Crossing boundaries
Seeing changes into looking
Intuition and inner voice carry out this change. This change is very difficult for many people to understand. The reason for this lies in the indispensable need for a high level of abstraction.
While ordinary abstraction is primarily concerned with defining, 'intuitive' abstraction requires pure seeing. Looking a priori is an example of this way of abstracting. A priori, there are different ways of ordering. If you want to sift through these possibilities, you have to concentrate entirely on ordering.
High concentration on ordering reveals inner perception as the seeing of a priori conditions. In this way, the possibilities of ordering reveal themselves as natural movements, in this case as possibilities of orienting oneself through changes in the external and/or internal directions of vision.
In this way, the narrowness or breadth of the environment influences the narrowness or breadth of thought.
Although the questions that arise depend primarily on upbringing and education, they are organized primarily by natural conditions a priori. Thus the upward and downward directions of vision initiate the ideas of superordination or abstraction and subordination or concretization.
The movements forwards and backwards initiate anticipation and reflection or criticism.
Intuition and inner voice carry out this change. This change is very difficult for many people to understand. The reason for this lies in the indispensable need for a high level of abstraction.
While ordinary abstraction is primarily concerned with defining, 'intuitive' abstraction requires pure seeing. Looking a priori is an example of this way of abstracting. A priori, there are different ways of ordering. If you want to sift through these possibilities, you have to concentrate entirely on ordering.
High concentration on ordering reveals inner perception as the seeing of a priori conditions. In this way, the possibilities of ordering reveal themselves as natural movements, in this case as possibilities of orienting oneself through changes in the external and/or internal directions of vision.
In this way, the narrowness or breadth of the environment influences the narrowness or breadth of thought.
Although the questions that arise depend primarily on upbringing and education, they are organized primarily by natural conditions a priori. Thus the upward and downward directions of vision initiate the ideas of superordination or abstraction and subordination or concretization.
The movements forwards and backwards initiate anticipation and reflection or criticism.
wfschmid - 8. Januar, 03:47
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