| Thinking, Being, Health and Disease |
Speech to the Faculty of Health and Social SciencePolytechnic University of Hong Kong November 2003 by Dennis K. Chong © We are truly honoured to be asked to speak to you. What we utter here, we pray and hope will stir the peace and tranquility of your high institution because we are We would like to begin by posing to you this question:
Who or what are you? When you answer this question, you suddenly realize that your answers are opinions about yourself. Let us say we can all agree that whatever you may say about yourself, we can all agree with you when you say:I am. Now to say that “I am” presupposes that there is an “I” first. This “I” is in turn an opinion. It is you asserting that “I am I.”To say “I” is, at some level, to know “I.” It is in the knowing of “I” that we implicitly know that it is in the process of “am-ing.” The offering of this self-recursive evaluation is a derivative of a faculty that is able to do what it is doing. What it is doing is to perceive distinctions, interpretations opinions judgements adjudications evaluations determinations insights perceptions conclusions derivations abstraction. Such distinctions are ABOUT itself, others, things and the reality in which it is in.In the Greek language, the ABOUT is called meta. We call this faculty the meta function, m(f). It would seem that logically we are You are the m(f). I am the m(f). In Psychology this faculty is known as the ability to abstract. The abstraction is the distinction. The operation of the m(f) is continual if not continuous: Whether one likes it or not, one must interpret other people, who in turn interpret other people (often) interpreting still other people, and so on. Interpreting of others interpreting still others are not a matter of choice or chance because one so frequently and spontaneously interprets other people in multiple embedded and iterated equences of attitudes that one comes to think of explicit metathoughts in similar sequences. Radu J. Bogdan: Minding Minds The MIT Press 2000 page 153. We have a pet, a Beagle. It is very obvious that he has a meta function because he can arrive at judgements, distinctions and conclusions. Human thinking is metamenation. It is the m(f) that gives us the power to think. Thinking is metamentation. The faculty of the m(f) uses the mind as the engine to generate its thoughts. In this context, we now have a problem. This problem the assertion by René Decartes:Cogito, ergo sum. (I think therefore I am.) To say this is practically to say that because I think I am a human being. This position was serious questioned by Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek by his character, Data the android. In the series, it was and is very clear that he was deemed NOT to be human even though he could think better and faster than a human being. The bar that was set for him to be deemed human and which he could not meet was that he had to have feelings or emotions. This he could not do. In time he was to acquire the emotion chip. The unanswered question now is:With the emotion chip, was Data human? This leads us to an examination of feelings. What are feelings? To answer this we now propose a practical demonstration.From this demonstration we can conclude that
as on ascends the meta scale, the final meta state escapes its temporal co-ordinates. As a result when you ask the question, say, Because Meta-States have references to other states of consciousness, an abstraction of thought-feelings about previous thoughts-feelings, As meta-state continue up the scale into more and more transcendental states, they become more atemporal Michael Hall: META-STATES A DOMAIN OF LOGICAL LEVELS. SELF-REFLEXIVENESS IN HUMAN STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS. Empowerment In this respect, we believe it is not inappropriate and certainly timely to observe that for Descartes to come up with his aphorism, leaves Let then remind ourselves what we have said. It is our body that generates analogical thoughts. Through the m(f) our body thinks. It does so by We can also have feelings through the mind. This happens because our mental thoughts have their analogical isomorphisms, i.e. feelings. You only Feelings can be well-formed or ill-formed. The critical distinction between a well-formed of ill-formed emotion is whether having it will One can have primary ill-formed feelings or one can have ill-formed metastates. Primary feelings are not sustained over time. All emotions can vary intensity. Thus:
Here is another example:
The atemporal property of a metastate is by definition constant since we “carry them across time”. The result, VI we live in the emotion of the metastate VII it is constant. Both above conditions inevitably mean we habituate and accommodate to it. The consequences are that: 1. we will not know what it is about 2. if it is ill-formed, one would not be aware of its deleterious consequences 3. we will not be aware of the things that we might do that flow from it. There are other ill-formed states that carry across time with us because they are functions some powerful belief. I am no good. This is a derivative of the m(f) but it is in the form of an identification. It is in the category of a self-recursive opinion about We now realize that an ill-formed emotion carries analog consequences and at critical thresholds, it can have potentially
The critical question now becomes: How can a person do the shift from feeling sick to actual disease? He will do the shift when: 1. there is junko logic in place 2. the emotion reaches a semantic threshold. The term junko logic was originally coined by Richard Bandler. It refers to the analogical mal-formed logic in the Nobody likes me. I am a sinner. I am no good. People will look down on me. Nobody is going to put me down. What is a semantic threshold of an internal state? The semantic threshold of an emotion, feeling or internal state is What is a semantic threshold of an internal state? The semantic threshold of an emotion, feeling or internal state is when it is Emotion Analog equivalent a yen for someone rape anger hitting out grief tears and wailing and screaming anxiety hysterical panic jealousy fighting hunger ravenous consuming of food contempt urinating on another This is what we found out about a woman who had a cancer of her throat and then a cancer of her breast. We applied the
With the Quadrant Search you can retrieve critical information that is out of conscious awareness. This the result of the Quadrant Searches from a patient who firstly developed a cancer of her left breast. When this was
We then applied the Quadrant Search regarding her thyroid cancer:
The point of this presentation is to show you where the technology is at today in the awesome exploration of the Today we are able to find out what are the underlying sentient process that underpin the human condition that is the In this endeavour we are desperate for your co-participation in the exploration of the unexplored country that is before you. We thank you Dean for this signal opportunity and singular honour to share this with you.
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