My objection is that these models are static. Even in the case of empirical science, models are always subject to updating. But not in the case of popular theories, which have no balances and checks — no recourse to being updated, except on the basis of populist mood and sentiment.
Moreover, I have an even deeper objection, which is that people who use static models belong to a lower spiritual class than me. My reason for saying this is twofold —
1— because those who use static models are working with a two-dimensional view of life, whereas I am working from a three-dimensional perspective, that incorporates not only the present dimensions of being, but also how we are influenced and become different through time. The people who want to control us and our behavior work with conceptions that have a time limit on them. So, time is actually the force of freedom on our side, since it enables us not to be fixed by certain limitations, especially those that would impose themselves from the outside. These others, however, do not implicitly embrace the knowledge that we are all dynamic creatures who can, and must, change over time, if we are to be fully functional and revitalized. People who do not understand this implicitly are slaves by their very nature.
2 —2 —because some have a warrior nature and some do not. And (similar to my first point) someone using a non-dynamic or fixed model to define themselves tells me that they are reliant on others to define them, or that they have given up, or do not implicitly understand that self-actualisation is very much akin to fighting an ongoing war with self-definitions — since all interpretational paradigms, even the most flattering, fix us into position, and thus reduce our capacities.
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