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We could discuss it further, and maybe we're both going to be amateur armchair psychologists when we do so. We could be looking at cognitive psychology at this point, for instance. There are a lot of studies that relate to this coming from many fronts.
What do you think about, hell, what I'd call a compromise, in terms of operant strategy. Meaning, automated functions exist whether or not we are involved with their making or not, they will still form, and so on. That being said, that it would be good to temper that automation with situational awareness. To be mindful, and in the moment.
To cultivate both, all the time, of course, but with the lead being awareness. Then, it can be tempered. This is all old and simple stuff, I suppose. I guess it comes down to what you run with every day. What you run with will determine the actions you take. I said over and over baby and bathwater but it didn't come across all that well.
I know that most people cannot sit still without an associative thought crossing their mind within under a half-minute or so. That interests me.
It also interests me that the epistemological model we use here is top-down, meaning, brain, emotions, body, more or less. I find that to be limited. NB got it to a certain extent, where he countered the "emotions are not tools of cognition" statement by gently saying, yes, that is so, but they contain valuable information and that needs to be checked out. From there, you could look at Dr. Daniel Golman's work (e.g. Emotional Intelligence, Working With Emotional Intelligence, and so on).
In studying the (gasp) work of Gurdjieff (which will lead to Ken Wilber, which will lead to a firefight), I find there is a case to be made for alignment of intellectual, emotional, and physical centers. In other words, emotions are tools of cognition, as is the body, we are simply not familiar with them.
See, it goes to dark waters, and sword-fights. People cling to things, whether they be knowledge or otherwise. Man plans, God smiles. :) Reality is a harsh mistress...
best, rde
(Edited by Rich Engle on 11/04, 12:11pm)
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