeper truths becomes arduous, filled with paradoxes, emotional labor, and confusion. Accepting that much of what constitutes knowledge in science and other fields has been assimilated through belief marks the post-conventional transition.
  • The trap of needing anchors: To truly be courageous in the pluralist stage, one must release the desire for stability and embrace a period, possibly spanning years or decades, of uncertainty while exploring different perspectives. This process is confusing and emotionally taxing but also liberating as it broadens the range of possibilities beyond the limitations of conventional thinking.
  • Watching oneself and questioning actions: In the pluralist stage, one becomes an observer of their own behavior, questioning why they follow certain norms or perform specific actions. This self-observation can lead to the realization that some actions were performed simply because they were imitating others, and not due to a reasoned personal decision.
  • Abandonment of purely rational analysis: Pluralists move away from relying solely on rational analysis and incorporate a more holistic, organismic approach that values feelings, intuitions, and context. This reflects a significant shift from traditional methods that prioritize logic and provable facts.
  • Realizing the limitations of rationality: The post-conventional stage understands that rationality has inherent limitations and begins to appreciate intuition as a more powerful tool. The pluralist gains wisdom and insight from consciousness itself, rather than linear logical thinking or the need for formal proof.
  • Logic as a tool for self-deception: As pluralists progress, they recognize how the mind can use logic to deceive the self and preserve the ego. They see logic becoming self-aware and psychological, accounting for how the mind can manipulate reasoning for its own benefit.
  • Emphasis on exploration over goals: For pluralists, the journey and exploration of various perspectives become more valuable than achieving specific goals. There is an increasing distrust of conventional wisdom and strict rationality as pluralists prefer to experience life and relationships over working solely towards material achievements.
  • The value of scrutinizing assumptions: Pluralists enjoy the novel mental freedom that comes with scrutinizing assumptions and seeing values as relative. They face the challenge of making judgments and decisions amidst this newfound understanding of relativity.
  • Problems as interplay between polarities: Pluralists see problems not as singular issues that can be eliminated but as an interplay of polarities that must be understood and harmonized. Rather than eliminating opposing perspectives, there's a need for understanding and integration.
  • Paradox and contradiction as features of reality: Pluralists embrace and relish in paradox and contradiction as fundamental aspects of reality rather than as flaws. They move towards a more holistic understanding, where not everything needs logical proof to be accepted.
  • Creative use of imagination and diverse perspectives: With the exploration of diverse perspectives, pluralists' creativity and imagination skyrocket. They start connecting subtle clues rather than dissecting problems into parts, valuing insight, and breakthroughs achieved through non-traditional means like meditation and self-reflection.
  • Misunderstanding of Non-linear Thinking: Many people ridicule non-linear, spiritual, or holistic approaches like meditation, yoga, chakras, and intuition because they are accustomed to a linear, analytical way of understanding reality. They fail to recognize these as legitimate ways to interface with reality.
  • Shift from Doing to Being: In the pluralist stage, there's a transition from constant activity to focusing on being and feeling. This can seem 'hippie' or 'new age' to conventional thinkers who value tangible, materialistic accomplishments over abstract experiences.
  • Consciousness Becomes More Abstract: As individuals progress through stages, their capacity for abstract thinking increases. This leads to recognizing spirituality and ephemeral experiences as valid and real, even though they may not be tangibly measurable.
  • Mind-Body Connection: Pluralists develop an awareness that emotions are not just mental but are also physically manifested throughout the body. They recognize that many ailments could stem from psychological factors like repressed emotions.
  • Importance of Feeling and Emotions: The realization that emotions are present in the body and not just the mind leads pluralists to practices that integrate body awareness, such as yoga and mindfulness, which are sometimes dismissed by conventional thinkers.
  • Exploration of the Self: Pluralists turn inward, valuing self-exploration and self-expression over adhering to socially approved roles. They seek their own unique gifts and answers to personal questions, distancing themselves from conventional routines.
  • Moving Beyond Conventional Stereotypes: While 'hippie' qualities like openness and expressiveness characterize the pluralist stage, it doesn't necessitate a complete adoption of hippie lifestyle choices. Pluralists can maintain conventional responsibilities while holding their expanded worldviews.
  • Beyond Judging and Embracing Relativity: Pluralists transcend conventional judgments and the demonization of negative social elements. They understand the validity of all perspectives, including those of societal outcasts, and adopt a more nuanced moral outlook.
  • Integration of Sub-identities: Pluralists face the challenge of integrating various sub-identities, such as masculine, feminine, rational, and intuitive, into a cohesive whole without denying any aspects.
  • Fear of Regression and Isolation: The fear of being pulled back into lower developmental stages is prominent among pluralists. They also risk feeling socially isolated and having relationship conflicts, especially with partners who do not share or understand their post-conventional mindset.
  • Pitfalls of the Pluralist Stage: Leo highlights misconceptions at the pluralist stage where all hierarchies are often seen as oppressive, and all opinions as equally valid, which isn't practical for survival. He also points out the issues with extreme relativism leading to indecision, and how too much focus on diversity and equality can be counterproductive, a problem he feels is overstated by conservative critics.
  • Pluralist Self-Judgment and Toleration: Pluralists may judge others who don't share their egalitarian views, showing a contradiction in their non-judgmental ideals. Although they tolerate diverse ideas and cultures, they might not always recognize their higher development stage leading to perceived arrogance or naivety.
  • Contradicting Ideas and Pluralists' Role in Society: Those in the pluralist stage can entertain contradictory ideas and their attitude often reflects a non-commital stance of "it all depends," leading to indecisiveness. They are more introspective, focusing on internal growth rather than material achievements, often resulting in a fringe existence in society.
  • Introduction to the Autonomous Strategist Stage: Leo introduces the strategist stage, accounting for approximately 5% of the U.S. adult population, characterized by systemic understanding, appreciation of all developmental stages, and a global inclusive worldview; which contrasts sharply with the judgmental nature of pluralism.
  • Strategists' Comprehensive Understanding: Strategists perceive complex long-term patterns and consider personal and societal development through an evolutionary lens, embracing interconnected systems and responsibilities.
  • Autonomy and Self-Actualization in Strategists: Strategists create meaning autonomously, propose new ideas, and take responsibility for their interpretations, striving for meaningful self-actualization and leading by example.
  • Responsibility and Compassion of a Strategist: A strategist owns their interpretations and meanings of reality, taking utmost responsibility, which underscores their maturity and rare capabilities to lead and aid humanity's evolution.
  • The Evolutionary Mission of Strategists: Strategists view themselves as agents of transformation with a purposeful vision for society's progression. They focus on upholding universal principles despite the inherent challenge of reforming the 'human chimp' to align with high ideals.
  • Realism of Strategists: Strategists address patterns, systems, and habits with a practical outlook, understanding the evolutionary steps necessary for change, distinguishing them from the often unrealistic pluralist stage.
  • Personal Development in Strategists: Recognizing their own imperfections, strategists continually work on improving themselves as a prerequisite for leading others towards ambitious societal visions, undergoing extensive internal work.
  • Strategist Embodiment vs. Pluralist Idealism: Strategists move from the idealism and theoretical concepts of pluralists to a grounded, realistic approach to personal and societal transformation, ensuring they first embody their teachings before implementing them.
  • Self-Awareness and Growth: Leo discusses the importance of becoming aware of one's own biases and shortcomings, realizing that addressing and changing these aspects is a challenging process. He acknowledges that while superficial concerns may plague the conventional mind, the strategist is preoccupied with deeper existential questions and a desire to contribute to humanity's betterment.
  • The Dual Awareness of a Strategist: Leo explains that strategists are keenly aware of their personal limitations and the extensive needs of humanity. They recognize the progress they've made through inner work and self-actualization while staying committed to guiding others on a similar path. The complexity of maturation and the high value of helping others evolve are underscored.
  • The Holistic Approach of a Strategist in Business: Strategists consider not just financial profits but also the well-being of employees, aesthetic environments, and ecological impacts. Leo shares his personal guiding principles behind Actualized.org, prioritizing development and understanding over maximizing profits.
  • Strategist's Attachment to Transformation: Leo admits to an initial aggressive approach to transformation at the beginning of Actualized.org, and his gradual learning to allow people their own space and time for growth. He emphasizes a more detached approach now, understanding not everyone is ready for transformation.
  • Systems Thinking and Evolutionary Development: Leo talks about how strategists understand and apply systems thinking, recognizing circular causality and the cyclical nature of systems. They believe in the importance of fostering personal growth while being mindful of the readiness and developmental stage of each individual.
  • Individual Responsibility and Hierarchy: Leo clarifies that strategists see each individual as responsible for finding and actualizing their unique style. He also distinguishes between healthy, necessary hierarchies and oppressive ones, challenging the idea that all hierarchies are inherently bad.
  • Life as a Journey of Never-ending Growth: For strategists, life is about continuous growth and self-actualization. They take on the responsibility for self-regulation and see the pursuit of deep life purposes as essential for a meaningful existence.
  • Challenges and Superiority for Strategists: Leo acknowledges that strategists can give off a sense of superiority due to their deep understanding of human nature, which creates the risk of self-inflation and arrogance. Despite this awareness, he admits to a personal struggle with arrogance but also uses over-the-top arrogance for self-entertainment.
  • Integration of Emotions and Continuous Improvement: In contrast to previous stages, strategists accept complex personalities with both positive and negative traits, integrating negative emotions healthily. They acknowledge that perfection is unattainable, but continuous improvement and self-actualization remain the focus.
  • Identification as a Transformer: Strategists must be cautious not to let the concept of being a self-actualizer become a new egoic identity, which could hinder authentic development.
  • Impatience with Others' Growth: It's common for strategists to feel impatient with the slower developmental progress of others, reflecting an area of personal growth for the strategist themselves.
  • Non-Possessive Love and Increased Compassion: The strategist stage is characterized by an understanding and practice of non-possessive love, alongside a growth in benevolence and compassion for oneself and others.
  • Nuanced Emotional Awareness: Strategists develop a nuanced understanding of their emotions, learning to distinguish and decode the messages within their emotional spectrum rather than reacting impulsively.
  • Authenticity in All Aspects: The strategist strives for authenticity in every aspect of life, including communication, relationships, business, and creative pursuits.
  • Expanded Tools for Exploring Reality: Dreams, imagination, fantasy, and vision become significant tools for strategists to explore reality and themselves.
  • Sustainable Solutions and Large-scale Thinking: Strategists search for sustainable solutions to large-scale issues that affect humanity, thinking generationally and aiming to address the root causes of problems.
  • Non-Blaming in Relationships: A significant change at this stage is the cessation of blaming others in relationships, indicating a move towards personal responsibility and mature conflict resolution.
  • Concern for Future Generations: Strategists invest in the well-being of future generations, often making personal sacrifices for the greater good.
  • Struggle with Acceptance and Enlightenment: Despite their advanced stage, strategists still contend with accepting reality as it is and may struggle with difficult emotions. Enlightenment becomes their spiritual goal.
  • Charismatic Leadership and Vision: Strategists often emerge as charismatic leaders with a compelling vision for an ideal future world order, inspiring others to contribute towards this vision.
  • Forgiveness and Redefined Humor: They learn to forgive themselves and others, leading to decreased guilt and self-criticism. Their humor shifts to a non-hostile, existential reflection on the human condition.
  • Satisfaction Tied to Self-Actualization: Strategists feel dissatisfaction if they perceive themselves as falling short of their unique human potential, which can lead to frustration or depression.
  • Issue of Purpose Post-Career: Upon retiring or no longer being in a mentorship role, strategists may face existential issues concerning their sense of purpose and relevance.
  • Realistic Appraisal Skill: Gaining an understanding of bias allows for clear, more accurate appraisals of situations devoid of personal biases or egoic distortions.
  • Visionary Systemic Analysis: Strategists become capable of long-term systemic thinking, understanding the interconnectivity and long-term implications of systems.
  • Sophisticated Psychological Language: In discussing human behavior and societal issues, strategists utilize a detailed and sophisticated psychological vocabulary.
  • Addressing Societal Ambitions and Anxiety: The strategist faces anxiety about fulfilling one's personal potential and principles while confronting societal pressures and ambitious visions.
  • Importance of Continuous Self-Actualization: Embracing that self-actualization is an endless journey becomes a critical recognition at the strategist stage.


Bombarda

Edited by MuadDib

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The 9 Stages Of Ego Development - Part 3
https://youtu.be/pGItuEai8vo

  • Suzanne Cook-Greuter's Research: Leo credits Suzanne Cook-Greuter for her comprehensive 90-page research paper on ego development, which forms the basis of his discussion. He emphasizes that while he integrates her research, his presentation includes his own interpretations and commentary relevant to self-actualization.
  • Importance of Pace in Development: Progressing through the ego development stages should not be rushed; it's important to fully experience and understand each stage before moving on to higher levels. Skipping stages can lead to frustration and the inability to sustain higher levels of development.
  • Application of the Ego Development Model: Understanding the stages of ego development is a practical tool for evaluating the character and level of development of people in various contexts, such as business partnerships, family dynamics, and personal relationships. This insight can inform strategies for interaction and whether to maintain or cut ties with certain individuals based on their development stage.
  • Teaching and Stage Relevancy: Leo acknowledges that most of his teachings are aimed at the final two stages of ego development, which may be too advanced for those who are currently at the conformist, expert, or achiever stages. He suggests that individuals may need to return to his teachings after they have solidified their understanding of the earlier stages.
  • Risks of Prematurely Seeking Enlightenment: Leo warns against pursuing higher levels of spiritual awakening, like enlightenment, without having achieved personal success in basic survival and life needs. He recommends fully experiencing the achiever stage before seeking to transcend it.
  • Stage 9: Construct Aware: This stage involves recognizing the mind’s role in constructing one's reality, questioning the ego's distortions, and the acknowledgment of linguistic filters. It leads to complex existential questions and an understanding of the limitations of rational thought.
  • Magician Stage as Leaders and Guides: People at this stage often become mentors, consultants, or coaches who work to guide others, feeling comfortable with their knowledge limitations and embracing vulnerability. They take on roles that catalyze transformation, fully expressing themselves and recognizing the value of self-correction.
  • Centaur Analogy for Construct Aware Stage: The construct aware stage is likened to a 'centaur' or 'vision logic', where individuals balance primal needs with higher existential and spiritual desires.
  • Dealing with Chaos and Interconnectedness: At this stage, chaos is seen not just negatively, but as a natural part of life's rhythm. People learn to flow with it and recognize the interconnectedness of all things.
  • Transitioning to the Unitive Stage: Those who reach the unitive stage witness life without the need for rational explanation, experiencing a sense of completeness, and perceiving mundane things as profound.
  • Unitive Stage Realizations: Individuals at this stage feel fulfilled without needing external validation or achievements. They recognize the paradox of life's meaninglessness yet engage passionately with life, find value in all life forms, and guide others towards vertical development.
  • Shift in Leo Gura's Teaching Style: Leo discusses his evolving approach to teaching—aiming to be more compassionate and understanding, reflecting his own progression towards the unitive stage of ego development.
  • Tapping into Universal Intelligence at Unitive Stage: Leo suggests that at the unitive stage, direct insight and wisdom from universal intelligence become more accessible, with a focus on wisdom over IQ or specialized knowledge.
  • Valuing Direct Experience and Empathy for Ignorance: Individuals at advanced stages of ego development place emphasis on direct experience and display deep empathy for others' ignorance, understanding its origins in limited perspective.
  • Release of Control and Gender Integration: Individuals become less concerned with controlling life and achieve a profound sense of peace with their masculine and feminine aspects, resolving internal gender conflicts.
  • Advanced Understanding of Human Behavior: At higher stages, a comprehensive understanding of human behavior emerges, recognizing suffering, conflict, and violence as manifestations of the unconscious ego mind.
  • Ultimate Realizations and Cosmic Perspective: Enlightenment and awakenings become more profound, aligning with an understanding that judgement is ignorance and birth and death are imaginary concepts. These realizations contribute to a sense of tranquility and equanimity. 
  • Continued Introspection and Growth: Even after reaching the unitive stage, the journey of self-discovery continues. Leo emphasizes the ongoing nature of this work and the importance of self-reliance in personal growth. He advises against relying solely on his teachings for personal evolution, advocating for self-teaching and exploration beyond the unitive stage.
  • Responsibility for Personal Growth: Individuals should use high-level advice as guidelines but must find their own path to growth, harmonizing advice with individual life situations.
  • Existence of Stages Beyond Unitive: Leo hints at the possibility of stages beyond the unitive stage, which are less recognized due to their rarity but signify even more profound levels of human evolution and understanding.
  • Assessing Resources and Teachers by Developmental Stages: Books, videos, courses, and teachers can be evaluated according to which stage of ego development they correspond to. This allows individuals to find resources and mentors that are appropriate for their current stage or slightly beyond it.
  • Encouragement to Aim Higher: Leo advises those at the achiever stage to maintain a high vision for the future and to lay the groundwork for advanced metaphysical understanding while handling basic needs and goals.
  • Introduction to Construct Aware Stage: This stage, inhabited by 0.5% of the U.S. population, involves realizing that reality is constructed by the mind and deeply intertwined with material reality, challenging the notion of separate objective reality.
  • Existential Paradoxes and Inner Conflict: At the Construct Aware stage, individuals grapple with existential paradoxes and recognize the role of the mind, language, and ego in interpreting and constructing reality.
  • Shift in Life Focus: Existential issues and the meaning of existence take precedence over material concerns, leading to pervasive uncertainty and questioning of previously held truths.
  • Awareness of Reality as a Construction: People at this stage see their worldview as an unconscious amalgamation of cultural inputs rather than consciously chosen. They realize that all aspects of perceived reality, including political and scientific beliefs, are influenced by the subconscious.
  • Deconstructing Meanings and Judgments: At this stage, individuals question their judgments and meanings attached to things, recognizing biases in their worldview shaped by the ego for its own survival.
  • Understanding the Limitations of Symbolic Abstraction: The Construct Aware stage brings recognition of the limitations and biases inherent in concepts like time, purpose, and even tangible objects, when viewed through the lens of language and the human mind.
  • Map vs. Territory: There is a deep appreciation for the difference between symbols and actual reality, recognizing that perspectives are biased, geocentric, and human-centric.
  • Language as a Deep Technology: Individuals realize the significant role of language in shaping reality and communication, recognizing both its limitations and its potential to simplify or complexify our perceptions of the world.
  • Navigating the Limitations of Language: The challenges of using language without being restricted by it become apparent, and individuals at the Construct Aware stage become more adept at circumventing the pitfalls language may introduce.
  • Realizing the Impact of Language on Knowledge: Concepts and knowledge acquisition are seen as arbitrary and crucially dependent on language, leading to a more careful and conscious approach to understanding and knowing.
  • Awareness of Duality: The understanding that all concepts rely on opposites - such as good vs. evil, or human vs. non-human - becomes evident, heightening sensitivity to the dual nature of language and conceptualization.
  • Taking Responsibility for Mental Constructs: Individuals at this stage become accountable for their own creation of concepts and categories, marking a shift from unconsciously adopting cultural definitions to consciously forming their mental landscape.
  • Exploring Beyond Human Mind Limitations: There's a realization that one can transcend the human mind and question fundamental constructs like human identity, opening up new territories beyond what was previously dismissed as pseudoscience or 'airy-fairy' ideas.
  • Breakdown of the Objective Material World Belief: The belief in a permanent, objective material world begins to dissolve, blurring the distinctions between mind, body, self, and the external reality.
  • Deconstructing Notion of a Permanent Self: The self is recognized as a dynamic collection of beliefs and concepts, constantly evolving rather than being a fixed entity, bustling with every new experience and interaction.
  • Continuous Self-Change: Awareness grows that personal identity is in constant flux; every experience subtly shifts one's sense of self, challenging the notion of a static, unchanging personal identity.
  • Cross-Paradigmatic Integration: There's an ability to appreciate and integrate diverse worldviews and religious beliefs without judgment, leading to an intellectually unified perspective of existence.
  • Global Historical Perspective: Moving into a higher altitude of consciousness, construct-aware individuals gain a global view of meaning-making and take responsibility for the subjective meanings they assign to their experiences and the world.
  • Shift from Inherent to Projected Meaning: Realization dawns that meaning is not inherent in external events or situations but is instead a projection of one's mind, leading to more deliberate and conscious meaning-making.
  • Understanding of Map-Making and Self-STORY Deconstruction: Individuals become cognizant of their need to create mental maps and narratives with a permanent self at the center and learn to deconstruct and challenge such identifications.
  • Awareness of Self-Deception: Even though the ego still leads to self-deception, a heightened awareness enables individuals to catch, correct, and learn from their distortions rather than being totally consumed by them.
  • Understanding the Constructive Nature of Personal Identity: Acknowledgment arises that self-identity is maintained by continuous thoughts about oneself, skewing reality to ensure survival of this constructed self.
  • Non-Physical Conception of Birth and Death: A profound realization surfaces that birth and death are not purely physical processes but mental activities linked to the ongoing construction of personal identity through thought.
  • Deconstruction of Self: Individuals at this stage start to see the possibility of deconstructing the self, leading to self-annihilation. There is fear and uncertainty about what lies beyond this, but an understanding that 'self' is a subjective construct that must ultimately dissolve.
  • Meta Cognitive Stage: The stage involves deeply questioning one's own thought processes, which can be seen as a final attempt by the ego to create comprehensive maps and models of reality, despite the impossibility of fully capturing the infinite nature of reality.
  • Addiction to Models and Theories: There is an acknowledgment of the fascination with creating complex models and meta-models, which, while intellectually stimulating and practically useful, ultimately oversimplify reality and are not the territory itself.
  • Conflict Between Helping People and Pursuing Truth: There's a realization that the utility of models in helping others does not equate to the discovery of absolute truth, highlighting the ego's subtle manipulation of reality for higher purposes.
  • The Struggle of Advanced Development: Recognizing the absurdity of using models to fully grasp reality, individuals become aware of the difficulties in going beyond the human mind due to a lack of role models and examples to follow.
  • Redefining Knowing: At this stage, there's a shift towards examining alternative ways of knowing beyond rationality, language, and science, questioning the quantifiable constraints placed by human constructs like science.
  • Awareness of Ego's Influence: Individuals become acutely aware of the ego's distortions on perception, filtering reality through biased lenses and essentially questioning the possibility of objective experience.
  • Dilemmas of Ego Transcendence: The more one attempts to transcend the ego and quiet the mind, the stronger the ego can become, illustrating the paradoxical nature of detaching from reality.
  • Awareness of Thought's Limitations: There is a growing suspicion of thought and recognition that all cognitive processes are dualistic and constructed, fundamentally separate from the non-dual reality.
  • Challenges of Experiencing Reality Without Filters: The realization of the importance of experiencing reality without linguistic filters emerges, but the practical challenge of achieving this denotes the difficulty in transcending ingrained cognitive mechanisms.
  • Interconnectedness of Dualities: The recognition that dualities like good and evil or life and death are inseparable parts of the same whole undermines the simple-minded approach of lower stages seeking to increase good and eliminate bad.
  • Judgment as a Source of Unhappiness: An increased awareness of how the habitual judgment of experiences creates suffering and unhappiness leads to the contemplation of non-judgmental awareness.
  • Awareness of Judgment: Realizing the habitual nature of judging can be frustrating, as it leads to suffering; despite this awareness, it takes years to fully let go of this habit.
  • Compassion and Human Complexity Understanding: Individuals develop a deeper compassion for themselves and others and attain a nuanced perception of human nature and interactions.
  • Navigating Meaning and Meaninglessness: Caught between the extremes of considering life either completely meaningless or unquestioningly meaningful, individuals work to balance and integrate these perspectives.
  • Emotional and Rational Pattern Recognition: There is recognition of how emotions and rational thoughts manipulate one’s perception, and the challenge becomes to integrate and mindfully manage both.
  • Conscious Observation of Ego: A heightened self-awareness allows individuals to observe their ego in action, such as during disagreements or impulsive behaviors, leading to opportunities for growth.
  • Integration of Multiple Modalities: The integration of feelings, intuition, rational thinking, and transpersonal experiences enhances one's flexibility in responding to various life situations.
  • Seeking Mystical Experiences: Individuals develop a craving for mystical states and temporary freedom from ego control, often facilitated by meditation, psychedelics, or other practices.
  • Leadership Roles in Construct Aware Stage: People tend to assume roles as catalysts or transformers within organizations or society, often working independently or creating novel structures to contribute meaningfully.
  • Openness and Humility: Embracing uncertainty, these individuals show comfort with not knowing and exhibit humility regarding the limits of knowledge without the need for defense or pretense.
  • Expression of Authenticity: Language and communication become more complex, vivid, and authentic, with attempts to let go of conscious structuring and embracing spontaneous expression.
  • Trans-Rational Insight: Access to knowledge from non-rational sources such as intuition, bodily states, and dreams increases, playing a more significant role than logic.
  • Self-Deception as Learning Opportunity: Recognizing personal self-deception turns into a chance for growth and helps understand the ego traps others may fall into.
  • Balance Between Animalistic and Spiritual Desires: The Centaur metaphor indicates a balance between primal needs and higher desires, integrating existential and spiritual concerns with basic survival needs.
  • Perception of Chaos: There is an understanding of the rhythmic chaos in life, which individuals learn to navigate like surfing waves, embracing life's unpredictability.
  • Cumulative Interconnectedness and Profound Experiences: Recognition of interconnectedness across all subjects deepens, leading to profound insights and setting up for the transition to the unitive stage.
  • Witnessing the Present Moment and Absolute Truth: The unitive stage allows individuals to apprehend absolute truth through direct consciousness, a transformative experience beyond rational explanation.
  • Openness to All Experiences: At this advanced stage, individuals are receptive to the full spectrum of life’s experiences, valuing each without judgment, and finding value in every moment of being.
  • Transformation of Reality Perception: Reality becomes imbued with magic and wonder, as even the most mundane objects are seen as miraculous, shifting the perspective from ordinary to mystical.
  • Profound Appreciation of the Mundane: A fork, once seen as an ordinary object, can evoke tears due to its perceived miraculous existence. Those at lower ego stages might not appreciate the intrinsic value and complexity of such simple things, missing the cosmic perspective that one gains at higher stages.
  • Cosmic Perspective as Organizing Principle: At higher stages of ego development, individuals view themselves and others as part of humanity's evolutionary journey. They effortlessly shift among different perspectives and states of awareness.
  • Comfort with Mystical Experiences: Mystical and unitive experiences become familiar and comfortable, rather than alien or scary. The peaks of awareness from earlier stages now serve as a stable foundation for ongoing mystical experiences.
  • Presence and Groundedness in the Present: With a shift to higher stages, living fully in the present becomes the norm, and individuals experience a unity with nature and the universe, feeling embedded rather than separate from their surroundings.
  • Deep Security in Identity: The unitive stage offers deep fulfillment and a sense of self-completion that doesn't rely on external factors like fame, money, or relationships, based on realizing one's identity as infinite and complete.
  • Simultaneous Perception of Concrete and Eternal: Unitive individuals can perceive both the temporality and eternal symbolism of entities, seeing all stages of ego development as interconnected and necessary to the whole.
  • Acceptance of Lower Stages: This stage brings a profound acceptance of those at lower levels of consciousness, fostering deep peace and relinquishing the need to control or judge others, allowing for grace and humility.
  • Simplicity Beyond Complexity: After developing complex models of understanding, those at the unitive stage often transcend and simplify their worldviews, fostering a zen-like mentality and approach to life.
  • Contemplation of Life Purpose: Despite recognizing the ultimate insignificance of personal achievements in the vast universe, individuals at this stage still engage passionately with life, embracing a controlled, conscious approach to their endeavors.
  • Shift in Perspective on Life's 'Game': Life is seen as a controlled folly—a conscious game that one engages in while recognizing its ultimate emptiness, which paradoxically frees one from the despair of attachment.
  • Critiques of 'Impractical' Higher Stages: Those at lower stages often criticize the unitive stage as impractical, failing to see the value in existential or non-materialistic perspectives that prioritize spirit over survival.
  • Holistic Approach to Teaching and Life: People at the unitive stage foster global justice and creativity, acting as catalysts in society, and valuing all life forms equally, transcending biases like age, gender, and species.
  • Evolution of Leo's Teaching Style: Leo acknowledges his previous authoritative teaching style and shares his intention to teach in a more accepting, compassionate, and holistic manner as he moves further into the unitive stage.
  • Bliss in Being: Individuals at the unitive stage find profound joy and contentment in simply existing and being aware, experiencing a non-attachment to outcomes and consistent insights into reality's interconnectedness.
  • Mind as the Only Existence: Everything is Mind (with a capital M); there never existed a material world. Mind is synonymous with consciousness and is infinite. All perceived reality, including the table, chair, and fire hydrant, is consciousness. 
  • Direct Consciousness of God: The unitive stage brings a direct experience of God, absent in lower stages where God is considered separate and other. This stage allows for the realization that the universe and the individual are both manifestations of God.
  • Self as Creator: Individuals realize that they are the creators of their reality, which is profound and life-altering. Lower stages may view this as absurd or narcissistic, but it's not about superiority; it's about awakening to one's true nature as God.
  • Taking Responsibility for Being God: Recognizing oneself as God entails taking full responsibility for one's life. Those who aren't aware they are God create their suffering—understanding oneself as God fosters a responsibility to lead a more divine existence.
  • Consciousness of God Not a Belief: This realization is not based on beliefs, ideologies, or speculation. It's an actual direct consciousness that transcends mere faith or philosophy.
  • Mundane Becomes Supernatural: At the unitive stage, the mundane is viewed as supernatural. There's an appreciation of the fundamental mystery and intelligence of all creation, realizing that nothing can be known in absolute terms, only experienced or embodied.
  • Distinction and Construction: At this stage, distinctions, such as between a taco and a kangaroo, are understood to be mental constructs that have no ultimate difference. These distinctions are seen as important for human growth but not reflective of an ultimate separation.
  • Tolerance, Compassion, and Affiliation: Individuals feel a deep affiliation with all forms of life, tolerating and embracing the essence of others, respecting their intrinsic nature without the need for change.
  • Wisdom vs. Specialized Knowledge: There's a recognition that wisdom and high IQ or specialized technical knowledge are not the same. The unitive stage values wisdom and consciousness over IQ scores or technical expertise.
  • Channeling Universal Intelligence: People in the unitive stage can channel insights and wisdom directly from a universal source. This telepathic communication with the universal intelligence is seen as a deep personal connection with the infinite.
  • Interconnectedness With All Beings: Belief in the interconnectedness of all life forms is a cornerstone of the unitive stage, leading to the notion that there's no essential distinction between oneself and any other being.
  • Embracing Diversity of Existence: There's an appreciation for the myriad ways of being, realizing that all are valid and beautiful. This includes an understanding of the necessity of ignorance until one is ready to grow and change.
  • Conflict as a Lack of Perspective: The unitive stage holds that all conflict arises from a lack of perspective and understanding. Compassion stems from recognizing one's former ignorance and appreciating others' developmental stages.
  • Insights and Profundity: At this stage, an individual can express profound wisdom with ease, often surprising even themselves. This profundity is seen as an attribute of the universe rather than the individual, as they are aligned with universal intelligence.
  • Realizing Personal Growth Achievement: Looking back on personal development, an individual can reflect on their past ignorance and appreciate the multi-decade journey, understanding the value in overcoming life's toughest moments.
  • Empathy for Others' Ignorance: Realizing one's own ignorance fosters deep empathy for others who are stuck in their ignorance, though it doesn't necessitate tolerating harmful or delusional behaviors and ideologies.
  • Moderation and Quality Control: In maintaining a valuable community, there is a distinction between accepting individuals and allowing destructive behaviors to proliferate, necessitating moderation to preserve quality and integrity.
  • Spontaneity and Simplicity in Wisdom: In unity stages, individuals experience straightforward simplicity, which becomes a vital aspect of their wisdom and the transcendence of the ego.
  • Mental Space Expansion: The mind becomes jail-broken, free of mental fetters, defense mechanisms, and manipulations. This vast mental freedom allows for exploring reality from an unhindered perspective.
  • Mindful Present-Moment Awareness: A non-evaluative approach to the present moment allows for experiencing reality without the need for manipulation, interpretation, or control from the ego.
  • Integration of Masculine and Feminine Sides: Unity stage brings about an internal peace by integrating previously unacknowledged aspects of self, leading to personal harmony and bridging gender conflicts.
  • Conflict Realization: At this level, individuals understand that most conflict is self-created and arises from unconscious selfishness.
  • Bridging Contrasts and Dualities: The unitive person reconciles different contrasts and dualities, merging concrete/practical, theoretical/philosophical, and more, thereby fostering holistic understanding.
  • Cosmocentric Perspective: Adopting a cosmocentric view, individuals see themselves as integral participants in cosmic evolution, where holistic identification transcends the merely global perspective.
  • Dissolution of Evil and Enemies: Recognizing that "evil" is a projection of ego biases, people at this stage shed such notions, understanding that supposed enemies and evil are manifestations of self-bias.
  • Imaginary Nature of Reality: The realization that all aspects of reality, material and physical alike, are imaginary—life becomes viewed impersonally and not taken seriously or personally.
  • Tapping into True Happiness: Accessing states of equanimity, tranquility, and absolute love leads to an understanding of true happiness and satisfaction.
  • Enlightenment at the Unitive Stage: At this stage, enlightenment and awakenings occur more frequently and are realized without entanglement in ego-driven interpretations.
  • Aloneness and Oneness Realization: Understanding emerges that self and others are identical; oneness includes all multiplicities of existence, transcending and adding inclusivity to the concept of solitude.
  • Compassion for Human Behavior: With the deconstruction of the ego, individuals deeply understand the roots of human conflict, suffering, and behavior, stemming from unchecked selfishness and ego.
  • Profound Silence and Inexpressibility: Reaching a point where the profundity of the universe is recognized as beyond the scope of language or even rational explanation.
  • Self-Sufficiency in Problem-Solving: Leo emphasizes the importance of viewers finding their own solutions to problems rather than seeking specific guidance. The growth process requires individuals to figure things out independently. 
  • Role of High-Level Advice: Leo's role is to provide high-level pointers and advice, aiming to open minds and prevent significant missteps in life. Implementation of this advice into the nitty-gritty of day-to-day existence is the viewer's responsibility.
  • Creativity in Application: The advice given by Leo is intentionally general and abstract, so viewers must creatively adapt it to fit their unique personalities, strengths, desires, and life circumstances.
  • Existential Questions Beyond the Unitive Stage: Leo acknowledges the existence of stages beyond the unitive stage. These stages are highly transhuman and mystical, explored through advanced techniques like psychedelics and meditation.
  • Challenges of Scientific Modeling of Advanced Stages: Scientific models like Suzanne Cook-Greuter's have limited data on the most advanced stages of human development due to their rarity. Understanding these stages requires studying exceptionally developed humans.
  • Aspirations for Future Understanding: Leo admits his current understanding of stages beyond the unitive stage is limited but anticipates gaining more insight over the next two decades, acknowledging that humanity is still grappling with these concepts.
  • Ongoing Journey and Self-Work: The understanding of human evolution is dynamic, and Leo encourages viewers to continuously work on themselves using models like the nine stages as a roadmap.
  • Actualized.org as a Resource: Leo mentions his website, Actualized.org, which provides numerous tools like a blog, a book list, a life purpose course, and a forum designed to support individuals moving into post-conventional stages of development.
  • Preparation of Content Referring to the Nine-Stage Model: Leo plans to create content that breaks down each stage of development and provides actionable steps and insights into potential traps, further than what was covered in the introduction.
  • Focus of Actualized.org: The primary objective of Leo's teachings is to move individuals into post-conventional stages and beyond—to become construct aware, then unitive, and possibly beyond that in the future.
  • Connection to Infinite Intelligence: Leo's teachings aim to open individuals to deeper existential questions and the development of a high-bandwidth connection with infinite intelligence, promoting a transition beyond merely mental understanding.
  • Psychedelics as Learning Tools: Psychedelics are highlighted as a potent tool for nonlinear, organic, infinitely intelligent learning that transcends conventional teaching methods.
  • Ultimate Self-Teaching: Leo's ultimate goal is to guide viewers to a point where they can teach themselves through direct connection with the universe, lessening their need for external guidance including his own teachings.


Aparecium

Edited by MuadDib

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The Sneaky Psychology Behind Conspiracy Theories
https://youtu.be/-cZ5gGloYa8

"Conspiracy theory: a fool's idea of intelligence."

"A study conducted in 2016 found that 10% of Americans think the chemtrail conspiracy theory is 'completely true' and 20-30% think it is 'somewhat true'." - Wikipedia

  • Susceptibility to Conspiracy Theories: People are extremely susceptible to conspiracy theories due to a lack of understanding of epistemology, social media echo chambers, late-stage capitalism, and the breaking down of traditional mainstream narratives.
  • Role of Epistemology in Conspiracy Theories: The lack of epistemological knowledge leads to people falling into common traps and being prone to conspiracy theories. Most people, even college graduates, remain epistemologically ignorant.
  • Consequence of Social Media Platforms: Social media platforms facilitate ideological echo chambers that reinforce and amplify conspiracy beliefs without proper moderation or collective responsibility from platform owners.
  • Influence of Late-stage Capitalism: As wealth is funneled to the top of society, the majority struggle with meeting their survival needs, leading to frustration and a convenient attraction to conspiracy theories as explanatory mechanisms.
  • Conspiracy Theories as a Form of Distraction: Leo warns against getting lost in conspiracy theories as it distracts from spending time and energy on higher consciousness pursuits.
  • Popular Conspiracy Theories: Conspiracy theories include beliefs in a flat Earth, the moon landing being faked, the JFK assassination, reptilian races, anti-vaccine sentiments from both left-wing (health concerns) and right-wing (mind control) perspectives, and COVID-19 origins and Bill Gates's role in vaccination.
  • Conspiracy Theory Structure Versus Content: The content of conspiracy theories can vary widely but it's the similar structure of these beliefs that matters, which is characterized by a projection of an ignorant ego mind and a lack of serious epistemological investigation.
  • Conspiracy Theories as Ego Projections: Conspiracy theories are often embraced by people with low intelligence and intellectual laziness as a way to feel smart and iconoclastic, even though it's a form of conformity to alternative belief systems.
  • Identification with Conspiracy Theories: People struggle to distinguish between direct experience and belief systems, leading to a deep entrenchment in conspiracy theories and toxic ideologies.
  • Bill Gates and COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories: Leo refutes the conspiracy theory that Bill Gates is trying to profit from coronavirus vaccines with microchips for mind control. He points out that Gates donates billions and has pledged to give away most of his wealth, undermining the logic that he would scheme for more money.
  • Pizzagate and Pedophile Ring Conspiracy Theories: Conspiracy theories about elites running pedophile rings, such as Pizzagate and those fueled by Jeffrey Epstein's death and QAnon, are criticized by Leo. He notes their persistent popularity and toxic influence despite hoping they would fade as a fad.
  • Targets of Conspiracy Theories: Leo lists common subjects of conspiracy theories, including claims of Jewish and communist elites conspiring to rule the world, as well as accusations against figures like George Soros. He also discusses conspiracy theories on 9/11, chemtrails, false flag attacks, Obama birtherism, and Clinton scandals.
  • Right-Wing Conspiracy Theories: He indicates that right-wing conspiracy theories are more prevalent and ties this to levels of cognitive, moral, and spiritual development. The more conservative and fanatical individuals are, the more susceptible they are to such unsubstantiated narratives.
  • Conspiracy Theories Vs Actual Conspiracies: Leo distinguishes between conspiracy theories, which mix truth with false narratives, and actual conspiracies, which have been proven and are based on factual events. He explains that conspiracy theories are seldom fully fabricated but are made plausible by including some elements of truth.
  • Cultural Marxism and Other Government-Related Conspiracy Theories: Leo explores conspiracy theories like cultural Marxism, government gun control plots, and water fluoridation. He criticizes the distortion of these issues to promote an agenda, while also expressing personal preferences for natural products.
  • Left-wing Vs Right-wing Susceptibility to Conspiracy Theories: Leo argues that people with more liberal, progressive, and cognitively, morally, and spiritually developed views are less likely to engage with conspiracy theories compared to their conservative and right-wing counterparts, who may have lower developmental levels.
  • Conspiracy Theories as a Survival Mechanism for the Ego: He suggests that conspiracy theories serve as a survival mechanism by validating fears and phobias, with public figures like Donald Trump and Alex Jones using such narratives to manipulate others who operate at lower levels of consciousness.
  • Conspiracy Theories and Personal Bias: Leo acknowledges his left-wing bias, grounded in valuing consciousness, selflessness, and truth, and he recognizes that these values are not equally embraced by all political orientations. He cautions conservative or right-wing viewers against taking his critique of conspiracy theories as a personal attack, explaining that the critique stems from a difference in values rather than partisan bias.
  • Corruption vs. Conspiracy Theories: Gura distinguishes between real systemic problems like corruption in government, police, military, and business, and the misunderstandings of corruption provided by conspiracy theories. He clarifies that these issues are serious and are not adequately addressed by resorting to conspiratorial thinking, which adds another layer of mental corruption.
  • Critique from Above vs. Below: Leo explains the importance of critiquing the establishment from a conscious, informed perspective ('from above') versus an uninformed, emotional critique ('from below'). He provides examples such as the need to update democratic processes and represent minorities accurately as a higher-level critique, as opposed to dismissing the government as illegitimate, which is a critique from below.
  • Conspiracies that Turned Out to Be Real: Acknowledging real historical conspiracies like Watergate and Iran-Contra, Leo emphasizes the difference between legitimate instances of government or institutional wrongdoing and conspiracy theories that mix truth with false narratives to appear convincing.
  • Nature of Deception in Conspiracy Theories: Leo suggests conspiracy theories are a form of self-deception that contains some truth mixed with falsehoods, making them difficult to disentangle and highly convincing to the underinformed or uneducated mind.
  • Misinterpretation and Demonization in Conspiracy Theories: Using Pizzagate as an example, Gura illustrates how conspiracy theories cherry-pick facts and amplify them into exaggerated, sensational narratives that are challenging to debunk once they take hold in someone's belief system. He criticizes the use of pedophilia accusations as a way to demonize and avoid engagement with differing ideologies or individuals.
  • Pedophilia Narratives and the Right Wing: Leo comments on the right wing's use of pedophilia in conspiracy narratives as a tactic to demonize opponents and create a moral panic, often without substantial evidence, and questions why such narratives focus disproportionately on accusing elites instead of addressing pedophilia broadly.
  • Conspiracy Theories and Class Bias: Leo criticizes the idea that pedophilia is predominantly an issue among elites by providing statistical logic; with elites being less than 1% of the population, pedophilia is inherently more common among the other 99%. He also confronts the psychological and classist reasons why people might prefer to target the upper class with such accusations, rather than examining their own social strata.
  • The Problem of Pedophilia: Gura points out the harm of pedophilia is uniform, regardless of the perpetrator's social status. However, conspiracy theorists often succeed in directing public outrage toward elites due to pre-existing biases against late-stage capitalism, instead of addressing the issue more broadly across all classes.
  • Investigative Journalism vs Conspiracy Theories: Leo distinguishes between investigative journalism and conspiracy thinking, noting that the former involves rigorous standards, evidence, and accountability, while the latter lacks these and often resorts to unfounded accusations.
  • Systems Thinking vs Conspiracy Theories: Gura compares systems thinking to conspiracy theories, explaining that systems thinking is a holistic approach recognizing the interconnection within complex systems like economies and governments. In contrast, conspiracy theories usually blame a single group and lack this depth of analysis.
  • Definition of Conspiracy Theories: Leo quotes Wikipedia to elucidate that a conspiracy theory is an imposed template giving order to events by suggesting a small hidden group manipulates events, this separates conspiracy theorists from those who accept official accounts.
  • Conspiracy Theories as Scapegoating and Heroism: He describes how conspiracy theories often serve as a form of scapegoating, offering individuals a sense of heroism and purpose, particularly when targeting pedophiles, without actually contributing to solving the problem.
  • Modern Witch Hunts and Justice: Gura discusses the dangers of "witch trials" in modern times, where individuals are vilified without due process, likening this to the unfounded vilification of accused pedophiles by conspiracy theorists. He advocates for lawful and investigative approaches to addressing actual cases of pedophilia.
  • Misguided Civil Action and Government Funding: He critiques those who promote conspiracy theories about fighting pedophilia while simultaneously refusing to support government funding for agencies that address child abuse and sex trafficking, highlighting the contradiction in the actions of the Trump administration as an example.
  • Reality Control and Conspiracy Theories: Gura asserts that no single group can control society due to its complexity and the unconscious nature of most actors, including elites, thereby dismissing the idea of a controlled conspiracy by a malignant unified group.
  • Conspiracy Theories and the Perception of Evil: Leo notes that conspiracy theories often revolve around the perception of sinister plots, promoting an "us vs. them" mindset rather than understanding the truly distributed and chaotic nature of reality and societal systems.
  • Understanding the Origins of Evil and Collective Decision-Making: Gura suggests that what is conceived as "evil" more often stems from ignorance and unconsciousness rather than a deliberate malevolent force. Conspiracy theories misconstrue the concept of collective decision-making and the complexity of societal systems.
  • Nature of Society and Misconception of Evil: Societal conflicts are not conspiracies but inherent complexity within civilization. Evil is not rooted in conscious malice but in unconsciousness, selfishness, and ignorance. Conspiracy theories simplify the question of why evil exists by pointing fingers at scapegoats like cultural Marxists or globalists, rather than acknowledging the internal nature of evil.
  • Mental Distaste for Confusion and Ignorance: The mind and ego seek to make sense of their surroundings, leading to oversimplified and distorted realities. When unaware of this narrative-spinning, individuals can easily fall prey to conspiracy theories rather than engage in self-questioning and acknowledgment of personal ignorance.
  • Misguidance of Conspiracy Theories: Conspiracy theories offer an attractive but misleading simplification of reality, catering to the fear of meaninglessness and the aversion to personal introspection. This pathway avoids the emotional labor required for personal growth, instead providing ready-made scapegoats for one's problems.
  • Rejection of Personal Responsibility: Embracing conspiracy theories allows avoidance of confronting personal issues such as one's own shadow, sexual repressions, and contributions to societal problems. These theories negate the need for emotional work and distract from taking responsibility for inner evils.
  • Conspiracy Theories as Emotional Payoff: The attractiveness of conspiracy theories lies in their immediate offering of meaning, purpose, and clarity. This contrasts with the painstaking process of introspection and truth-seeking which yields no immediate social or financial rewards.
  • Negative Outcomes of Conspiracy Theories: Conspiracy theories solidify a dualistic worldview, promote suspicion and blame, obstruct problem-solving, waste time and energy, and radicalize and polarize the public, all of which hinder the collaborative efforts needed to address complex societal issues effectively.
  • Understanding Pedophilia: Leo Gura discusses the complexity of pedophilia by drawing attention to the idea that individuals do not choose their sexual preferences and that these cravings can be incredibly powerful. He suggests that simply criminalizing or demonizing pedophilia does not address its root causes or complexities.
  • Personal Anecdote on Pedophilia: Leo shares a personal encounter with a self-identified pedophile seeking advice, illustrating the individual’s struggle with sexual desire for minors and the acknowledgment of the potential harm acting on such impulses can cause. He uses this anecdote to illustrate the need for more profound solutions rather than simple demonization.
  • Potential Solutions for Pedophilia: Gura reflects on the challenge of finding a compassionate solution for pedophiles, suggesting virtual reality as a potential outlet for their desires that does not harm children. He clarifies that proposing such solutions does not mean endorsing harmful activities but aims to confront these issues with greater nuance.
  • Collective Responsibility and Crime: Leo argues that demonizing and criminalizing activities like pedophilia or criminal behavior overlooks the collective responsibility society has to address the root causes of such problems. This might involve systemic changes to prevent such issues, such as reevaluating the economic system or implementing better social safety nets.
  • Projection in Conspiracy Theories: He points out that right-wing conspiracy theories often project undesirable characteristics onto others. For example, he suggests that the right-wing focus on pedophilia might be an indication of fear and denial of their own shadow aspects.
  • Conspiracy Theories and Emotional Payoff: Gura explains that conspiracy theories provide an emotional payoff, making them satisfying and even addictive, allowing individuals to feel powerful, empowered and part of a common cause against perceived enemies.
  • Refusal to Address Complex Realities: He criticizes conspiracy theorists for refusing to confront the complex and paradoxical truths of reality. They avoid taking collective responsibility for societal issues, instead focusing on a narrow understanding that fails to address the underlying causes of issues like crime or pedophilia.
  • Conspiracy Theories and Skepticism Misuse: Leo Gura identifies that conspiracy theories misuse skepticism by weaponizing it against perceived enemies instead of turning it inwards to question one's own beliefs and motives. This creates an unhealthy division between the self and others perceived as adversaries.
  • Emotional Manipulation in Conspiracy Theories: Conspiracy theories exploit low consciousness emotions like shock, fear, and anger to engage and manipulate individuals, building up fanbases and exploiting these emotions for profit.
  • Intellectual Integrity Lacking in Conspiracy Theorists: According to Gura, conspiracy theorists typically lack intellectual integrity and honesty. They are uncharitable in their perspectives, often dismissing others' views and lacking the willingness to put themselves in others' shoes.
  • Advanced Gossip Nature of Conspiracy Theories: Gura likens conspiracy theories to an advanced form of gossip, engaging because of our inherent fascination with controversy and narrative. This form of engagement lacks depth and can contribute to closed-mindedness and dogma.
  • Conspiracy Theories as Mass Mobilization Tools: By appealing to common fears and using controversial narratives, conspiracy theories can mobilize crowds and be exploited by individuals seeking power, such as Donald Trump.
  • Political Disillusionment Fosters Conspiracy Theories: Individuals disillusioned with the political system, government, or facing personal hardships are more susceptible to conspiracy theories, as these offer a semblance of understanding and control.
  • Mainstream Culture as Protective Shield: Gura posits that mainstream culture protects the population against toxic ideologies. Criticizing elites can be legitimate, but must be done from a place of consciousness and not as an emotional reaction.
  • Dangers of Undereducated Masses Without Elites: Leo warns that in the absence of educated elites, uneducated and selfish masses can spiral into delusion and cause societal harm. Conscious leaders are required to guide society constructively.
  • Reality as Mind-Constructed: Gura emphasizes that reality is largely constructed by our minds, and if this process isn't consciously managed, can lead to delusion. This has been exemplified by historical events like Nazi Germany.
  • Rejecting Conspiracy Theories as Civic Engagement: While encouraging civic involvement, Gura distinguishes it from conspiracy theorizing and urges individuals to take collective responsibility in a constructive manner.
  • Personal Belief Distinguished from Conspiracy Theories: Gura shares his belief in UFOs but clarifies that he doesn't let this belief dictate his life or narrative. He differentiates between personal beliefs and the promotion of conspiracy theories.
  • Leo Gura's Views on UFOS: Leo maintains a neutral stance on UFOs, exhibiting no emotional attachment to their existence or non-existence. He emphasizes the importance of separating belief from direct experience and distinguishes his approach from conspiracy theorists.
  • Harm Caused by Conspiracy Theories: Leo discusses the real-world damages resulting from conspiracy theories, such as violence associated with Pizzagate and the reputational harm to public figures like Anderson Cooper and Bill Gates due to pedophilia conspiracies.
  • Alex Jones and Smear Campaigns: He criticizes Alex Jones for propagating harmful conspiracy theories about Robert Mueller and Sandy Hook, which affected individuals' reputations and safety. Despite retractions in court, Jones continued to spin more conspiracy theories.
  • Difference Between Leo's Teachings and Conspiracy Theories: Leo clarifies that his teachings are grounded in direct experience and rigorous inquiry, unlike conspiracy theories, which often lack solid evidence and promote false narratives.
  • Trump-Russia Financial Ties: On Trump's financial connections with Russia, Leo hypothesizes that there could be conflicts of interest but emphasizes that he doesn't hold on to this belief rigidly and awaits further evidence.
  • Grounding in Direct Experience: He insists that his references to God, mysticism, and criticism of materialist science are derived from personal awakening and deep introspection, encouraging listeners to have their own direct experiences rather than accepting ideas unquestioningly.
  • Reality, Imagination, and Conspiracy Theories: Leo explores the power of the mind to create internally consistent narratives detached from reality, underlining the fact that reason and logic can be manipulated and that reality itself is a construct of the mind.
  • Detecting Unhealthy Beliefs: He suggests using introspection to feel the negative emotions driving conspiracy theories, reinforcing the idea that genuine truth lies beyond the ego's narrow perspective.
  • Intellectual Integrity and Pursuit of Truth: Leo stresses the importance of recognizing the mind's capacity for self-deception and staying committed to intellectual integrity and truth.
  • Ego's role in conspiracy theories: Leo warns of the dangers of ego-driven thinking, highlighting the "us versus them" mindset and tendency to think in black and white terms within conspiracy theories. He points out that this thinking can be identified by emotional responses such as denial, projection, and a lack of love, emphasizing the need for introspection to identify these ego warnings.
  • Genuine interest in truth: To effectively counter conspiracy theories, Leo advocates for a genuine interest in truth that surpasses personal biases, grudges, and political affiliations. He stresses the importance of seeking truth over comfort, and of being open to admitting ignorance and giving up preconceived notions.
  • Solutions to conspiracy theories: Leo outlines multiple solutions to the problem of conspiracy theories, including practicing introspection, valuing open-mindedness, obtaining a factual education, and considering diverse perspectives. He also highlights the importance of rigorous journalism, scientific academic rigor, and the principle of falsification.
  • Challenges of education and factual understanding: Leo observes that many people lack serious education, suggesting that the educational system should better cover topics like epistemology and philosophy. He believes that a holistic education can serve as a bulwark against one-sided conspiracy thinking.
  • Active life purpose against conspiracy theories: He argues for having active life goals and self-actualization as antidotes to conspiracy theories. According to Leo, engaging in personal development redirects energy away from toxic ideations towards constructive pursuits.
  • Collective responsibility and systems thinking: Leo emphasizes collective responsibility and systems thinking as necessary approaches for creating a healthier society. By understanding the systemic nature of issues, one avoids scapegoating and promotes more effective solutions.
  • Intellectual integrity and admitting ignorance: Maintaining intellectual integrity and the humility to admit ignorance are key to not falling prey to conspiracy theories. This straightforward acceptance of not knowing, Leo argues, is more truthful than speculating without evidence.
  • Distinction between beliefs and direct experience: Leo highlights the crucial difference between beliefs and direct experience. Discerning what one actually knows from what one believes is a significant step in moving away from conspiracy-minded thinking.
  • Consciousness and non-duality as solutions: He proposes exploring non-dual mystical experiences and the recognition of consciousness, truth, and love (with a capital 'L') to transcend conspiratorial thinking.
  • Encouragement for further exploration: Leo concludes by urging viewers to watch other relevant episodes on related topics that intersect with conspiracy theories, thereby deepening their understanding and freeing themselves from limiting thought patterns.
  • Upcoming discussions on science: Looking ahead, Leo prepares viewers for deep dives into the epistemology of science to demonstrate even scientists' susceptibility to misconceptions and how these can contribute to materialism, reductionism, and atheism. He believes understanding the imaginary aspects of science is the real "red pill."

Confringo

Edited by MuadDib

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Deconstructing The Myth Of Science - Part 1
https://youtu.be/QwyPdXtl0HU

"Every scientific man, in order to preserve his reputation, has to say he dislikes metaphysics. What he means is he dislikes having his metaphysics criticized." - Alfred North Whitehead

"The theoretical authority of science is much smaller than it is supposed to be." - Paul Feyerabend

  • Advanced and serious material: Leo stresses that the content is not casual but designed for individuals deeply interested in understanding reality, and warns that it can cause an existential crisis due to the deep connections between one's sense of self and the scientific worldview.
  • Requirement of extreme open-mindedness: Listeners are encouraged to have an open mind, as the content poses a threat to established worldviews and identities, particularly those built around science.
  • No reliance on faith or belief: Leo insists that his insights must not be accepted on faith but instead validated through personal contemplation and direct experience.
  • Focus on the limitations of science: He clarifies that the series will highlight the limitations of science, not its advantages, which are already emphasized in education.
  • Advanced contemplation material: Leo has spent 15 years and over a thousand hours contemplating the nature of science, emphasizing the depth and complexity of the material.
  • Science as a source of authority: The authority science holds in society means any critique can be perceived as an attack, with Leo clarifying that his intent is to purify science from corruption and fundamental mistakes, not to undermine it.
  • Understanding science as a cultural system: Leo presents science as a cultural phenomenon, not an ideology, and distinguishes between criticism from below and above, aiming to critique from an advanced, post-rational cognitive level.
  • Misinterpretation as hostility towards science: Leo refutes the idea that he hates science, clarifying that his deep love for it drives him to correct its corruptions rather than undermine its value.
  • The distinction between types of criticism: Explaining that criticism of science can be from a lower reactionary or higher evolutionary perspective, Leo encourages recognition of limitations that require new methods and deeper evaluation.
  • Deconstruction of science: Leo aims to explore the epistemic and metaphysical foundations of science, its limitations, and the possibility of transcending current scientific boundaries throughout the four-part series.
  • Utility of Science versus its Alignment with Truth: While Leo acknowledges the practical utility of science, he warns against confusing scientific utility with the attainment of truth. He clarifies that science can indeed produce false theories, and blindly following it may lead away from true understanding.
  • Loyalty to Truth over Science: He suggests prioritizing fidelity to truth rather than science, highlighting historical instances where science misrepresented reality. Correcting scientific misconceptions enables realignment with truth, preventing ideological divergence.
  • Science's Influence on Worldview: Science shapes individuals' worldview and sense-making capabilities, serving as the operating system for the human mind. Errors within science, therefore, can corrupt perception and hinder a deeper understanding of reality.
  • Science's Success and its Deceptive Nature: Leo argues that the success of science can be misleading, creating an over-inflated sense of understanding reality. He asserts that the greatest deceptions mix truth with falsehood, making critical discernment difficult.
  • Critiquing Science is Part of Its Evolution: He emphasizes that critiquing and deconstructing science is essential for its evolution, contradicting the notion that science should be immune to reevaluation. True progress occurs when new paradigms are accepted rather than rejected.
  • Differentiating 'Doing' Science from 'Understanding' Science: Leo distinguishes between the act of conducting scientific work and comprehending the system of science. He points out that expertise in scientific practice doesn't imply an understanding of science's philosophical and epistemological underpinnings.
  • The Importance of Meta-Science for Breakthroughs: Meta-science, or the philosophy of science, is argued to be crucial for innovative scientific work, as it allows for out-of-the-box thinking and expansion beyond the current scientific paradigm.
  • Clear Distinction Between Pop Culture Science and Academic Science: Leo divides the conception of science into a popular myth and an academic understanding. He intends to critique both, as both can have misconceptions and biases, despite the academic view being more nuanced.
  • Focus on Interpretations and Assumptions in Science: Leo clarifies that while empirical measurements in science are generally reliable, the focus of his critique will be on the interpretations, assumptions, methodologies, and the meta-science that inform these measurements.
  • Pop Cultural Myth of Science vs Professional Academic Understanding: He introduces the distinction between the simplistic, cultural myth of science and the more complex understanding by professionals and academics, warning that both perspectives are subject to critique and potential flaw.
  • Critique of scientism and rationalism: Leo Gura criticizes the cultural dichotomy that separates the world into "scientific and rational" versus "religious and irrational." He calls this a myth that overly idealizes science, turning it into an infallible belief system defended with the same fervor as religious ideology.
  • Cultural creation of scientists: Scientists are not inherently scientific; culture inculcates scientific thinking and methodology. This intertwined relationship between culture and science forms a feedback loop where each influences and creates the other, leading to a cycle that reinforces existing scientific beliefs.
  • Prevalence of misconceptions: Gura lists numerous misconceptions about science that are believed both by the public and professionals, such as science being merely objective facts, science equating truth due to its practical success, and an oversimplified distinction between science, pseudoscience, and religion.
  • Challenging the objectivity of science: Key misconceptions include the belief that science is immune to bias, ego, and belief; the notion that it has a static, monolithic method; and the assumption that it inherently seeks truth and is eager to correct its errors. Leo suggests these are false and that science is affected by psychological, historical, and cultural forces.
  • Misconceptions extend to renowned figures: Even public intellectuals and respected figures like Neil deGrasse Tyson, Sean Carroll, Richard Dawkins, and Jordan Peterson are not immune to these misconceptions, according to Gura. He contends that many professionals do not fully understand what science is, despite their accolades.
  • Essence of science: Gura prompts the audience to question the nature of science, its validity, and how we know it is a valid methodology. He warns against the assumption that technological success is equivalent to scientific truth and reminds the audience of science’s historical errors.
  • Radical self-honesty and validation of science: He concludes by asserting that neither laypeople nor professional scientists have truly validated science as a methodology. Gura argues it's impossible to do so, challenging the audience to recognize their unconscious acceptance of science without critical examination.
  • Origins of the Scientific Method: The scientific method wasn't present from the beginning of humanity. It was invented by humans who had to determine what was considered valid or invalid science. This raises the problem of how to validate the scientific method itself without begging the question since using science or reason to validate science is circular reasoning.
  • Invention of Science and Criteria for Validation: The first person to create a scientific method faced the challenge of determining what would count as valid science without any pre-existing framework. The criteria and methods they chose were not self-evident but rather influenced by culture, which complicates the idea of independent verification among different individuals or cultures.
  • Science as the Pursuit of Knowledge: Science is viewed as part of a larger pursuit - the pursuit of knowledge. If restricted too narrowly, the full potential of science is limited by excluding certain areas. A true scientist is interested in discovering everything that's true, without arbitrary boundaries.
  • Determining Valid Ways of Pursuing Knowledge: Gura presents a challenge in classifying various methods (like meditation, shamanism, logical deduction, etc.) as valid or invalid ways of pursuing knowledge. The difficulty lies in reaching a consensus on the criteria for validity.
  • Example of Shamanism and Science: The example of a shaman discovering medicinal properties of plants suggests that science is not confined to academia. This calls into question the conventional definition of what constitutes science and what is considered a scientific method.
  • The Myth of a Monolithic Scientific Method: The belief in a singular, universally agreed-upon scientific method that leads to truth is debunked. Gura argues that such a method does not and cannot exist, and many accepted scientific beliefs are cultural artifacts rather than objective truths.
  • Science as Belief and Culture: The communal belief in a shaman's knowledge within a tribe is compared to modern-day acceptance of scientific claims. Both situations rely on trust and belief rather than personal experimentation, highlighting that much of what is believed to be scientific fact is based on cultural belief systems.
  • Shamanism and Perceptions of Science: Leo discusses how tribal beliefs in medicinal flowers are accepted without question, which mirrors how laypeople accept scientific facts they haven't experimented with themselves. He points out the similarities between this and the accepted method of knowing science, challenging the distinction between tribal knowledge and scientific understanding. 
  • Fusion of Empirical Data and Belief Systems: The integration of empirical observations with spiritual or animistic beliefs by tribal cultures is analogous to how modern society, including academics, embed scientific facts within complex matrices of sense-making, showing that science is also influenced by cultural and subjective perspectives.
  • Different Worldviews and Interpretation of Facts: Leo explains that the same facts can be integrated into different worldviews across various cultures, including secular interpretations, which demonstrates the subjective nature of how empirical data is understood and points to the diverse applications and interpretations of scientific facts.
  • Questioning the Validity of Witchcraft as Science: Leo challenges the outright dismissal of practices like witchcraft as unscientific without empirical testing or understanding, highlighting the potential biases and ideological prejudices that might be influencing such judgments and advocating for a genuine test in the spirit of scientific inquiry.
  • Confirmation Bias in Science: He emphasizes the problem of confirmation bias, discussing how cultural assumptions about the validity of various methods, including the scientific method itself, remain untested and accepted based on beliefs, which could potentially lead to erroneous conclusions about what constitutes valid science.
  • Methodological Confirmation Bias: Leo illustrates the difficulties in method validation, noting that methods to acquire knowledge are numerous and it's almost impossible to determine which are valid or foolproof. He underscores that errors can be made even when using a method correctly, suggesting that validating knowledge acquisition methods is deeply challenging.
  • Distinction Between Truth and Falsehood as Non-obvious: Gura insists that discerning truth from falsehood is highly non-trivial and counterintuitive, criticizing the assumption that experimentation always yields more valid knowledge than speculation or introspection, which often goes untested and is simply believed. 
  • Aristotle's Misconception and the Value of Experimentation: Through the anecdote about Aristotle's belief in the differing number of teeth in men and women, Leo argues the importance of direct experimentation and the non-obviousness of such empirical truths, promoting the idea that trial and error are core to scientific validation.
  • Galileo's Struggle with Telescopic Data: He narrates the story of Galileo's challenges with convincing his contemporaries of his telescopic discoveries, demonstrating the human mind's capacity for denial when faced with data threatening its worldview, by discrediting the methods that provide such data.
  • Construction of Reality by the Ego Mind: Leo expounds on the concept that one's perception of reality is constructed by the ego, adding that even scientific ideas are part of this subjective construction and that everything believed to be real by the ego is perceived as objectively true, highlighting the lack of objectivity in what is considered science.
  • Science Across Various Domains: He queries the scientific nature of history, computer programming, and filmmaking, suggesting that while there are factual and empirical elements, these fields also contain speculative and subjective components, questioning the conventional boundaries of what is acknowledged as science.
  • Inclusivity of the scientific method: Despite the common notion of a singular objective scientific method, Leo Gura argues that such a method is a fantasy and does not exist. He explains that all methods, including those for map making, criminal detective work, or filmmaking, contain numerous assumptions that have never been independently tested.
  • Relativism in selecting scientific methods: Science often operates under the pretense of objectivity, but the selection of one method over another is inherently subjective. The choice to consider some methods, like using microscopes or X-rays, as valid while rejecting others, like witchcraft or map making, reflects a subjective, relativistic decision rather than an absolute one. 
  • Scientific understanding beyond empiricism: Gura challenges the concept that science can be reduced to studying material alone, exemplified by the hypothetical of blending a frog to study its cells. He stresses that this approach overlooks other aspects of the frog's existence, veiling the complex nature of science and the heavy reliance on metaphysical and epistemic assumptions.
  • Essence of scientific method: Summarizing what he considers the spirit of the scientific method, Leo emphasizes open-mindedness, empirical investigation, and starting from scratch without assumptions. The process involves letting nature reveal its workings, accepting radical truths, recognizing mistakes, and utilizing an extraordinarily broad approach that even encompasses practices like witchcraft.
  • Science as an evolving exploration of phenomena: Gura points out that science opens new domains of phenomena, thus necessitating different methods. The methodological dilemma lies in recognizing which phenomena and methods are valid. An overly narrow scientific method risks excluding whole domains of reality, leading to confirmation bias in judging what constitutes legitimate evidence.
  • Metaphysical and methodological dilemmas in science: Leo articulates the inherent circularity problem in validating the scientific method using the scientific method itself. He summarizes by emphasizing the need for open-mindedness and neutrality in scientific investigation, which are often lacking due to the biased and dogmatic metaphysics held by most scientists.
  • Circular reasoning in science and religion: Leo draws parallels between the circular logic used by religious adherents to justify their beliefs and the circular validation utilized by scientists for the scientific method. Just as a Christian may believe in the Bible's divine authorship, scientists often use the scientific method to validate the scientific method. This, Leo argues, doubles down on any unperceived errors and creates blind spots, as data that don't fit within the method could be denied—showing a lack of independent validation.
  • Problem of demarcating science from pseudoscience: Leo challenges the idea that there is a clear line distinguishing science from pseudoscience. He contends that the very criteria used to make this distinction have not been validated outside of science. This inability to externally validate these criteria means that the distinction itself is a form of begging the question, thus illustrating the problem inherent to distinguishing what counts as science.
  • Science as a subset of philosophy: He explains that science originated as 'natural philosophy' and emphasizes that science is an offshoot of philosophy, not an independent realm. This is important since science operates within the larger domain of meta-science, which precedes empirical science. Leo criticizes the misconception within the scientific community that regards philosophy as unnecessary and unscientific, pointing out the untested metaphysical and epistemological claims held unconsciously by scientists.
  • Potential arrogance of the scientific mindset: Leo critiques the scientific desire to mechanize the process of finding truth, comparing it to a meat grinder producing factual outcomes. He argues that this outlook is flawed because it overlooks the complexity of nature and ignores the necessity for the scientist's self-awareness and self-reflection. He encourages recognizing science as an intuitive process rather than an objective and mechanical one.
  • Consequences of misunderstanding science's theoretical basis: Finally, Leo emphasizes science's deep reliance on interpretation and theory, with most of it being theoretical work rather than empirical. He points out even the simplest scientific statements like "lemons are yellow" are steeped in subjective interpretation, language, and metaphysical considerations. This underscores the fact that science is not just a collection of raw facts, but a complex web of theories, conjectures, speculations, and assumptions informed by human abstraction.
  • Misunderstanding of objective facts: Despite common belief, facts like "the Earth is round" involve subjectivity and interpretation, highlighting that what is considered scientific fact is often deeply intertwined with human perspective, language, philosophy, and culture.
  • Evolution as a conceptual model: The concept of evolution, though widely accepted as an empirical fact, is a theoretical framework created and projected onto nature by humans to make sense of observable phenomena, which illustrates the interpretative nature of scientific understanding.
  • Reconstructing dinosaur skeletons: Dinosaur skeletons in museums are often incomplete and reconstructed from different findings, showing the degree of guesswork and interpretation involved in paleontology, which extends to speculative features like color and biology of the dinosaurs.
  • Simplicity of the atomic model: The classic atomic model with electrons orbiting a nucleus, though commonly held in the public imagination, has been debunked by quantum mechanics, showcasing how simplified models can mislead our understanding of scientific reality.
  • The underdetermination problem: Multiple theoretical models can explain a given set of data, presenting the underdetermination problem in science, where it's challenging to ascertain which model accurately represents truth, signifying that science is theory-laden and not just a collection of facts.
  • The interconnected web of scientific ideas: Scientific ideas form a web of interconnected thoughts that point to one another and only indirectly connect to empirical data at the periphery, underscoring that models and interpretations are what give meaning to data, not the data itself.
  • Relativity and subjectivity of scientific methodology: Decisions about what phenomena to study, which experiments to run, and how to categorize data are relative and subjective, affecting the outcomes and interpretations of science and demonstrating it's not just empirical data but also how we make sense of it.
  • Categorization in science: Categorization of phenomena in science, such as distinguishing between fruits and vegetables, is subjective and arbitrary, influenced by the human mind rather than inherent divisions found in nature, impacting how we understand and make sense of reality.
  • Biases in pattern recognition: Science, as a form of pattern recognition, focuses on relationships and patterns that are relevant to human survival needs, such as object permanence, highlighting the subjective biases inherent in our scientific interpretations.
  • Quine's Web of Belief: Leo Gura discusses the philosophy of W.V. Quine, who compared scientific knowledge to a field of force bounded by experience. When experience contradicts our beliefs, we adjust the periphery of our knowledge before the core, illustrating that our understanding of science is underdetermined by experience and full of subjective choices.
  • Psychedelics as a Scientific Tool: Leo challenges the dismissal of psychedelics as valid scientific tools, likening this to the denial of Galileo's telescope discoveries. Modern scientists might reject substances like 5-MeO-DMT without personal experimentation, mirroring historical closed-mindedness to anything outside cultural norms.
  • The Difficulty in Epistemology: Leo argues that separating truth from falsehood is an extremely challenging, costly, and risky endeavor. He claims that true science involves taking calculated risks and venturing into uncharted territories rather than reconfirming what is already known.
  • Holistic Intelligence in Science: Leo promotes a meta-scientific approach to science, emphasizing that true scientific breakthroughs require holistic intelligence, intuition, and philosophical consideration beyond mechanical or formal systems.
  • Einstein's View on Meta-Science: Quoting Einstein, Gura highlights the importance of meta-scientific thinking to achieve groundbreaking discoveries in science. True scientists who seek truth also delve into philosophy and epistemology of their field.
  • Critical Evaluation of Methodology: He criticizes the tendency to dismiss unconventional methods like psychedelics, advocating for their critical evaluation instead. The process of discovering truth is emphasized as being non-trivial and open to various methodologies beyond those conventionally accepted by science.

Accio

Edited by MuadDib

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Deconstructing The Myth Of Science - Part 2
https://youtu.be/LR2rB8tuD2I

"It's structured to cover up a lie. The most dangerous lies in the guise of truth. Where, all that you say factually is true but it's part of a semantic field which is in itself a lie." - Slavoj Zizek

"There are some ideas so wrong that only a very intelligent person could believe in them." - George Orwell

  • Non-ideological nature of Leo's teachings: Leo clarifies that his teachings are not ideological or belief systems but are insights about reality that need deep personal contemplation and independent derivation to be truly understood.
  • Anticipating objections: He plans to address objections not out of sequence but because he understands that the mind can react defensively and he preempts misunderstandings by emphasizing the importance of maintaining an open mind.
  • Concerns of undermining science: Leo addresses concerns that questioning science may endorse pseudoscience or quackery. He acknowledges the possibility but stresses that the validity of challenging science isn't negated by potential misuse.
  • Science as evolving and self-improving: Leo rebuts the idea that science self-improves without active critique and mindset shifts. He argues that science requires individuals to be willing to rethink its workings for real evolution to occur.
  • Science's pursuit of truth: Leo confronts the defense that science merely aims at improving life rather than pursuing absolute truth. He finds this argument intellectually dishonest, as many scientists are indeed driven by the pursuit of truth, but some may retreat to practicality as a defense when the ability of science to reach ultimate truth is questioned.
  • Pragmatic Defense of Science: Leo Gura criticizes the portrayal of science merely as a pragmatic tool for survival and manipulation, arguing that it should not be divorced from the pursuit of truth.
  • Pragmatism and Truth: He clarifies that pragmatism as a philosophy suggests truth is based on utility, a notion that he finds problematic since it conflates truth with functionality.
  • Limitations of Useful Falsehoods: Gura explains that the usefulness of certain methods or falsehoods, such as lies, for survival or manipulation does not equate to them being the truth.
  • Utility versus Truth in Scientific Models: He points out that historically useful scientific theories, such as Newtonian mechanics and atomic theory, have been acknowledged as not true in an absolute sense despite their practical success.
  • The Hypocrisy in Pragmatic Defenses: Gura argues that pragmatism cannot consistently defend scientific truths without also legitimizing unscientific beliefs from different cultures that prove to be practical in their contexts, which exposes a double standard.
  • The Flaw in Pragmatic Justifications of Religion: He contrasts the pragmatic defense of scientific ideas with religious ideologies, noting that religious beliefs might serve pragmatic purposes but that does not render them true.
  • Science Beyond Pragmatism: Gura emphasizes that science is more profound than mere practicality and that scientists are driven by the belief that they are uncovering deep universal truths, not just manipulative schemes.
  • Preserving the Notion of Truth: He insists on the importance of separating truth from mere utility and practicality, pointing out that truth may exist independently from its practical implications.
  • Deconstructing Pragmatism: Leo Gura argues that equating truth with survival or happiness leads to a slippery slope, implying that lies could also be considered true if they are useful which contradicts the real aspirations of science and individuals' perception of factual reality.
  • Ego's equation of survival with truth: The ego can equate personal survival with truth leading to manipulation, deception, and lies since survival becomes the priority over factual accuracy or ethical considerations.
  • Existence of Absolute Truth: Absolute truth is regarded as accessible through consciousness, suggesting an actual reality beyond the bounds of current scientific methods, which cannot fully grasp or explain it.
  • Science's dilemma with Absolute Truth: Science faces a challenge where it must either acknowledge its limitations in capturing the entirety of the Absolute Truth or deny its existence completely to preserve its authority and credibility.
  • Function of science in relation to Absolute Truth: Despite practical applications, the real value of science lies in its partial correspondence to the Absolute Truth, which is the grounding framework of science itself.
  • Illusion created by practical success of science: The functionality of science in producing practical results often leads people to mistakenly equate working scientific models with absolute truth, ignoring the existence of many functional yet diverse worldviews and interpretations of nature.
  • Science and interpretation of nature: Science is a collection of human-constructed mental schemes to explain phenomena, which can change and vary, indicating that scientific models are not necessarily true nor the only way to understand nature.
  • Understanding culture and science as multiple models: Just as diverse cultures provide various methods of functioning in society, there are potentially thousands of different scientific models that could explain the same phenomena, each with trade-offs and limitations.
  • Scientific observation and denial: Observations in science can be subjective, and what counts as legitimate evidence is relative to the standards set by the scientific community, which can ignore or contest data that doesn't fit established paradigms.
  • Relativity and standards of scientific evidence: The scientific community's standards for what counts as valid evidence are arbitrary; nature does not need to meet these standards as they must adapt to the phenomena they aim to study.
  • Challenges in proving non-material phenomena: Phenomena like ghosts, if they exist, might not be approachable with standard material methods, highlighting the limitations of traditional scientific approaches in explaining all aspects of reality.
  • Questioning the objectivity of observational standards: Leo argues that the standards for what constitutes legitimate observational evidence—such as for ghosts, UFOs, or mystical experiences—are not objective but are biased by the scientific establishment’s preconceptions.
  • Credible reports of unexplained phenomena: The existence of credible reports of phenomena like UFO sightings by authoritative figures, such as military personnel, challenges the dismissal of these occurrences as mere fabrications or delusions.
  • Video footage of UFOs and observational denial: Leo points out that even with video footage of UFOs, people deny their legitimacy because it doesn't fit within their existing worldview. Anything outside of that limited worldview is not considered real unless one has a direct, undeniable experience.
  • Obstacles in presenting evidence against science: Leo emphasizes that the issue isn't the lack of evidence showing scientific errors but rather the disbelief and denial people exhibit when such evidence is presented. It's not the evidence itself, but what is considered credible evidence, that poses a problem.
  • Denial of paradigm-challenging scientific errors: He differentiates between internal paradigm errors that science readily admits and external paradigm errors that challenge foundational worldviews. The latter are usually dismissed because the collective mindset assumes existing worldviews as absolute.
  • Misconceptions about postmodernism: Leo counters the accusation that his teachings resemble postmodernism, stating that while some ideas may overlap, his insights are independently developed and go beyond the scope of postmodernism.
  • Criticism of the use of science by its critics: Addressing the criticism that questioning science is hypocritical if one uses scientific tools, Leo argues it is similar to wanting to improve a country's policies while living in it. Questioning does not equate to hypocrisy but to seeking reformation.
  • Handling scientific anomalies: Leo introduces the problem of how science deals with anomalies, where contradictory data is often dismissed as noise or error without an objective standard to determine when enough anomalies necessitate a paradigm shift.
  • Lack of objective criteria for anomalies: He reveals a lack of objective criteria to discern legitimate anomalies from noise in science, allowing for genuine anomalies that could disprove a theory to be easily dismissed.
  • The recontextualization problem: Leo describes the 'recontextualization problem,' where the meaning of a scientific fact can drastically shift when seen in a different context. He suggests this can significantly alter interpretations of scientific theories, indicating the fluidity of scientific knowledge.
  • Contextual Dynamics of Facts: Facts are not static or objective truths independent of context; they only make sense within a given context. A context-aware mind understands the relational nature of facts, whereas a context-unaware mind sees facts as independent and absolute.
  • Problem of Recontextualization: The meaning of scientific facts can completely reverse when the context is expanded or altered. What appears true in one context can become the opposite in another, leading to significant epistemic challenges for science.
  • Entanglement Problem in Science: Scientific observations and results are inherently entangled with the methods and instruments used in their collection, including human senses and perception. This interconnection means that data are not independent of the observing instruments.
  • The Scientific Method's Limitations: The scientific method is not infallible or universally applicable, as the method itself influences the result. Each method has its limitations and biases, raising concerns about the validity and universality of scientific outcomes.
  • Scientist's Bias in Experiments: The scientist and their experiment are interlinked; personal biases, beliefs, paradigms, emotions, and worldviews all influence scientific inquiry, challenging the claim of neutrality within the scientific process.
  • Interpenetration of Reason and Emotion: Contrary to popular belief, reason and emotion are deeply intertwined in the scientific process. Emotions drive reason, affecting scientific investigations and undermining claims of pure rationality.
  • Science Entangled with Perception: The entirety of science is contingent on the perception, consciousness, and nervous systems of the observers. Scientific models and results would vary with different sensory and neurological setups.
  • Entanglement of Science with Survival: Survival and ego needs significantly influence the course of scientific investigations, contrary to the belief that science purely seeks abstract truths. Scientific institutions' survival needs also affect their direction of research.
  • Culture's Influence on Science: Science and culture are deeply intertwined, with cultural beliefs and norms capable of corrupting scientific endeavors. The idea that science is solely about finding truth is challenged by the reality of cultural influence.
  • Inherent Relativity and Bias in Science: Due to the discussed entanglements, all scientific claims are perspectival, relative, biased, and partial. Complete objectivity, neutrality, and absoluteness are foreclosed by these intricate interconnections within the framework of science.
  • Quantum Entanglement Misconception: Clarifies that the concept of entanglement used in the discussion extends beyond the specific technical phenomena in quantum mechanics. The broader philosophical idea of entanglement signifies the fundamental interconnectedness of reality, arguing that if reality is one, then separating parts becomes impossible, making everything inherently entangled.
  • Quotes from Renowned Scientists on the Nature of Reality: Leo cites quotes from Leonard Susskind, Werner Heisenberg, David Boehm, Max Planck, and John Archibald Wheeler to show support for the notion that reality is fundamentally entangled and participatory, which has a relativizing effect on all data and facts.
  • Oneness and Quantum Entanglement: Leo argues that quantum entanglement illustrates the oneness of reality. He points out that some scientists recognize entanglement's macro effects but are still uncomfortable or unable to fully grasp the radical implications of oneness.
  • Partiality of Scientific Observation: Using quotes from notable physicists, Leo emphasizes that observation in science is partial and tinged by the observer's methodology and biases. He argues that what we observe is not nature itself, but nature as exposed to our methods of questioning.
  • Entanglement and the Limits of Observation: Leo contends that traditional materialist views of observation do not hold when considering deeper levels of reality, likening the study of reality to dissecting oneself, with all the associated emotional entanglement.
  • Myth of Objective Science: Leo asserts that science cannot be objective as every aspect of the scientific method is partial and influenced by the observer's perspective, predispositions, and the instruments they use, leading to methodological biases that exclude portions of reality.
  • Thought Experiment – VR Simulation: Leo uses a thought experiment comparing scientific study within a virtual reality simulation to highlight the limitations of considering philosophy, metaphysics, and epistemology as irrelevant to scientific inquiry, demonstrating the relativity of scientific truths.
  • Relativity of Scientific Truths: He elaborates on the myriad factors that relativize science, including culture, society, era, language, paradigm, tools, neurology, perception, and consciousness, arguing that changes in these factors can turn scientific truths into falsehoods.
  • Limits and Bias in Science: Leo finishes by asserting that scientific claims are inherently limited and biased, deeply entwined with the observer's framework, which leads to a disregard for elements outside of the observer’s self-imposed window of reality, challenging the notion of science as an objective pursuit of truth.
  • The relativity of scientific beliefs: All scientific beliefs, including the rotation of the Earth or the atomic structure of matter, are relative and conditional; they depend on the context and our acceptance based on trust in scientific authority rather than direct testing and experience.
  • Science as belief and authority: Leo challenges the notion that science is purely empirical, suggesting that 99% of it relies on belief in authority. People trust in scientific claims and peer validations without having personally verified or experienced them, creating a 'pyramid scheme of belief.'
  • Example of beliefs in science: Leo illustrates with common beliefs, such as the Earth's rotation or the structure of matter as atoms, that most people accept without direct testing, relying on authority and technology to substantiate these claims.
  • Problem of scientific overleveraging: Science has an 'overleveraging' issue analogous to the banking system where validation through personal experience is vastly outnumbered by the frequency of belief, creating a bubble of unchallenged scientific paradigms susceptible to collapse when confronted.
  • Scientific indoctrination through education: Science education is described as a form of indoctrination, where children are taught scientific facts through memorization without exploring epistemology, metaphysics, or methodologies, creating a rigid worldview.
  • Implications of scientific indoctrination: The formative years of education imprint a scientific paradigm that shapes our worldview, leading to difficulties in thinking outside this framework and criticizing foundational aspects of science.
  • Peer review as a system of confirmation: Peer review in science is criticized for being a circular system that confirms existing beliefs, with peers often sharing the same paradigm and rarely challenging foundational assumptions or methodologies.
  • Science as a social-cultural activity: Modern science relies on elements such as society, culture, bureaucracy, and consensus, with scientific authority depending on this collective agreement rather than an isolated pursuit of truth.
  • Priority of institutional survival in science: Leo argues that the scientific consensus is built more on what benefits the survival of scientific institutions and bureaucracies than on unwavering pursuit of truth, with truth being a secondary concern.
  • Critique of peer review defense: Leo denounces the common defense of scientific beliefs through peer review, contending that peer review reinforces existing beliefs and ignores significant issues.
  • Circular Logic in Peer Review: Peer review in science is criticized for fostering groupthink as it operates within a closed loop of mutual methodological agreement among peers sharing the same biases and worldview, which does not challenge the fundamental methods or assumptions of scientific work.
  • Question-Begging in Validating Truth: Leo emphasizes the futility of seeking validation for truth from others who are considered authoritative within one's preexisting scientific paradigm. He argues that true validation can only come from personal examination and testing, rather than relying on others' approval.
  • Limitations of Academic Consensus: Scientific consensus is equated with orthodoxy, maintained by peer review systems consisting of individuals who share the same cultural and educational indoctrinations. This encourages conformity to existing paradigms rather than fostering revolutionary thought.
  • Impact of Culture on Science: Science is deeply intertwined with culture, meaning that one can only understand science within the cultural context they are raised in. Changing scientific understanding thus requires cultural shifts, which Leo frames as a marketing problem due to the necessity of spreading new ideas through society.
  • Slow Permeation of Scientific Ideas Into Culture: Leo notes that scientific truths can take decades or even centuries to become fully integrated into culture, stating that marketing and cultural acceptance are critical for the adoption of new scientific ideas, which often stand contrary to the immediate survival needs of the majority in society.
  • Conservatism of Science: Science is characterized as being conservative, as it seeks to maintain a strict authority by only allowing ideas that meet rigorous standards. However, this approach can also inhibit the acceptance of new, valid ideas and limit a complete understanding of truth.
  • Nature of Scientific Paradigm Shifts: Scientific breakthroughs face resistance from established norms and can take generations to be fully accepted, as culture and entrenched dogmas from one paradigm serve as barriers to the next. Once accepted, these new ideas are often regarded as obvious and the cycle of denying further novel discoveries continues. 
  • Persistence of Epistemic and Metaphysical Blunders: Historical cycles of scientific paradigms lead to continuous epistemic and metaphysical errors, as the contents of dogmas change, but the structure of belief, authority, and ideology remain constant, repeating mistakes across human history.
  • Undermining of Materialism and Realism: Scientific discoveries from various fields have undermined the foundations of materialism and realism, yet the majority of people, including many scientists, do not fully comprehend the profound epistemic and metaphysical implications of these advancements.
  • Historical Resistance to New Ideas in Science: Ignaz Semmelweis' introduction of antiseptic procedures demonstrates the staunch opposition to novel scientific ideas that contradict established beliefs. His findings, although drastically reducing mortality rates, were rejected and ridiculed by his medical peers. Semmelweis was ultimately committed to an asylum and died after mistreatment, showing how truth in science isn't always welcomed or accepted.
  • Whitewashing of Scientific Mistakes: Science often fails to acknowledge its past mistakes and corrections are made only after the initial pioneers of new ideas face significant resistance and sometimes personal tragedy. This "whitewashing" distorts the reality of how science reacts to revolutionary ideas.
  • Reluctance of Science to Evolve: Despite proclaimed willingness to advance, science historically resists self-evolution in practice. Many ideas that later became accepted faced initial denial and ridicule. Such resistance is masked by the notion that if one discovers the truth and proves it, the scientific community will readily accept it.
  • Science's Expansion Through Culture Wars: The boundaries of science are not widened through passive agreement but through cultural and ideological battles. New theories and models that expand scientific understanding are often met with fear and resistance, as they threat established paradigms. These cultural wars are a necessary part of scientific evolution.
  • Psychological Barriers in Accepting New Scientific Theories: Psychological factors like prejudices, biases, cultural norms, and survival concerns heavily influence the acceptance of scientific theories. Fear and ego prevent open-minded acceptance of revolutionary ideas, be it the Earth's shape, time's relativity, or the source of human evolution.
  • Scientific Institutions and Survival Concerns: Scientists within academic institutions face pressures concerning reputation, career, and conformity to the institution’s established beliefs. This concern for professional survival limits the freedom to explore radical ideas and challenges to the scientific status quo.
  • Institutional Priorities Over Truth: Major scientific institutions are primarily focused on maintaining their authority, legitimacy, and securing funding from donors, often at the expense of pursuing unbiased truth. To preserve their standing, these institutions avoid employing scientists who deviate too far from accepted paradigms.
  • Academic Limitations on Scientific Truth: Academic institutions inherently restrict the scope of scientific exploration to their predefined parameters. Scientists are bound by unspoken agreements to align with the institution's paradigms, and straying from them can lead to career jeopardy.
  • Issues with Modern Education System: The current education system, which should be illuminating students on truth, instead remains trapped in a mode of rote learning, memorization, and testing without teaching fundamentals like epistemology or metaphysics, thus perpetuating scientific indoctrination and limiting critical thinking.
  • Funding Biases in Scientific Research: Modern science, embedded in late-stage capitalism, is heavily influenced by the pursuit of profits and immediate technological advances. This profit motive filters research topics, diverting attention away from non-practical areas, potentially stalling exploration into rich, unresearched domains of reality.
  • Problem of Reductionism in Science: Science increasingly focuses on overspecialization, leading to a narrow and fragmented understanding of reality. This 'blinders on' approach prevents a holistic view, as experts in specific subfields fail to engage with knowledge outside their expertise.
  • Consequences of Overspecialization: The compartmentalization of scientific fields creates artificial divides that don't reflect the interconnectivity of nature, resulting in ignorance and a piecemeal picture of reality. This hampers progress in understanding the true nature of reality, which is more than the sum of its parts.
  • Lack of Interdisciplinary Communication: There's a significant gap in communication not only between different branches of science but also between science and other forms of knowledge like shamanism and mysticism. Overemphasis on specialization discourages scientists from considering insights from outside their immediate field.
  • Reductionist Delusion: The materialist science bias of reductionism assumes by breaking down reality into smaller components, understanding will be reached. Leo challenges this notion as an unscientific and false premise, exemplified by the analogy of studying a blended frog and expecting to understand the entirety of the animal.
  • Benefits of Independent Research: Independence from the constraints of academia allows for a broader spectrum of study across diverse disciplines. The freedom to explore wide-ranging theories fosters a more profound and comprehensive understanding of reality.
  • Funding and Resources in Late Stage Capitalism: Criticizes the current scientific funding model that prioritizes technology and profit-driven research, affecting the capacity to conduct groundbreaking, independent research. Leo notes how the unequal distribution of resources limits independence and innovation.
  • Promotion of Holism: The solution to the reductionism problem is promoting holism, an approach that is not financially rewarded compared to specialism. Despite holism being undervalued, it is seen as essential for a comprehensive understanding of nature.
  • False Notion of Falsifiability: Challenges the belief within science that every theory must be falsifiable and possess predictive power. Leo suggests that certain truths or theories may not seem immediately useful but can become invaluable for future scientific advancements, thereby criticizing short-sighted dismissal based on immediate utility.
  • The Infinity Problem in Science: Leo argues that science is in denial about the infinite nature of reality, preferring to treat it as finite. He states that finite methods cannot fully grasp the infinite, leading to an inherent incompleteness in the scientific method, hence why scientists must develop a more open and flexible approach toward studying nature.
  • Infinite Nature of Reality: Leo Gura emphasizes the problem that scientists treat nature as finite because their methods cannot access infinity. He explains that the methods used to study nature are inherently finite, leading to a confirmation bias wherein scientists fail to recognize the infinite aspects of reality.
  • Limitations of Proof: Gura discusses the limitations of proof, stating that proof is a finite notion and therefore cannot adequately capture the concept of infinity. According to him, proof is a smaller subset of truth, indicating that there will always be aspects of reality that are true but unprovable.
  • Direct Consciousness of Infinity: He asserts that it is possible to demonstrate to oneself that reality is infinite, but doing so requires a conscious experience beyond peer review or formal proof. Gura suggests that through specific methods, one can become directly conscious of the infinite nature of reality.
  • Intuitive Nature of Science: Gura argues that despite common perceptions, scientific discovery relies heavily on intuition and holistic pattern recognition, which cannot be formalized or explained through a mechanical process. He claims that the greatest scientific achievements have resulted from intuitive leaps of consciousness.
  • Relativity of Proof and Intellectual Capacity: He emphasizes that the notion of proof is relative and depends on an individual's intellectual capacity to grasp insights and intuit truths. Gura explains that science does not exist for beings lacking this intellectual capacity, like donkeys, implying that our scientific understanding is subjective to our level of consciousness and neurology.
  • Critique of Rationalist, Materialist, Realist Mindset: Gura critiques those restricted by a rationalist, materialist, and realist mindset, comparing the difficulty of explaining infinity to them to the impossibility of teaching arithmetic to a donkey. He suggests that cognitive development and consciousness awakenings are needed to comprehend infinity.
  • Myth of Science: Underlying his critique is the narrative that science is often apologetically rationalized as objective and rigorous when in reality, intuition is central to its function. Gura compares this concept to a scene from Star Wars to illustrate the intuitive essence behind scientific breakthroughs.
  • Commitment to Truth: Gura concludes by reaffirming his dedication to questioning every scientific assumption in the pursuit of truth. He expresses a willingness to discard all beliefs, regardless of their perceived sacredness, to uncover what remains after rigorous examination, believing that truth will withstand such scrutiny.
  • Ubiquity of Bullshit: Lastly, he calls attention to the pervasive nature of misinformation or 'bullshit,' cautioning that even scientists are capable of self-deception and misleading others, often without malicious intent. This propensity to generate falsehoods is characteristic of the human condition and widespread across society.


Colloportus

Edited by MuadDib

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Deconstructing The Myth Of Science - Part 3
https://youtu.be/FeOIuybpfgc

"Systems, scientific and philosophic, come and go. Each method of limited understanding is at length exhausted. In its prime each system is a triumphant success: in its decay, it is an obstructive nuisance." - Alfred North Whitehead

"The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence." - Nikola Tesla

  • Potential misuse of deconstructing science: Leo Gura warns of the dangers associated with the deconstruction of science, cautioning that individuals with pre-rational perspectives might exploit his critique to justify science denial and conspiracy theories. He emphasizes that this undertaking's intention is not to affirm baseless ideologies but to advance intellectual progress through honest self-examination.
  • Actualized.org as a process, not an ideology: Gura clarifies that Actualized.org is not pushing a specific philosophy or ideology but rather advocates for the mental deconstruction of all beliefs, including one's own. This process is intended to lead to freedom and liberation from all ideologies, not the establishment of a new one.
  • Acknowledgment of visionary scientists: Leo acknowledges the presence of high-quality, visionary scientists who have transcended materialist and rationalist paradigms. However, he notes their rarity and lack of mainstream recognition due to prevailing institutional paradigms that do not favor post-rational science.
  • Science and language are inseparable: Leo highlights the deep connection between science and language, emphasizing that modern science cannot operate without the linguistic labels and categories. He discusses the evolution of language in tandem with scientific progress, and how its constructive role may influence our understanding of reality.
  • Subconscious and metaphysical baggage of language: Gura points out that every word, even seemingly straightforward terms like "rabbit," carries subconscious implications and implicit metaphysical baggage. He questions the taken-for-granted nature of words and their meaning in science, suggesting that our minds and language may be so intertwined that it becomes hard to distinguish their origins and influences on our perception of reality.
  • Challenging the assumption of language's solely descriptive role: Gura argues against the notion that language is merely descriptive, instead proposing that it actively constructs our perception of reality. He suggests that language acts as an augmented reality system, overlaying and projecting onto raw phenomena.
  • The possibility of experiencing reality without language: Leo challenges the audience to contemplate the potential of experiencing reality without language, highlighting the limitations that language can impose. He suggests that scientists' lack of awareness about meditative practices prevents them from exploring non-linguistic modes of experiencing reality, which could offer a more direct insight into its nature.
  • Non-Linguistic Understanding of Reality: Linguistic approaches have dominated human perception of reality, but there may exist non-linguistic ways to approach and understand reality which have not been sufficiently explored or validated scientifically.
  • Scientific Validation of Linguistic Modality: The scientific community has largely operated under the assumption that language is the best tool for understanding reality without thoroughly testing and validating this assumption against non-linguistic methods.
  • Challenge to Scientists: Leo challenges scientists to experience reality for one minute without linguistic thought to reveal potential biases in their understanding, as constant linguistic thinking suggests an entanglement with a specific mode of perception.
  • Inherent Duality of Language: Language intrinsically imposes a dualistic framework onto reality by creating categories and oppositional pairings, which may not align with nature’s potential nonduality.
  • Methodological Bias of Science: Modern science is criticized for not realizing that its methodological reliance on dualistic categorization could be projecting unnatural divisions onto a fundamentally nondual reality.
  • Critique of Common Scientific Terms: Leo urges scientists to deeply contemplate common scientific labels, such as "experience," "reality," and "existence," noting that these terms are often used without a full understanding of their implications and are products of the mind.
  • Semantic Significance in Science: Every term used in scientific exploration shapes our understanding and must be deeply questioned; this is not merely semantic wordplay but affects how scientists, and society at large, conceptualize and interact with reality.
  • The Map-Territory Distinction: Leo warns against confusing symbolic models and representations with reality itself, highlighting that while models are refined over time, they will never truly embody the complete truth of the territory they attempt to represent.
  • Inherent bias towards symbolic representation in science: Leo Gura criticizes science for being heavily biased towards exploring reality through thinking, symbolism, and representation via modeling. He argues that this limits scientists to only one modality, overlooking direct methods of understanding reality that do not rely on thinking or symbolic mechanisms. 
  • Possibility of direct consciousness of reality: He suggests the potential for direct consciousness of reality—direct access to the absolute truth without the intermediaries of models or symbols. This method differs from the conventional scientific approach and is not yet taught or recognized within academia, which focuses primarily on symbolic representation.
  • Definition of science and its future expansion: Leo challenges the current narrow definition of science and proposes that it should be expanded to include direct experiences and consciousness. He predicts that the perception of what is considered science will evolve drastically over the next couple of centuries.
  • Limitations of the scientific consensus: He foresees that mainstream academia is unlikely to accept his views in the short term because they defy entrenched worldviews and professional reputations. Change within science frequently follows the retirement or passing of older generations and the fresh perspectives brought by younger scientists.
  • Scientists trapped in their models: Leo notes that scientists often become overly attached to their models, mistaking them for reality itself. This attachment becomes an obstacle to deeper understanding, as models are inherently simplified and limited representations of the complex and infinite nature of reality.
  • The "Substance Problem" in scientific inquiry: Leo highlights a critical issue he dubs the "substance problem" in science, where science does not—and arguably cannot—explain the true essence of anything. Science can describe how entities behave but fails to address what they fundamentally are.
  • Circular Definitions in Scientific Explanation: He critiques the use of circular definitions in scientific explanation, where terms are continuously redefined in terms of others without ever arriving at a fundamental understanding of what these terms actually signify.
  • Symbolic representation's limitations in grasping substance: Leo asserts that symbolic representation cannot provide a direct understanding of the substance of entities. This realization undermines the belief that physics or any other field can truly get to the essence of what things are through their traditional methods.
  • Philosophical dismissal as a defense against substance questions: He notes that many scientists dismiss philosophical inquiry into the substance of things as impractical or irrelevant, labeling it as a job for philosophers and not scientists. However, Leo argues that understanding the substance is not only possible but vital, requiring methods outside of current scientific practices.
  • Misconception of Substance Questions in Science: Leo critiques the scientific community for disregarding substance questions as irrelevant or meaningless. He challenges scientists to become directly conscious of the substance of any aspect of reality, highlighting that traditional science avoids answering "what is" type questions, which he believes is a dogmatic limitation.
  • Arthur Eddington's Perspective on Substance Questions: Leo shares a quote from physicist Arthur Eddington, who expressed skepticism about the ability of science to address substantial truths. Eddington's viewpoint suggests that scientific methods lead to a "shadow world of symbols" rather than to concrete reality, emphasizing the inability of physics to define the intrinsic nature of the atom.
  • Methodological Error in Science: Leo argues that a significant methodological error within science is the belief that reality can only be investigated through a network of pointer readings and symbolic models. He insists there is something profound beyond these symbols, which scientists miss due to dogmatism and close-mindedness.
  • The Validity of Unconventional Scientific Methods: He posits that to validate any scientific claim, one must use the method prescribed by the claimant, not an alternative method. This principle is demonstrated through the necessity to use a telescope, not binoculars, to observe Jupiter's moons, asserting the right of the claimant to dictate the validation method.
  • Contemplation as a Valid Scientific Method: Leo defends contemplation as a bona fide scientific method, arguing that refusing to accept it due to its unconventional nature is itself unscientific. He claims that deep contemplation can verify truths that cannot be found in books or nature.
  • Empirical Claim of Identity and Consciousness: Leo makes an empirical claim that one is not truly human and can experience being an inanimate object. He introduces Salvia as a method for experimenting with consciousness, potentially demonstrating that personal identity can shift dramatically under its influence.
  • Prejudgment and the Openness of Science: He criticizes the prejudgment of unconventional methods and claims without actual experimentation, emphasizing that true science requires open-mindedness and the willingness to personally test methods, even if they appear unorthodox.
  • Inherent Dangers in Scientific Exploration: Leo recognizes the intrinsic dangers of scientific exploration, exemplified by the potential risks of using Salvia. He argues that danger does not invalidate science; instead, it often accompanies groundbreaking discoveries, as seen historically with pioneers of radiation.
  • The Evolution of Science through Testing Beliefs: Leo suggests that science advances through the testing of beliefs, challenging listeners to personally experience and test his claims. He emphasizes that personal experience is necessary for validating scientific claims, regardless of whether the method of validation fits traditional scientific criteria.
  • Fear and scientific truth: Many individuals claim to be interested in scientific truth but are actually more concerned with comfort, survival, and defending their belief systems, indicating a lack of genuine scientific pursuit.
  • The "Black Hole Problem" in sharing radical discoveries: Scientists who experience radical shifts in understanding, such as finding out they're not actually human through psychedelic experiences, face the "black hole problem" where they cannot convey this to others who haven't shared the same experience. 
  • Direct experience as a requirement for paradigm shift: Convincing others of profound scientific discoveries often necessitates them having the same direct experiences, which they may be reluctant to have due to closed-mindedness towards unconventional methods.
  • The softness of "hard sciences" and the challenge of "soft sciences": Contrary to popular belief, "hard sciences" like physics avoid addressing fundamental questions about reality, making them less concrete than typically assumed. "Soft sciences" like psychology are inherently more difficult due to their complex, holistic nature.
  • The artificial hierarchy between sciences and bias towards reductionism: The belief that hard sciences are more tangible and important than soft sciences is debunked as reductionist bias. All aspects of reality, including the softer, more emotional elements, are equally valid and should not be artificially ranked.
  • Relativity of terms 'natural', 'supernatural', and 'paranormal': What is considered to be 'supernatural' or 'paranormal' today may, with time and scientific development, be reclassified as 'natural', illustrating the shifting nature of these terms, and suggesting they're largely arbitrary labels.
  • Challenge against false distinctions in science definitions: Leo Gura criticizes the distinctions between science and pseudoscience, and natural and supernatural, as being abstract barriers created by current scientific paradigms rather than grounded in the actual investigation of phenomena.
  • Science and Magic as Interchangeable: Leo Gura explains that what we currently see as technology might have been perceived as magic in the past, and advanced future technology, if presented today, would seem magical to us. This suggests that the boundary between science and magic is porous and based on familiarity and understanding, not on absolute differences.
  • Relativity of Scientific Terms: Leo emphasizes the relativity of terms such as 'natural,' 'physical,' and 'normal' within science, pointing out that these are context-dependent and change with time as our collective understanding evolves.
  • Misunderstanding of Objectivity and Subjectivity: He criticizes science's misunderstanding of objectivity and subjectivity, showing that the very process of doing science is subjective, as it occurs within human consciousness, which is inherently subjective.
  • Consciousness as the Foundation of Reality: Leo contests the scientific marginalization of consciousness, arguing that it is the most fundamental component of reality. He contends that everything in science occurs within consciousness and there is nothing beyond it, asserting that the current scientific paradigm is incapable of understanding consciousness.
  • Science as Relative to Human Neurology: Leo claims that science is not studying an external reality but is essentially mapping the neurology of human consciousness. If human neurology were to change, the entirety of science as we know it would change.
  • The Self-Reference Problem of Science: He discusses the issue where science tries to explain itself using tools incapable of such introspection, likening it to an eyeball trying to look at itself or a snake trying to eat its own tail.
  • Science as a Perception: Leo posits that science is ultimately just a perception, with the material world, brain, and reality all being perceptions. Hence, science itself is a perception within a perception, leading to the conclusion that all of science could be a hallucination.
  • Circularity of Scientific Substance: He challenges scientists to explain the substance of science itself, demonstrating the circularity of scientific explanations that rely on concepts like atoms, quarks, and strings, which ultimately trace back to thoughts or perceptions.
  • Imagination as the Basis of Science: Leo states that all of science is nothing but imagination, putting forward the notion that scientific concepts and the material world are as imaginary as unicorns or Santa Claus.
  • Map vs. Territory in Understanding Science: He distinguishes between the map (theories and ideas about science provided in his lecture) and the territory (the actual empirical understanding of reality), urging listeners to move beyond the map to arrive at the territory themselves.
  • State of Consciousness Dictates Scientific Truths: Leo explains that scientific truths are valid only within a certain state of consciousness. Different states, such as drunkenness or dreaming, can negate the relevance of scientific truths, indicating their dependency on our normal state of consciousness.
  • Subjectivity of States of Consciousness: Leo Gura questions the special status of our ordinary waking state of consciousness, suggesting that it's only one among thousands. Through experiences such as dreaming, being intoxicated, or taking psychedelics, our state of consciousness can radically shift, causing the entirety of scientific understanding to 'fly out the window.'
  • Science's Bias Towards Demystification: Leo criticizes the methodological bias in science that aims to demystify reality, cautioning against the notion that mystery is a problem to be solved. He suggests that the fundamental nature of reality may be intrinsically mystical and that the relentless drive to demystify could be a result of cultural brainwashing rather than empirical necessity.
  • Mistakes in Science vs. Religion: Leo points out the double standard in how society forgives scientific errors while harshly judging religious mistakes. He argues that while scientific errors are often dismissed as part of the scientific process, religious missteps are never excused, even though religion evolves or improves its perspectives.
  • Evolution and Openness of Religion: Leo discusses the evolution of religious institutions like the Catholic Church, showing that they, too, can evolve over time to integrate progressive values and scientific facts. He underlines the unfairness in how critics permanently attribute old errors to religious institutions but allow science the flexibility to evolve and correct itself.
  • Science's Historical Mistakes: Leo brings to light forgotten historical errors made by scientists, such as the initial disbelief in heavier-than-air flight or the dangers of high speed. He asserts that science is just as fallible as religion, but it is treated as if it's a flawless repository of knowledge.
  • Contradictions Within Science: Leo delivers an extensive list of contradictions inherent in the scientific process. These range from the scientific claim that all perceptions are generated by the brain to the inability of science to prove foundational concepts like the existence of an objective external world, self, and mind.
  • Dismissal of Unorthodox Scientific Claims: He criticizes science for dismissing unorthodox ideas that don't come from established sources, emphasizing that this is essentially an appeal to authority—which is ironically, what science accuses religion of doing.
  • Double Standards of Science and Open-Mindedness: Leo notes the hypocrisy in science’s self-representation as open-minded when it often rejects methods and worldviews that fall outside its established norms, branding them pseudoscience.
  • Science's Claim to Practicality versus Objectivity: Leo questions science's simultaneous claims to practicality and as the pinnacle of cultural truth. While science is often pragmatic, it also claims to hold objective truth, except when other worldviews provide practical solutions—these, however, are not afforded the same status of truth.
  • Emphasizing the Importance of Evolving Science: Leo suggests that science will evolve to include understandings currently deemed mystical or supernatural, revolutionizing our approach to the natural world. This echoes the advancement of science in history, leading to the acceptance of phenomena once considered paranormal.
  • The "Science and Responsibility" Conundrum: Leo points out the double standard in attributing the consequences of scientific advancements. He notes that harmful outcomes, such as nuclear bombings or opioid overdose deaths, are often attributed to politics or business rather than science, whereas religion is directly blamed for its negative impacts. This, he argues, demonstrates a significant hypocrisy in how science is critiqued compared to religion.
  • The Intelligence Fallacy in Science: Leo criticizes the assumption within science that the universe cannot possess intelligence, contrasting it with the recognized intelligence of humans, who are a part of the universe. He explains this as a flawed separation between humans and the universe, emphasizing that human intelligence is essentially a manifestation of universal intelligence.
  • The Limitations of Logic in Science: Leo argues that science relies heavily on logic, which in turn depends on the validity of its premises. However, logic cannot prove the truth of its foundational premises, making it insufficient to ground scientific inquiry entirely, revealing a fundamental limitation in the scientific method from a logical standpoint.
  • Science and the John Stuart Mill Paradox: Paraphrasing John Stuart Mill, Leo highlights the ironic situation where both religion and science have been destructive forces historically, despite their contributions to hope and progress. He critically addresses the hypocrisy and double standards displayed by some atheists and rationalists when evaluating the historical impact of science versus religion.
  • The Unacknowledged Harms of Science: Leo discusses the unintentional yet significant harms caused by scientific progress, such as drug abuse and weaponry. He argues that the scientific community often distances itself from the negative applications of its discoveries, thus refusing to accept responsibility for the repercussions of scientific advancements, which impacts society and various aspects of reality.
  • Science's Role in Social and Cultural Dynamics: Leo emphasizes that science cannot exist in isolation from society and culture, including government funding, universities, and the overall wellness of society. He stresses that scientific development is intertwined with the healthiness of communities and the dissemination of information, such as on social media.
  • Leo's Definitions of Science: He offers a multifaceted view of science by presenting multiple definitions, including science as an imaginary scheme, a projection of the mind, a human invention, a shared cultural belief, an epistemology and metaphysics, trial and error, symbolic representation, an ideology, a state of consciousness, survival mechanism, linguistic structure, sense-making activity, and a hallucination within the Universal Mind.
  • The Importance of Internalizing the Definition of Science: He concludes by urging the audience to spend years contemplating what science is, understanding its vast implications, perspectives, and connections to reality—an exploration that he asserts should expand beyond academic and laboratory confines to personal, everyday experiential learning.
  • Application of Science in Daily Life: Leo Gura illustrates science as a natural part of everyday life, like searching for lost car keys. This process is a fundamental practice of science — observing, hypothesizing, and experimenting. He emphasizes the importance of keeping an open mind to all possibilities, which is essential in scientific endeavors and life in general.
  • Inner Science: Gura encourages the study of one's own emotions and subjective experiences, viewing this introspection as a legitimate form of science. He advocates for recognizing the scientific merit in understanding personal phenomena such as anger, joy, or sadness and the effects these have on one's life.
  • Personal Responsibility for Science: Leo underscores the importance of taking personal responsibility for exploring and understanding one's own life scientifically. He wants people to actively engage in this "inner science" rather than passively accepting knowledge from external authorities like scientists or gurus.
  • Practical Critiques of Modern Science: Gura offers a list of areas where he believes modern science is fundamentally mistaken, including misconceptions about materialism, realism, objectivity, Western medicine, perception, consciousness, psychedelics, rationality, the existence of paranormal phenomena, mystical experiences, birth and death, and the nature of immortality.
  • Misunderstandings in Core Scientific Concepts: He argues that science's current understanding of God, infinity, nothingness, artificial intelligence, the Planck length, evolutionary mechanics, and the Big Bang is flawed. He claims these views will evolve radically in the future as science advances.
  • Epistemic Questions for Contemplation: Leo Gura presents a list of fundamental epistemological questions about the nature, function, and underlying assumptions of science, inviting listeners to explore these for a deeper understanding of scientific practice.
  • Metaphor of Knowledge and Limitations of Science: Gura uses the metaphor of a carpet in a house to depict the vastness of the universe's knowledge compared to the minuscule portion humans comprehend through science. He envisions a future where science includes the mystical and paranormal and recognizes the reality as infinite love.
  • Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of Science: Leo Gura raises profound inquiries into the nature of science, challenging the very foundations and assumptions upon which scientific knowledge is built. He advocates for an open-minded approach that encompasses a broad spectrum of human experience and consciousness.
  • Future Outlook of Science: Anticipating revolutionary changes in the scientific field, Gura predicts that future generations will have an expanded understanding of phenomena currently dismissed as pseudoscience, leading to a more comprehensive and profound grasp of reality.
  • Call for a Deeper Exploration of Reality: Leo challenges listeners to dive deeper into the exploration of reality, emphasizing the profound impact this can have on the richness and depth of their lives. He urges people to take a more serious and inquisitive approach to life.
  • Role of Actualized.org: Gura clarifies the purpose of Actualized.org as a platform that encourages independent exploration and growth, rather than providing conclusive enlightenment. It serves as a guide for individuals on their journey of personal and philosophical discovery.
  • Infinity of Universal Consciousness: Leo Gura draws a comparison between the universe as an infinite carpet and human scientific knowledge as a single fiber within it. He asserts that even a million years of scientific advancement will only reveal a minuscule part of the vastness of the universe, emphasizing the limitations of science in comprehending infinity.
  • Nature of Infinity: Leo illustrates how any finite method, including science, will always fall infinitely short of truly understanding the infinite nature of reality. This intrinsic characteristic of infinity positions science's capabilities as profoundly limited when it comes to grasping the full extent of the universe.
  • Fisherman Analogy: A fisherman hooking the bottom of the ocean serves as an analogy for scientists who believe they understand a portion of the universe but unknowingly are dealing with the totality of it. Gura points out scientists often falsely believe they've captured a significant truth when, in reality, they've barely scratched the surface of understanding.
  • Revolutionary Changes in Science: Predicting significant evolutionary changes in scientific understanding, Gura suggests that future generations will view current scientific practices as archaic. Pseudoscience and spiritual concepts such as non-duality, God, and immortality will be integrated into mainstream scientific thought.
  • Role of Individual Responsibility: Emphasizing the power of individual initiative, Gura argues that the evolution of science depends on each person's willingness to entertain unconventional ideas and methodologies. He attributes societal collective consciousness and openness to shaping the future of scientific progress.
  • Integration of Science and Spirituality: Foreseeing a future where science and spirituality merge, Gura envisions the acknowledgment and realization of the infinite nature of reality and love within the domain of science, moving beyond the confines of materialism and realism.
  • Call for Self-Exploration: Leo Gura advocates for personal exploration and inner science, stressing the profound importance of self-study and deeply understanding one's own existence as the ultimate science.
  • Conclusion and Quotes: Concluding his points, Gura shares quotes that sum up the notion of science as both a limited and profound human pursuit that intertwines closely with our intuitions and fundamental beliefs about the nature of reality.
  • Seriousness in Exploring Reality: Leo calls for a more earnest and deep approach to life and reality, urging listeners to transform their lives into a pursuit of extraordinary discovery and understanding, challenging the status quo and venturing into the mysteries of existence.

Bombarda

Edited by MuadDib

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What Are Holons - Understanding Holism - Part 1
https://youtu.be/mUWgw4y6lzw

Great fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite 'em. 
And little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum. - The Siphonaptera

  • Introduction to Holism and Holistic Thinking: Leo introduces the concept of holons as a foundational element for understanding holism and holistic thinking. The more practical aspects of this idea will be elaborated in part two of the series.
  • Origins of the Concept of Holons: The term “holon” was coined by Arthur Koestler and later expanded by Ken Wilber, implying that reality's fundamental building blocks are these holons which are simultaneously parts and wholes.
  • Nature of Holons: Holons can be physical objects like cells or even abstractions and mental objects. Reality consists of a nested hierarchy of holons, from subatomic particles to the entire universe.
  • Perspectival and Relativistic Aspect of Holons: The perception of holons is relativistic, varying based on the chosen perspective. Every object can be seen as a holon depending on context.
  • Interpenetration of Holons: Holons can be part of multiple other holons and interpenetrate each other. For instance, a person is part of various holons such as a family, a country, and the human species.
  • Complexity of Holonic Design: Complex systems demonstrate modularity, allowing for a component-based structure that facilitates repair and understanding. Examples include the human body’s organ transplants and the interchangeable parts of a car engine.
  • Complexity of Reality: Leo emphasizes the incredible complexity of reality and the importance of understanding this complexity for accurate manipulation, such as repairing a car or performing medical procedures.
  • Appreciating Complexity in Spiritual Contexts: In spiritual circles, there is often an oversimplification of reality. However, Leo argues for a deeper appreciation of the staggering complexity inherent in all aspects of reality.
  • Complexity of Reality: Reality's complexity is astounding, from intricate systems like car engines and computer processors to the vast ecosystem of our planet, encompassing everything from the atmosphere to the brains of billions of living beings.
  • Interactions of Holons: Holons interact in multilayered ways that are not simply bottom-up, but also top-down and sideways, leading to a dynamic and complex interplay that necessitates a multi-dimensional understanding.
  • Examples of Holons: Examples include computers, software like Windows operating system, sports teams, cities, political parties, nations, fisheries, economies and industries, coral reefs, and even the human body, which can be likened to a city based on its functional complexity.
  • Nature of Holons: According to Wikipedia, holons are self-regulating, self-organizing structures that balance chaos and order, existing as discrete yet interconnected entities, ranging from subatomic particles to the multiverse.
  • Autonomy and Community in Holons: Holons demonstrate a balance of autonomy and community, with the capacity for self-reliance and independence, yet simultaneously under the influence of larger systems that they also influence.
  • Complexity and Creativity in Holarchy: Holons become increasingly complex and creative up the hierarchy, gaining more degrees of freedom and capabilities, from simple molecules to complex societal structures.
  • Bi-directional Information Flow in Holons: Information within holons flows both ways—from the macro to the micro and vice versa—and is crucial to the stability of the system. When this flow is compromised, systems like biological organisms can break down, analogous to cancer.
  • Order and Balance in Biological Systems: The human body exemplifies the delicate balance required to maintain life, surviving for decades despite various abuses, signifying the intricate order necessary for complex systems to function.
  • Fragility and Complex Balance of the Human Body: Even minor dysfunctions in the body highlight the delicate balance necessary to maintain health. Every cell has a role, from respiration to immune responses, and the body's complexity is evident in these interactions. The sheer number of cells and how they differentiate between helpful and harmful bacteria emphasize the importance of holons in our biological system.
  • Engineering Lessons from Biological Systems: Studying the body's ability to manage complexity and harmony can provide insights for designing efficient social systems, cities, sports teams, corporations, and organizations like the UN.
  • Nature's Genius in Design: By not taking nature for granted and examining the human body's design, we can gain incredible insights into stability, complexity, and harmony which could improve human-designed systems.
  • Holarchy vs. Hierarchy: A holarchy is a hierarchy without a definitive start or end point, suggesting an infinite structure. This concept is contrasted with traditional hierarchies, challenging the way we structure and understand reality.
  • Interconnections within the Web of Life: Reality comprises networks within networks, with no clear hierarchies or linear structures. This networked nature of existence emphasizes the limitless, nested connections within the universe.
  • Understanding Organizational Structures: Rethinking organizational structures away from strict hierarchies towards more holistic and interdependent holarchies could result in healthier, more balanced systems.
  • Limitations and False Impressions of Control: The illusion of a central ego or CEO governing the body underscores the misconception that control is strictly top-down, where, in reality, many functions are autonomous, demonstrating a need for nonlinear understanding.
  • Redefining Parts and Wholes: The concept of parts and wholes is subjective, based on perspective. Misidentifying these can lead to problems in society, governance, and design.
  • Problems with Overemphasis on Community or Individuality: Political ideologies like those in authoritarian regimes or libertarian philosophies can be unsustainable when they focus too heavily on the collective or individual at the expense of balance.
  • Designing Healthy Systems Requires Balance: Crafting well-coordinated societies requires understanding the balance between individual autonomy and collective responsibility, aiming for utility without oppression.
  • Reflection on Libertarianism and Unsustainable Systems: Extreme libertarianism in the United States disregards societal responsibilities, risking sustainability. Leo criticizes this philosophy and underscores the importance of a balanced approach for durable societal structures.
  • Societal Design Faults: Unconscious design within society leads to negative outcomes like school shootings, pollution, criminality, drug abuse, war, genocide, and racism. These consequences emerge primarily due to the lack of holistic consideration in societal structures.
  • Harmony in Holistic Design: A more holistic design accounts for the harmony between parts and wholes and balances different levels of interaction. Such designs create and sustain complex and efficient systems, comparable to the human body.
  • Sacrifices for Unified Action: Coordination and unified action across holons require individual parts to sacrifice some autonomy. Analogous to a cell in the body obeying the commands of the brain, individuals must conform to the broader rules of social holons like family, community, and society.
  • Cultural Programming and Rules: Most cultural norms and prohibitions are absorbed unconsciously from an early age. People often follow these without deep consideration, though not all cultural rules may be beneficial or healthy, exemplified by the libertarian philosophy on gun control.
  • Complex Social Interaction: Individuals must navigate between their personal freedom and the requirements of the larger social structures they are part of. The challenge lies in achieving a sustainable balance that avoids the extremes of absolute freedom or oppressive tyranny.
  • Corporate Regulation and Social Balance: There is inadequate regulation over corporate power, leading to problems like predatory capitalism. Achieving the right balance between corporate freedom and social welfare is a complex task requiring wisdom.
  • Responsibility in Social Constructs: Humans are tasked with creating harmonious societies, an undertaking that mirrors the marvel of the human body created by the universe. Sensible sacrifices and exploitation avoidance are essential for a balanced collective existence.
  • Avoiding Dysfunctional Sacrifice: Individuals should resist participating in dysfunctional collective actions, such as unjust wars, and be mindful of ethical implications before committing to collective decisions.
  • Misunderstanding of Control in Power Structures: Contrary to conspiracy theories, no small group fully controls complex systems like governments. Instead, power is distributed in a circular causal manner, with elected officials being empowered by the people's choices.
  • Individual's Role in a Complex Society: It is vital for individuals to recognize their integral role within societal holons, maintain their responsibility, and not blindly follow collective madness that can manifest in negative outcomes like war and discrimination.
  • Balancing Laws with Higher Order: While certain social rules are necessary for societal order and functionality, balance with the higher order aims of society is essential, and compliance must be grounded in understanding rather than forced obedience.
  • Circular Causal Chains: To understand societal and governmental structures, one must appreciate the complexity of circular causal chains. This perspective challenges oversimplified conspiracy theories about centralized control by the powerful elite.
  • Delusion of Centralized Control: Conspiracy theories suggesting that a handful of individuals such as billionaires or secretive groups control the world are considered delusional. Real power structures are far more intricate and interwoven than such simplistic views allow for.
  • Source of Power and Responsibility: Power structures derive their legitimacy and resources from the public. For instance, consumer transactions with companies like Amazon directly contribute to the wealth and influence of figures like Jeff Bezos. Recognizing this highlights the shared responsibility each individual holds in shaping power dynamics.
  • Government and Self-Reflection: Criticizing one's government without recognizing one's own participation and responsibility in its formation creates a false duality. To improve societal structures, one must include oneself in understanding the complex, multi-dimensional and circular nature of social systems.
  • Holons and Ego: Realizing that one is part of larger holons requires humility and letting go of ego. Individual parts of a system must work selflessly for the greater good, just as the organs in a body function to preserve the whole organism.
  • Selflessness in Holons: For a harmonious system, individual holons need to exhibit humility and selflessness, contributing to the well-being of the larger system without self-centered motivations.
  • Laws and Community Survival: Obeying societal laws, such as paying taxes, is essential for maintaining vital services and structures. Cheating on such responsibilities can lead to the degradation of community well-being.
  • Foundations of Holistic Thinking: Leo indicates the upcoming discussion in "Holistic Thinking - Part 2," which will explore how to apply a holistic approach to design and social engineering, emphasizing that social engineering is mistakenly viewed negatively when it could be crucial for systemic improvement.
  • Life's Delicate Balances: The dilemma of life involves finding delicate balances between autonomy and community, individualism and collectivism. This complex process cannot be reduced to simple formulas and requires conscious effort and self-development.
  • Masculine and Feminine Dynamics: The masculine and feminine tend to value autonomy and community differently, leading to unique challenges in relationships and societal roles. A better understanding of these dynamics can aid in finding balance and avoiding pathologies related to overcommitment or excessive detachment.
  • Political and Social Simplifications: Simplistic binaries like capitalism versus socialism or individualism versus collectivism fail to capture the complexities of societal structures. Higher, more nuanced and holistic perspectives are needed to transcend these limitations and foster better systems.
  • Gender Dynamics in Holonic Understanding: Leo discusses the complicated nature of understanding attraction between males and females, citing that this often leads to demonizing the opposite sex. He emphasizes the importance of recognizing that humans are not the apex holon in the universe, warning against narcissistic behaviors that lead to self-centered views and suffering in the world.
  • Cultural Acknowledgement of Human Limitations: Leo suggests that a solution to humanity's issues lies in culturally acknowledging that humans are not the highest holon and that humility is needed. He argues for a necessity to make sacrifices for the overall ecosystem of the planet and to prepare for cooperative interactions with extraterrestrial life forms in the future.
  • Concept of Indra's Net: Leo introduces the concept of Indra's Net from Hinduism and Buddhism, which explains the universe as an intricate web of mirrored orbs. Each orb reflects every other orb, pointing to the interconnectedness and non-linear relationship among all holons.
  • Fractality and Interpenetration of Reality: Quoting ancient texts, Leo illustrates the fractal, recursive, and interpenetrative nature of reality, where everything is deeply connected as part of a whole. This concept of infinite interpenetration aligns with the idea of holism being a fundamental part of existence.
  • Consciousness Beyond Materialism: Discussing his psychedelic experiences, Leo claims that everything, including the human body, is made of consciousness. He shares personal insights on seeing all entities within his own hands, leading to the conclusion that reality is a fluid hallucination shaped by consciousness.
  • Reality's Groundlessness: Leo emphasizes that reality lacks a foundational ground, rejecting notions in science, religion, and philosophy that attempt to anchor reality in specific entities. This realization may cause existential discomfort, but it is crucial for understanding the structure of existence.
  • Reality's Infinite Imagination: Leo proposes that reality's true nature is to imagine itself into existence infinitely. This infinite creative potential makes reality groundless, holographic, and a fractal mindscape where all is interconnected.
  • Indra's Net as a Metaphor for Understanding Reality: Leo suggests using the image of Indra's Net as a lens to view the universe, replacing outdated materialist views with an understanding that reflects the non-linear and deeply interconnected nature of holons.
  • Groundlessness of Reality: Reality is described as groundless, with no fixed anchor point like atoms, brains, or historical events. Leo contends that the very need for a ground limits reality and thus, reality would not confine itself in such a manner. 
  • Ego's Search for Ground: The ego seeks to ground itself in tangible concepts such as a brain or atoms to maintain a sense of reality and existence, but this grounding is imaginary and merely a mental construct. 
  • Historical Grounding as Imaginary: Leo challenges the conventional idea of grounding one's existence in historical lineage, highlighting that concepts like birth, ancestry, and even the Big Bang were all invented after one's birth and are, therefore, imaginary. 
  • Infinite Imagination: Leo proposes that reality is not restricted by any fundamental components but is rather an expression of infinite imagination, capable of envisioning any scenario without limitation. 
  • Reality as an Infinite Holographic Fractal Mindscape: Leo introduces the concept of reality as an infinite holographic fractal mindscape, where each part contains the whole and consciousness is infinitely capable of imagining any part of the universe independently.
  • Clarifying Holography: Leo explains what true holograms are, how they preserve the whole image regardless of damage, and likens this to consciousness, which is also infinitely holographic, encompassing and imagining every part of the universe.
  • Infinite Nature of Consciousness: Reality and its elements—energy, atoms, space, and even human bodies—are described as inventions of consciousness, which itself is an infinite and self-imagining entity without confines.
  • Reality Without a Ground: The search for a 'ground' or foundational basis for reality is dismissed as a futile pursuit, with Leo asserting that reality itself is infinite, without a clear starting point or ground.
  • Infinity as Magical Reality: The notion of infinity is presented as magic, making the impossible possible, allowing the universe to exist and create itself with infinite power, defying the rules of logic.
  • Creation & Existence: For anything to exist, including a single atom, infinite power is necessary. This concept challenges traditional scientific and materialist perspectives which are often in search of a finite ground for reality.
  • Unraveling the Infinite Fractal: Our search for the origins of the universe is described as unraveling an infinite fractal, with reality constantly expanding its backstory in response to our inquiries.
  • Backstory as Imagination: The backstory of where everything comes from, including our own existence, is imagined by us as we probe reality, seen when looking in a mirror or exploring space.
  • Infinite Backstory and Consistency: Leo likens the infinite backstory of reality to an author who can keep inventing history for a character endlessly, maintaining internal consistency.
  • Grasping the Infinite Whole: Enlightenment involves grasping the entirety of the infinite reality as a whole, recognizing oneself as God who is creating themselves, and acknowledging the groundless nature of existence.
  • Ultimate Holon as Self: The highest holon is not the physical universe but the individual's own consciousness, with everything occurring within oneself, revealing a truth that is often hidden by perceiving oneself as finite.
  • Reality as Unity Through Infinite Subdivision: Reality is explained as unity that can subdivide itself infinitely, creating an interconnected fractal reality where the highest holon is the self or God.
  • Practical Holonic Observation and Care: To apply holonic understanding, one must acknowledge the interconnectedness of everything, see beyond personal concerns to care for larger wholes, and care for the various parts within oneself, creating internal harmony.
  • Holistic Love and Non-Judgment: Avoid conflict, judgment, and dismissal of different parts of reality as it undermines the embodiment of god consciousness and leads to a devilish separation from the whole.
  • Hallarchic Tapestry: Reality should be viewed as a holarchic tapestry of interconnectedness and circular causations, acknowledging that individual actions have reverberating impacts throughout the whole system.
  • Reverberation of Actions: Everyday actions, such as eating fast food, have complex implications beyond personal health, impacting economic and global health by contributing to the proliferation of unhealthy choices.
  • Balancing Judgment and Compassion: While recognizing the negative impacts of certain actions is important, demonizing or cutting off parts of reality creates imbalance and a lack of love and compassion for those involved.
  • Life Devoted to Universal Good: Ponder what life would be like if every action was dedicated to serving the universe's highest good, without oppressing any parts, in order to align with the principles of holistic living.
  • Anticipation for Holistic Thinking: Stay tuned for part two, "Holistic Thinking," which promises to offer practical illustrations and foundational knowledge for a more appropriate understanding of varied anecdotes.

 


Bombarda

Edited by MuadDib

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Holism & Holistic Thinking - Part 1
https://youtu.be/5tmKFbXneis

"When we try to pick out anything by itself we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe." - John Muir

  • Holistic thinking in science: Reductionism, prevalent in many scientific endeavors, limits understanding by ignoring the interconnections and treating nature as a mere collection of discrete objects. Holism emphasizes relationships, interconnections, and the flow between objects, proposing that parts of a whole cannot exist or be understood separately from the whole.
  • Materialistic paradigm: The materialistic paradigm assumes reality can be fully explained by its basic elements like atoms, thus undermining the complexity of systems and leading to misunderstandings when scientists attempt to dissect parts in isolation, for instance, studying a frog away from its natural habitat.
  • Quality of scientific research: High-quality, holistic scientific research is often more costly compared to convenient, reductionist approaches like studies using college students, which can introduce biases due to unrepresentative sampling of the entire human population.
  • Bias in meditation studies: Studying meditation on undergraduate students, who are generally inexperienced, yields skewed results, unlike studying practiced yogis in India, which would provide richer insights into the practice's effects while also considering cultural diversity.
  • Analytical thinking in institutions: Institutions like academia and government favor analytical and reductionistic thinking over holistic thinking, which divides reality into categories rather than acknowledging interconnectedness, leading to a lack of broader understanding.
  • Consequences of unholistic thinking: Limited and unholistic thinking in various fields can result in negative outcomes such as pathology, disease, and actions labeled as "evil," highlighting the importance of holistic thought in promoting healthier societies and behaviors.
  • Importance of Holism: Holism is critical for understanding and solving problems at all levels in society, from individual health to business practices and global politics. It is not a binary state but has degrees that people should strive to elevate by taking into account the interconnected effects of their actions.
  • Corporate shortsightedness in the pharmaceutical industry: CEOs may push for drugs that target a specific health issue like cholesterol without fully considering potential side effects across the body or mind, such as cancer or depression, due to unholistic thinking and a focus on profit.
  • Holistic leadership and responsibility: True holistic thinking in leadership involves considering all potential direct and indirect consequences of decisions, such as the psychological effects of drugs or the societal impact of how they're marketed and priced, and taking responsibility for these outcomes.
  • Disney's handling of Star Wars: Disney's Star Wars trilogy lacked a holistic vision, as it was managed without a cohesive story across the series. The comparison with George Lucas's original trilogy shows the value of a visionary with a holistic plan in creative endeavors.
  • Holistic understanding in chess: In chess, the player with the most holistic understanding of the board, including sacrificial strategies and foresight, is most likely to win. This implies that real-life problems also require a holistic approach to be solved effectively.
  • Personal consequences of unholistic thinking: Lack of holistic thinking can lead individuals to make poor decisions in their personal lives, similarly to how narrow thinking can lead to 'painting oneself into a corner' in a chess game.
  • Two "master equations" of life: Leo introduces two "master equations" that explain all aspects of life and calls for deep contemplation of these equations. While the exact equations are not disclosed in the transcript, they symbolize the profound understanding gained through holistic thinking.
  • Holistic Equations: Holism is identified with wholeness, health, unity, oneness, the infinite, harmony, balance, goodness, love, godliness, selflessness, wisdom, holiness, heaven, and bliss. Conversely, an absence of holism is associated with division, fragmentation, partiality, brokenness, disharmony, limitation, finiteness, selfishness, ugliness, evil, hell, and suffering.
  • Health and Holism: Health is defined as harmony and balance within the 'whole'. A healthy body operates with all parts in synergistic harmony. Disease, then, is the result of parts of the body acting selfishly and disrupting this balance, like in autoimmune diseases or cancer.
  • Healing the Body and Society: Healing is about restoring balance and unity. This applies both to the physical body and the societal body, where divisive, pathological actions destabilize society leading to destruction and suffering.
  • The Case of Adolf Hitler: Hitler’s perspective is explained as an example of societal disease, where a selfish, divisive, partial ideology based on racism and hatred led to societal fragmentation and widespread suffering.
  • Effects of Selfishness and Divisiveness: Selfish and divisive ideologies lead to broken societies and unhappy individuals, contributing to the suffering of all those involved.
  • Unity and Healing through Holism: A move toward unification in both individuals and societies implies eliminating selfishness and bias, which results in love, balance, and a healthier, more compassionate community.
  • Higher Levels of Consciousness: Continual growth in consciousness, from finite to infinite, can lead to an individual realizing their oneness with the universe, or "God realization". This process harmonizes the individual's internal and external world, leading to experiences of bliss and heaven.
  • Scale of Holism: The scale of holism ranges from infinite division to infinite unity. Quality of life, holiness, and beauty depend on where one falls on this scale. Societal beauty, peace, and less conflict occur as collective holism increases.
  • Human History and Unity: History shows a progression towards larger unifications, from tribal to global. Resistance to unity (e.g., nationalism vs. globalism) leads to conflict and does not align with the trend towards infinite unity.
  • Spiritual Work and Selflessness: Spiritual work involves letting go of personal biases and divisions, moving towards complete selflessness, and realizing oneself as infinitely unified consciousness, or God.
  • Life's Master Equations: These equations encapsulate the essence of spirituality and holism: unify and heal divisions to transform fragmented consciousness into a holistic one. Realize that limited thinking contributes to disorders and dysfunctionality.
  • Self-improvement and Internal Conflict: Personal growth is hindered by internal conflicts within fragmented psyches. Unity must be established among conflicting parts to achieve true self-improvement and well-being.
  • Fragmentation and Shadow Work: Leo Gura explains that avoiding or punishing parts of oneself considered 'bad' leads to increased fragmentation and division within. Harmonization, instead, is achieved through love, acceptance, and understanding—key elements of shadow work.
  • Role of Healing and Self-Love: Healing involves recognizing and integrating disowned parts of reality, which includes accepting past wounds and forgiving those who caused them, leading to a remerged wholeness and genuine self-love.
  • Understanding Holism and Consciousness: Leo underscores that God is infinitely conscious, having no shadow, implying that division creates suffering, whereas holistic unity leads to bliss, love, and happiness—akin to experiencing paradise.
  • Dichotomy and Pathology in Emotion and Rationality: The artificial divide between rationality and emotion, such as the misconception that 'facts don't care about your feelings', leads to misunderstanding the human psyche and can generate physical and emotional pathologies.
  • Body Consciousness in Personal Development: Leo notes the importance of body consciousness and practices like yoga and bioenergetics in personal development, underscoring that deeper traumas often lie within the body, driving behavior more so than rational thought.
  • Politics and the Illusion of Division: Discussing 'globalists vs. regular folks', Leo dispels the myth that elites and ordinary people are categorically different, asserting that populism oversimplifies complexities with unholistic thinking, which can have dangerous consequences.
  • Criminal Justice and the Power of Rehabilitation: Leo criticizes the divisive view separating 'criminals' from 'good guys' and advocates for a more compassionate approach to criminal justice, one that fosters rehabilitation instead of punishment for better societal outcomes.
  • Science and Spirituality Schism: Highlighting the disconnection between scientific and spiritual communities, Leo suggests that each camp suffers from not integrating insights from the other, limiting their full potential to understand reality.
  • Science, Spirituality, and the Mind-Body Problem: Science faces limitations due to its materialistic view, struggling with issues like the mind-body problem that spirituality may resolve. Science benefits from spirituality's insights, just as spirituality would progress with more scientific rigor applied to practices like meditation and psychedelics.
  • Detriments of Unholistic Thinking: A reductionistic, materialistic mindset leads to the demystification of life, stripping it of spirit and meaning and fostering societal problems like depression, suicide, and addiction. This narrow approach neglects the importance of holism, unity, and spiritual connection, contributing to major issues such as conflict and civilizational collapse.
  • Transition from Scientism to Holism: The cultural paradigm shifted towards scientism over religion, offering logical advancements but also creating societal dysfunction. Wisdom involves discerning the higher from the lower—scientism often prioritizes the lower (technology, materialism) over the higher (spiritual connection, unity), leading to a disconnection from meaningful life aspects.
  • Pursuit of Unity in Major Fields: Across sectors, like religion and business, there's a common pursuit of dominance and unity, but often in a self-serving manner. For example, religions seek to become the sole way, and businesses aim to monopolize their market. However, this quest for unity can become dysfunctional if approached selfishly.
  • Unity in Geopolitics and Relationships: Geopolitics often attempts to achieve unity through dominance rather than mutual respect and peace. America-first policies illustrate the pitfalls of seeking strength through selfishness, potentially leading to global opposition. Likewise, in relationships and health, unity and well-being are sought, with varying approaches to achieving them.
  • Holism in Language Evolution: Languages aim for unity, which can create barriers or facilitate understanding. Historically, regions with numerous local dialects, like parts of India, showed division, while a unified language aids communication and can symbolize a move towards a more holistic society.
  • Language Unification and Business: Unifying languages in countries such as India, with many dialects and sub-languages, streamlines business processes and communication. Developed nations tend to have a single national language, and globally English is becoming predominant, though this may change if other languages like Chinese gain international influence.
  • Currency Unification and Convenience: A single currency is more convenient for global transactions. Currently, the U.S. dollar is the dominant currency, but cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are emerging as potential universal currencies. This reflects life's pattern of unity and division, seeking dominance and unification.
  • Reductionism Easily Exploited: Narrow, reductionist understanding can be selfishly exploited by 'devils'—those focused only on their concerns—leading to externalizing problems, creating societal pathologies, and shirking responsibility for the whole. This dynamic is evident in science departments with hyper-specialization.
  • Fragmentation within Scientific Fields: The separation of scientific fields—biology, physics, chemistry, psychology, and philosophy—results in a fragmented view of nature and inhibits a comprehensive understanding of reality. Holism would allow for interconnecting diverse departments for a more unified knowledge base.
  • Avoidance of Responsibility in Large Organizations: In large organizations, like phone companies or hospitals, individuals and departments often refuse to take full responsibility for problems, passing them around in circles without resolution. A holistic approach would ensure comprehensive problem-solving.
  • Misleading Single-issue Voters: Single-issue voters can be manipulated in politics, focusing on a narrow concern (like gun control or abortion) without considering all pertinent societal factors. Educated, holistic-thinking citizens are needed for well-functioning democracies, as they consider the totality of issues when making decisions.
  • Leadership and Selflessness: Effective leadership embodies selflessness, recognizing a global commonality and taking responsibility for broader issues. This contrasts with bad leadership, which is characterized by extreme selfishness and narrow self-interest.
  • Recontextualization of Narrow Expertise: Facts and knowledge can be completely reinterpreted when placed in a broader context. Holistic thinkers appreciate this vulnerability and strive for an understanding of the universe that is immune to recontextualization by expanding their context to the broadest possible scope.
  • Trade-off Between Detail and Big Picture: Understanding all details of one aspect, like mathematics or physics, will not provide a grasp of the entire universe. Holistic thinking, akin to zooming out, allows for comprehension of the whole without all details, resembling omniscience.
  • Utilizing Thoughts to Unite or Divide Reality: Thoughts can categorize and separate (divisive thoughts) or recognize commonalities and connections (unitive thoughts). Unitive thinking promotes peace and harmony, while divisive thinking can lead to conflict and disharmony.
  • Limitations of Thought and the Value of Developing Holistic Thinking: All thinking, even holistic, is dualistic and incomplete as it divides reality. However, increasing the quality of thought towards being integrative and unitive creates better solutions and can foresee counterintuitive outcomes, like how absolute freedom may lead to enslavement.
  • Holistic Thinking as the Highest Form of Intelligence: Intelligence is described as holistic pattern recognition providing insight and intuition. It involves deep context awareness, meta-cognition, self-reflection, unbiased and selfless perspectives, and concern for all levels of the universal hierarchy.
  • The Role of Self-awareness in High Intelligence: Becoming aware of one's participation and creation within the universe is essential. The highest intelligence implies the ability to transcend and self-reflect, thereby understanding and integrating oneself as an intrinsic part of everything.
  • Unbiased and Selfless as Highest Intelligence: The ability to be unbiased and selfless is crucial to the highest form of intelligence because it reflects the recognition that everything is one's self. Since everything is united, biases become groundless, and in recognizing one's identity as all-encompassing consciousness, selfishness is seen as inherently flawed and limiting. 
  • God as Infinite Intelligence and Selflessness: Leo Gura equates God to infinite intelligence and selflessness—a state where suffering and limited love do not exist. He argues that selfishness is a byproduct of limited consciousness, and with infinite intelligence, one would choose love, the antithesis of suffering and bias.
  • Psilocybin Mushrooms and the Semantic Map of the Mind: Describing a study on psilocybin mushrooms, Leo shows two circles representing the mind—one densely interconnected, symbolizing a mind on psychedelics, and one with sparse connections, representing a sober state. He suggests that psychedelics facilitate realization of infinite consciousness by increasing mental interconnectivity.
  • Infinite Consciousness and Godhead: The highest state of holism is described as a solid, glowing orb—a semantic representation of God, love, intelligence, and self. Leo suggests that in this state, divisions collapse and all distinctions (e.g., between oneself and others, love and hate) become meaningless, which is referred to as the godhead or complete awakening to oneself as God.
  • Holistic Spectrum of Consciousness: He explains that there are varying levels of consciousness from the highest godhead to the human experience and lower, implying an infinite spectrum of interconnectedness, with the ultimate state being an everlasting deepening into love and unity.
  • Holism as a Core Driver of Actualized.org: Leo Gura cites holism as the primary motivation behind his work with Actualized.org. His dissatisfaction with the lack of holistic perspectives in self-help, science, and other domains drove him to create content that aimed at infinite holism.
  • Cost of Holism: Achieving holism requires selflessness, which can be mentally overwhelming and even lead to the dissolution of the ego, described as a death for the sake of holism. Holism requires the surrendering of all subjective biases and prejudices, allowing one to see truth more clearly.
  • Selflessness and God Realization: True selflessness arises not from seeking benefit but from an inherent desire to surrender subjective biases. This state aligns a person with truth, leading them closer to God realization, which is selflessness, love, and oneness with everything.
  • Sustaining Modern Holism: Leo underscores the rare nature of holistic thinking and the challenges one faces in developing it, suggesting that the ultimate reward of selflessness is worth the pursuit, despite everything it demands to surrender.
  • Engaging with Actualized.org for Development: Leo invites his audience to partake in the resources provided by Actualized.org, such as reading recommended books, joining the forum, following the blog, or supporting the platform, to nurture holism within their personal and professional lives.


Glisseo

Edited by MuadDib

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