Theory seeds
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Safety as Predictability, Context, and Proportional Reasoning
Safety is often treated as a response to obvious danger. In this framework, however, danger is understood in two different ways. The first is predictable danger, where clear signs already indicate risk: targeted aggression, threats, boundary violations, lack of exits, intoxication, or escalating behavior. The second is potential danger created by loss of predictability, where… Continue reading
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Bias as Sedimented Perception
When learned reactions begin to feel like reality Bias is often described as a belief, opinion, or prejudice. But bias does not always operate as a clear, conscious thought. More often, it appears earlier than belief, as an immediate feeling that something is wrong, inferior, threatening, embarrassing, or undesirable. This is what makes bias difficult… Continue reading
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Envy, Perceived Legitimacy, and the Psychology of Dislike
Dislike is often treated as a simple emotional reaction: we either like or dislike others based on their behavior. However, this perspective is limited. In many cases, dislike is not a direct response to what others do, but a reaction shaped by internal processes such as blocked desire and perceived legitimacy. This essay explores two… Continue reading
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The Spiderman Syndrome
Perception is very important for people. The way people perceive someone creates value for that person. Value is not only about what someone is, but about how that person is seen and talked about. Continue reading
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TALENT AND CREATIVITY
This essay explores the relationship between talent and creativity. It argues that talent represents biological predisposition, while creativity emerges as a structured interaction of multiple cognitive abilities. By examining inheritance, environment, and mental architecture, the text proposes an ecological model of how ideas are formed and expressed. Continue reading
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Perception and Imagination: How Reality Becomes Lived
The theory of perception – Perception represents a set of cognitive filters, both visible and invisible, primarily rooted in the latent processes of the human mind. The way we perceive people, events, texts, and everything that surrounds us — both in conceptual and existential reality — is interpreted by our mind extremely quickly. We are… Continue reading
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Perception as a Primary Mechanism
It occurs before emotion, before language, and sometimes before conscious awareness. Perception is not passive and not merely sensory; it is an extremely fast process of detection, filtering, and evaluation of an event. Continue reading
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A Structural Hypothesis on Subconscious Narratives and the Retraining of the Human Mind
The theory suggests that many reactions arise pre-consciously through narrative patterns that prioritize coherence over certainty. Under stress, these patterns can form anxiety-driven mental scenarios that shape behavior. Lasting change requires retraining automatic responses through repetition and simulated practice. Continue reading
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The Ability to Understand Through Thinking
The more complex a brain is, the more capable it becomes of producing complex and coherent responses to external stimuli through thinking. Not all existing structures possess a brain. A brain implies biological organization, internal neural interaction, and the capacity to process information in relation to the environment. Continue reading
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Time, from my own philosophical perspective
Time, for me, is the movement of matter through space, and we measure one movement with another movement through an instrument that has its own motion. Time is a concept, but also a tool. We live only in the now, in this eternal continuous present. Continue reading
