Phenomenology of the Spiritual Mode of Being

Originally Written: March 27th 2020

Here we turn our conscious gaze to the mode of being I will classify as the “Spiritual Mode of Being”. This is a general noesis, or mode of being, which encapsulates different types of intentional action and their correlated ability to be consciously experienced, such as perceiving, thinking, feeling, speaking, and acting. It is general in that its components comprise distinct areas of intentioned activity, themselves classifying specific fragments of the totality of the mode of being. The Spiritual mode of being is the change in ones Being to one in which all areas of intention are modified by the noesis itself, in a way which is specific to the noesis. The way in which experience and intentioned action (all mental phenomena) are modified is thus the purpose of our inquiry. Being that we are to proceed down phenomenological lines, we must suspend all typical “natural” viewpoints, with an eye to the transcendental, or that which supersedes or courses throughout all experience. We here are looking for the essential characters of the noesis thus described as “Spiritual”, to be derived from analysis in its link between its constituent offspring, which is the subjective datum acquired through present moment awareness (Vipassana). This attentional factor of the mode of being must be presently applied whilst one is within the mode of Spiritual Being in order to accumulate data in respect to the field of consciousness which it indicates. This datum is to be retrospectively analyzed phenomenologically and expounded in its differences from the “natural” mode of being, as well as its essential characteristics delimited and isolated.

It appears from the start that this Spiritual Mode of Being is itself modified and conditioned through individually acquired knowledge; experiential, habitual, learned, as well as modified by genetically disposed character traits. So our path early on brings us to a dual exploration. My subjectively defined individual conception and phenomenological analysis into the contents present herein (my experience is all I have to work from) and the objective phenomenological essence of the mode of Being in its general application within the intersubjective realm, derived from reducing my personal experience to its fundamental features.

One, what is the most optimal, effective, beneficial – Spiritual Mode of Being, as it appears to me. This “optimal” being presents itself as characterized from the moral realist perspective, as that which produces the most “well-being” to the individual, his family, community, country, humankind, all life, both in the present, with implications for the short term and long term. Thus, present and future, across the individual and all life, are all morally implicated in my defining of “optimal”. Here “well-being” doesn’t imply merely escape from suffering, but may entail suffering with a silver lining (tough love), though, all factors considered, produces intentioned action which is most beneficial across the spectrum to psychological growth, character growth, communal freedom from suffering, etc. To me it appears in a pragmatic sense that the most optimal Spiritual Mode of Being is thus strictly a pursuance of this abstract conceptualization of the highest “optimal” ideal Spiritual Mode of Being, as, for practical purposes, my very conception of the most “optimal” mode of Being spiritual, itself is synonyms with Perfect Wisdom, or the best mode of Being one can act from. Given the complications in this, the most one can do is strive, from this personally spiritual mode of being, towards the attainment of the most optimal mode of Being, the characteristics of which would be modified with the further acquisition of knowledge, experience, and intuition.

While cultural and religious perennial similarities present themselves as Unity with the “One” in the forfeiting of the individual for a “higher ideal” such as Atman, Buddha, God, Jesus, Yahweh, Allah, what we find in secular spiritual instances is a similar pursuant of an all-encompassing “truth” and “oneness” or feeling of inseparability from the universe as a whole. In other instances, the individual may enter the Spiritual Mode of Being by attempting to become the ideal improved potentiality of himself, the contents which constitutes this improved potentiality reflected in the individual’s ideal. While pursuance of metaphysical, supernatural, secular, ethical, self-realization, truth-seeking, or generally transcendent understanding and alignment may all constitute the momentary ideal with which we are striving towards as an ideal within any individual’s experience of the Spiritual Mode of Being, the particular instances here serve only as a verification as an endpoint to the manifestation of the necessary essence which constitutes the generalized conceptualization of the Spiritual Mode of Being.

What this generally described as “Spiritual Mode of Being” from which I believe we should enter in order to pursue this “optimal” mode of being, is, is what we next will seek to find. What the objective essence of such a noesis is, and what is its objective, intersubjective discoverable characteristics are. In any act constituting the experiential neomatic content (the content of intention in the presently arising subjective experience) the Being of the “individual” is directed toward an object. In entering into the spiritual mode of being you are putting your Being in relation to an “object” which is other than itself. This object of intention, whether consciously realized or unconsciously manifested from, is in the Spiritual Mode of Being conceptualized as an ideal which is higher than the ideal of one’s current self-conceptualization. Whether that ideal itself constitutes an Abstract Being, a thought about morality, a metaphysical truth, or a wish for an ideal future is aside from the generality which we seek to uncover here.

This grounding of the mode of being in intentionality towards an object other than oneself which has this nature of being “higher” “greater” “better” “true” is always an abstract conception, if it were a scientific or otherwise “naturally” expressive content it would not relate to the Spiritual Mode of Being, but to an altogether different Mode of Being. The very nature of this Spiritual Mode of Being is in the transcendence of the ideal towards which Being is directed upon. This ideal is rarely consciously conceptualized in its totality, and always has subconscious and causally integrated roots below the conscious psyche, yet exists as a content which can be consciously symbolized, as well as consciously directed. This generalization of the fundamental generality of the mode of Being holds cross culturally, intersubjectively. In other words, it is produced through the alignment with one’s own Being with the abstract idea of a Being greater than oneself.

This abstract idea of a Being greater than oneself is always doxic, or grounded upon what one believes to be greater than oneself. The individual difference here will appear upon introspection directed phenomenologically across our varying ideals, whether it’s a God, the possibility of a greater character, or the moral realist striving for the height of wisdom. Of course there will be multiple “ideas” (Kantian sense, including thoughts, mental pictures, abstract representation, etc.) which one intellectually can devise as being greater than oneself, the alignment in pursuance or pursuance of unification with the idea as characterizing one’s mode of Being, is what here delimit the mode of being Spiritual. The possibility of variance of “idea” (in any individual) here pursued enables multiple “Spiritual Modes of Being” to be possibly manifest in the individual, but necessarily and experientially, all are contained within a unitary noesis in its producing the present moments intentioned actions. In other words, one individual may possibly enter into a Spiritual Mode of Being today which is altogether different from the one he enters tomorrow, or 5 years ago, depending on the idea for which he currently desires to pursue as that which represents the abstract being greater than himself. In addition, multiple ideas of such a Being greater than oneself can all be present in a connected formulation of one’s present Spiritual Mode of Being. Either one, or multiple, abstract objects for which we strive to be in alignment with can constitute a singular momentary Spiritual Mode of Being, often causing dissonance and the inability to successfully manifest an authentic representation of oneself in actions stemming from such a noesis (there is difficulty in consciously directing one’s actions to be in alignment with simultaneous content, especially if it isn’t articulated clearly).

The generalized essence of the Spiritual Mode of Being is thus here objectified. It is the mode from which one’s being attempts to align itself with an idea of a being greater than oneself. The object perceived in the subjective experiential noema (the perceived as experienced) produced from the noesis thus described is modified in accordance with the individual’s knowledge of what the abstract idea represents, as well as his trained ability to act in accordance with such knowledge. Thus, concentrated conscious effort directed towards attaining this Spiritual Mode of Being, which is itself is directed toward a “singular” idea, enables the practitioner to further be able to better manifest intentioned actions in accordance with the conscious idea, based on his practice within such a space of consciousness, his acquired knowledge, and time spent within such a mode of being. Unconscious entrance, tempered through habit and subconscious causal correlates, into a Spiritual Mode of Being, will, likewise, increase the ability for such a mode of being to manifest, as well as “carry along” the individual in his (Hiedeggerian) “thrownness” towards the ends of the unconsciously pursued ideal. This, to me, is sub-optimal, and I believe that our Mode of Being and its pursuance are better served by a consciously formulated idea, based upon rationally and logically coherent meaning and value structures which are explicitly defined and desired consciously by the individual. The unconscious adherence to dogmatic infallible claims, seek to halt growth towards a higher resolution image of metaphysical and moral “truth”, the use of a consciously conceptualized fallibilist yet clearly defined idea to be pursued in the Spiritual Mode of Being can help us to achieve progress towards such strivings. Diligent discipline towards not only attainment of the spiritual mode of being, but in addition towards the expansion of knowledge towards the idea within the mode of being, better enables the individual to produce a conscious experience (action, perception, mental formation, etc.) which is representative of the idea one is striving for.

The ability and manifestation of introspection is modified in important ways depending on what one’s individual acquired idea happens to be, and the Spiritual Mode of Being in its tendency to produce awareness of the present moment is directly related to what that idea is in its content. Ideals altogether lacking an importance of attention upon the present moment necessarily produce conscious experience with which we are not aware of in the present moment. Conscious clarity in reference to the idea necessarily produces an ability for the unconscious as well as consciously directed manifestations produced through the noesis of the Spiritual Mode of Being to be more or less in alignment with the idea.

As far as the entrance to a mode of being which is contrary to the Spiritual, in order to modify it so that it too is in alignment with one’s belief and value structure, seems to be a mode of being which falls within the domain of the spiritual itself, it is a subsystem located within the totality of the optimal spiritual mode of being. To pursue different aspects of ones Being, whether it be relational, moral, metaphysical, yet in alignment with the Spiritual Ideal, is to necessarily be within the totality of the Spiritual Mode of Being’s modification, and poses an overlay of content and influence. We cannot separate our this integral mode of being as easily as we would like from the totality of our Being, like our perceptive and embodied systems, it is integrally connected to all other subsystems.

 Many aspects of our conscious experience are thus related as fragments of the totality of the spiritual mode of Being, the metaphysical truth pursuance, ethical embodiment, our interactions in relationships, are all noetic content which could possibly be derivative from the totality of the Spiritual Mode of Being, and effort towards their improvement, or increased articulation of what is meant in their “optimization” necessarily will alter the totality of the Spiritual Mode of Being, while simultaneously, modifications of the Totality bring modifications of the fragments noematic content produced. This relational modification can furthermore be extrapolated to the Totality of Being and its mode of Beings thus constituting our noesis in their ever fluctuating arising, in the same manner, and vice versa.

The modifications of our ideal, produce modifications in the thoughts, actions, feelings, and circumstantial reactions we experience. In addition, the flux of each of these constitutive experiential moments, has an effect upon the totality. The change of the whole influences the change of the constituent elements, and the change of the constituent elements are inexorably connected to the whole, and therefore to each other. The modification in any of these domains, which necessarily experientially takes place as the impermanence of time correlates to the impermanence in mental content, produces a modification in all other domains, in all other higher or lower mental states. Lower being closer to the real experience, and higher being more abstract foundational essences. As the Spiritual Mode of Being is that which aims at transcendence of the normal mode of Being, or of our current actualized state, it often produces feelings, thoughts, and actions which are wholly unique to it, not necessarily unique in their manifestations, but unique in their intentionality. While we can do one thing for many reasons, the reasons why we perform any intentioned act within the Spiritual Mode of Being are directed correlated to the ideal which we doxically hold as the imperative of pursuance corresponding to the Specific form of the Spiritual Mode of Being we find ourselves in. Mindful recognition of the unique manifestations which arise from these intentions can aide the ignorant phenomenologist in determining from which ideal or ideals are currently underlying the content of his experiences.

Through determined effort in reducing from the specific to the general, in the stripping away of the manifestations to their abstract correlates, and the unity between the various datum, the individual working at discovering his content can uncover the abstract conceptualization of his most profound beliefs. In the practice here described, the individual can subsequently look to verify the precision and alignment of such an ideal to the non-transcendental, or “natural” viewpoint. This is a practice which is altogether unnecessary, yet I believe, personally, is beneficial. By being able to believe in the logical coherence between one’s consciously discovered/formulated higher ideal and reality, one becomes more certain and thus modifies his mode of being in a way which is beneficial. This certainty itself, I believe, should not be a dogmatic certainty, but the ideal we are certain of should contain the possibility of fallibility, the ability to change with time, as an integral part of its conceptualization. The certainty of such a belief places the individual in a place of potential growth in regards to his progress towards the ideal underlying the Spiritual Mode of Being, which, given the impermanence and thrownness of our experience, we may be thrust into at any moment, yet is possible for its content and actualization to be modified consciously (to a degree).

t is through the conscious alignment with that personalized “divine”, “transcendent”, “immanent”, ideal that we can make progress within the Spiritual Mode of Being towards an end we are both intellectually and intuitively manifesting as well as aware of.

Phenomenological Analysis of Vipassana Meditation Noema

Originally Written: March 24th 2020

While mindfulness requires diligent effort towards directing the gaze of conscious awareness towards the content of the present moment arising in consciousness, a phenomenological analysis requires much more psychologically rooted tools to perform at a truth revealing level (optimal/accurate/useful in degrees). While we can acquire the benefits of mindfulness through attention to the present, the requirements for a phenomenological analysis require intellectual clarity, knowledge of various scientific disciplines, non-contradictory logical reasoning, causal intuition, time and diligence directed by the mental gaze towards an authentic unravelling of the structure of the psyche, in short they require the ability to concentrate and pursue abstract correlates in their relation to the manifest contents discovered in mindfulness. This necessarily entails work, time, and discipline if one is to uncover the essential foundations for the noeses from which the noema (Husserl’s Terminology) are correlated and initially perceived as inextricably connected.

I wish to pursue the meaning, the noeses, the mode of Being, and its essential attributes for an experiential noema of, namely: entering into a Vipassana present moment meditation (Basic Vipassana Meditation). Now, first and foremost, I must recognize that the experience is of a specific differentiated nature, meaning, that I recognize my transition into a mode of awareness directed upon the present moment which is distinctly different from the previous mode of being, for which I conceptualize in my phenomenological analysis as an experience of mindfulness meditation. The goal for me, here, is to recognize the essence of the mode of Being which enabled and embodied such a subjective experience, and to uncover why.

First I analyze the situation for what it is, through recollection in memory and reflection upon the experiential content. Once I have clearly in mind the content I was experiencing in conscious awareness at the time of the period of mindfulness, I can circumnavigate the experience to get a clear view of the noema with which we are interested in attaining the correlated noesis. The multiple perspective exploration which ensues is the part of the work we must undergo to get a clear and authentic representation of the content. Here a reliance on clear, judgmental, unbiased memory is a preferred indifferent to us, as certain acts of reflection we may be unable to untangle from the truth of the matter. It is preferred in that it directly relates to an optimal outcome, and indifferent in that we recognize that the ability to do so is inherent in our intellectual capacities, and may…unfortunately…be out of our control in the time being, yet ultimately able to be improved through persistence and experience in performing phenomenological analyses, as well as with the increase of wisdom and knowledge in related mental faculties (logic / reason / intellectual concentration). To be able to perform such an endeavor we must “bracket” the “natural world” as described by Husserl, the degree to which we are able to separate the influence of a natural standpoint, or the unmindful mode of being, is crucial to the accuracy of the conclusion acquired. The amount of clarity in our recollection, and the resistance to any narrating and “Ego” driven defining of the content of the noema enable us to better or worse produce a clear, more accurate phenomenological result.

With the noema defined and held in our conscious gaze, that of the Vipassana mediation experience, we probe into our intuition to disclose what the intentionality of the acts performed in the noema are stemming from, or how the noematic content relates to the noetic content, their connection and formulation. For what purpose did we pursue such activity? From what mode of Being did it stem from? Why would we spend time doing such an act? Obviously the answer to these questions are differentiated in response to the individual, his circumstances, and the specific noema in space and time in which we are analyzing. Thus, my uncovering of the phenomena of mindfulness is related to this singular experience, and the work put in is towards the end in direct regard to that singular experience. The results therefore disclose information related to that mode of being intuited as being preliminary and underlying to the noema, but, also, they disclose a possible mode of being which can generally be stated as being able to manifest across the realm of future experience. While we discover the noesis of that singular noema in the analysis, we recognize it as an integral part of our psyche, and thus as having the potential of emerging again as a correlate to any future experience, and more specifically to acts of similar nature to the one inquired upon.

The intentionality in the case described is personally intuited in conceptualizations (word representations of “real” phenomena) based upon our acquired total synthesis of Being, containing specific knowledge with which the individual utilizes in his description and exploration of the phenomenological correlates to the experience. Language and its epistemology in regards to the individual is therefore an important aspect of any abstraction. Different perspectives and explanations are possible as being uncovered, as all being parts of the whole correlated explanation of the mode of Being relevant. Thus, we can expect always a partial conclusion, as the limit of knowledge and the kind of representation used (definition of words used in conceptualization is varied according to the individual). In my personal case I concluded, after work towards unravelling, a number of intuitions which may partially constitute the nature of the noeses underlying the phenomena of Vipassana meditation, in its manifestation and presentation in memory discovered by myself. The implications of such findings, and their relevancy towards further explanation across multiple disciplines, is later to be expounded upon.

I here wish to expound my personal findings to explore what I found, the implications, again, will later be preliminarily sketched out. In looking towards the intention I intuited that a mode of being of intentionality was prevalent throughout the experience. The conscious thought arose in which directed my being towards actualizing a mindfulness practice, and thus I habitually followed previous attempts at actualizing a Vipassana mediation, as I have up to this point acquired. The sitting still, eyes closed, and directing of the gaze into the present moment followed this consciously directed thought of wishing to perform a Vipassana meditation. Attention was focused upon the fleeting, transient contents of consciousness as it presented an awareness of perceptions of sensations and sensory content such as hearing, bodily pressure upon the chair, thoughts used in describing the present, attention brought to non-conceptually arising observation of the breath, sounds, feeling. I witnessed thoughts appear, I witnessed attention change. In retrospect there was always a content to which I could possibly be attentive to, although for brief moments my initial intention of pursuing a constant awareness of the present moment (a general guideline for Vipassana) was broken by forgetfulness of the practice as a thought or mental formation hindered my remembrance of the practice, but eventually was brought back to the attention upon the task at hand of being mindful. The variation in the content of consciousness in pursuing itself, varied in accuracy as it drifted between the awareness of the present, and non-awareness of its own content. These two poles make up a general description of the noema from start (that of entering into the mode of being) to end (that of exiting the mode of being and transitioning to a phenomenological analysis of the noema which had passed). The noema has been roughly, simply, conceptualized.

As there was a content connected to consciousness, there is a content of the underlying mode of being, the noesis, to that noema. Where consciousness was intent on pursuing Vipassana meditation, why was it pursuing Vipassana meditation? The answer lies in a multitude of phenomenological reasons relating to the nature of the mode of being which so desires such an experience (Phenomenology of Desire). This desire we will later expound upon. Several I will here explore as being uncovered in intuitional analyses. The mode of being is characterized by a will for character development, for becoming a better person, embodying the virtues with which to act upon in an optimal way for said character development. Upon investigation I discovered that from a doxological perspective (of my inherent intellectual belief structure) that I believe the pursuit of mindfulness to be relating and influential towards the goal of the improvement of character. Thus, part of the noetic content making up the whole noesis isn’t only of intentionality constitution, but also of doxic positionality (my Being’s relation to what I believe). I, through whatever reason (a causal chain of connectivity leads to our current belief structure), also hold as high in my meaning structure, or value hierarchy, the pursuit of character development (probably a conceptually acquired content stemming from content such as experiential knowledge and practical evaluation of Aristotle’s Nichomechean Ethics).  Thus, the mode of being described as character development has revealed itself as containing noetic content of intentionality, doxic positionality (my relation to my beliefs), and value pursuit (my pursuit of a value which I have personally acquired as something hierarchical more important to me than other experiences). The result of such content in experience being the actualization of the underlying desire for character development manifest in the Vipassana meditation noema which I experienced.

Now we look to analyze why I contain such a doxic, value, and intentional structure. While the noema, the experience itself, is put into the highest position of concreteness, a relation to the recollection in the awareness of the memory of the experience would be in the second order of concreteness (it loses something of the initial concrete experience in the conceptual and mental formation), and in the third dimension of abstraction we have intuited the noetic structure which we believe to underlie the initial 1st dimension experience based upon the 2nd dimension experience (of recollection). The 3rd dimensional conceptual abstraction defines parts of the contents of the noesis available to us through the 2nd dimension and is itself able to be subject to phenomenological analyses, just as much as any other noema. But that’s a side note just to convey two things, namely, that each step in the phenomenological analyses is itself a moment which can be phenomenologically analyzed in its own noematic content, and also from that to conclude that the limit of content available to be phenomenologically analyzed is thus limitless in extension.

Continuing down our analysis we enter a 4th dimension of analysis, as to what purpose the noesis, the mode of being, which contains (in our partial exploration) the content of the underlying mode of being producing the noema, is itself produced by. To this we must enter into much broader and more profound territory, the full exploration of requires much scientific insight, and the space of which is open to further investigation in the fields of sociology, evolutionary biology, formal biology, psychology, and philosophy. As Merleau Ponty points out, there are many senses to which a phenomenon gives, multiple significant attributes that are interrelated and constituting of the phenomenon, many interrelated perspectives from which to gaze upon it, all of which simultaneously constitute the phenomena, yet we can find, that some give a broader defining of its characteristics than others do, although, in actuality, they cannot be separated. On a basic level it is an automatic habitual intuition, for me, to explain the noetic content thus described in evolutionary biological terms. Underlying all intentionality and modes of being, and in their modification, and their discovered content, is a persistent desire on behalf of the organism which I find myself as (Dasein (thrown)), as well as the genetic makeup, to “desire” (in affect) to preserve itself, recreate itself, and accurately recreate itself. By desire here in quotations we are referring to the biological correlate of the anthropomorphic sense of desire and its synonymous connotation of “willing/wanting/striving”, which, in effect, is attempting to achieve something. While we can view acquisition of character traits and thus modes of being underlying them in part to society, culture, past experience, the circumstances, time; I initially look towards the concrete and most fundamental underlying substratum for my personal exploration of this 4th dimension. This biological “desire” evolutionarily is beneficial in its manifestation in the mode of being of character development in that, (I believe), through making myself a better person I can better navigate existence (insight into nature of reality through Vipassana), enabling me to become a stronger, wiser individual (in my reduction of suffering and improving of wellbeing). This biological “desire” underlying the manifestation of the mode of being of character development also simultaneously allows the individual to be better able to avoid death, sickness, injury, in short, that which is contrary to the continuation of my genetic material, and necessarily the individual with which I am. The preservation and safety of the genome is thus satisfied in this explanation. Also, the second characteristic of genetic “purpose”, the procreation and replication of the genetic material, find their explanation in the noema and its coinciding noesis. By embodying what the individual believes to be character enhancing he is simultaneously embarking to become a more viable candidate for procreation, in thus manifesting the mode of being previously described, the individual (in my case unconsciously, yet consciously uncovered) “believes” (proof through action)  in the pursuit of such activities which are produced by a character development mode of being, as being themselves tools towards character development and thus to the replication of his genes. This satisfies the second requirement in the biological imperative.

This rudimentary exploration towards the phenomenological underpinnings of a specific noematic experience is far from conclusive, but has provided information towards which I can use to understand how and why and from what mode of being the content of my experience is possible to be originating in. The conscious pursuit of ever more accurate descriptions of such a nature, indeed the meaning as to why the entire phenomenological investigation can be performed, is found in the insights gleaned by our own self-examination and realization, as well as has its utilization in the various scientific fields; psychology, biology, as well as obviously philosophy. With logic, reason, and intuition as our guides, following a phenomenological methodology, we are able to piece together the underlying characterizations of modes of being from a reduction from the “things themselves” experientially in any given noema. As the intuitions are discovered philosophically, the deeper explorations and explanations of the questions it is able to discover are thus open to pursuance by the various scientific disciplines. The verification of initial insights, the pursuit of answers to novel questions discovered in phenomenological analysis, and the subjective revelation of objective truths intuitive through persistent work in phenomenological analysis is something which can benefit anyone who contains the psychic imperative to seek the truth. The intentionality behind such an imperative leaves itself open to important and necessary research, across various disciplines, of which the answers can be valuable in their usefulness and beneficiality for us all (I believe).

On the Phenomenological Mode of Being Itself

Originally Written: March 10th 2020

We unconsciously shift modes of being as ever changing circumstances prompt the direction of our essential Being. We all are unconsciously shifting from state to state in the “natural being”, that is, in direct opposition to a “phenomenological being” which recognizes the content as stemming from the distinct modes of being available to our psyche. Somewhere in between is the “mindful being” which is able to recognize the content stemming from the “phenomenological mode of being” or the noesis. The mindful mode fails to recognize the noeses. The phenomenological mode recognizes the mode, but only retrospectively. In directing attention towards the content manifesting in another person’s intentional content (acts such as speech / actions / what we perceive in others as displaying) we can place rudimentary bounds on the state of being they are displaying. The problem with recognizing our own noesis in the moment is that we only apply conceptual definitions to states which already happened, whether they were moments passed, or quite far removed from the present. The present constantly advances, I would say for practical purposes, it advances seamlessly, as our mental processing and subjective experience of it, for practical purposes, is a seamless, transient, impermanent flow of phenomena as they are altered “by the moment”. The smallest piece of the present we are able to experience falls somewhere on a timeline of “Planck time”, with which is smaller than the brain processing power we contain is able to visualize or notice. For all intents and purposes, the moment is not able to be captured, and as it is constantly being altered (the contents of consciousness is constantly being altered) it places us in a very difficult position in regard to noticing our current noesis. What we can do, is notice what noesis we previously were in, and by so noticing, enter into a phenomenological analytic mode of being, which we know we are contained in, if we are performing a phenomenological analysis. Without conscious attention being focused upon the noesis of the previous moment, we are simply not present in the phenomenological analyzing mode of Being, and if we are so seeking such specifications we know we are in a phenomenological analyzing mode of Being. In other words, we are only mindful when we are mindful. And we are only aware of our current state of being when we are looking for it, in which we can define our current mode of being as that which is looking for its current mode of being. Any other mode of being is manifested in a way which is happening, yet is not consciously found, as our consciousness isn’t directed towards an awareness of it. We cannot find what we are not seeking, yet the only thing we can find, is that we are seeking.

The only mode of being which we are phenomenologically able to analyze as being our present mode of being, is the phenomenological analytic mode of being. Where previous phenomenological reductions are made in reference to manifestations occurring in the past, to previous noemas, their content, actions, speech, thought, mental formations, etc., and the classification of such phenomena into a coherent noesis, and then through the reduction of such noesis in order to distinguish its essential characteristics, what we here are doing is searching for the mode of being, or noeses, underlying our current present moment. Now what mode of being can be discoverable in the present moment? Only that which we are looking for. The only method we have in which to look for such a mode of being is a phenomenological analysis. Thus, when we intentionally direct our phenomenological analysis towards the content of the present moment, the only thing we truly know about our current moment mode of being is that we are conducting a phenomenological analysis, thus we uncover that our present moment mode of being is a phenomenologically analytic mode of being. This is formulated with the caveat of time as being free flowing, as it is in our subjective experience, and disregards the physics of “Planck time” as time moving in “chunks” which are unrecognizable in conscious experience. Also, this doesn’t exclude the possibility that we are also simultaneously inhabiting another mode of being, it simply states that the only mode of being we can discover as referring to our present moment, is the phenomenological analytic mode of being. If we think of phenomenology as a search engine with all informational and experiential content appearing in the results, and we become aware that we are using google, we necessarily are aware of google being open in the browser, regardless if there are other tabs, what is happening in the present moment is solely the one tab of google (as the phenomenological analysis). While there are other modes occurring in the present moment, they are necessarily unknown to us in this present moment, while of course, phenomenology can discover this retrospectively, it cannot discriminate and parse out the simultaneous modes of being which overlap in any given moment.

On Phenomenology – Continued

Originally Written: March 10th 2020

Mindfulness in its traditional application is a mode of being in which the practitioner becomes aware of the awareness of consciousness in the present moment, i.e. the practitioner becomes aware of the contents of consciousness as they present themselves to the field of consciousness. Attention is directed toward phenomena as they arise, and subsequently fade away to be replaced. Important insights are gleaned from such practice, such as the impermanence of mental phenomena and their inherent transitoriness, the lack of a self – as the contents being ushered into consciousness’s gaze are not being determined by the subject (the practitioner) – and the root of such phenomena is found to be in the very general care structure, or ability to desire. Upon closer introspection and further development of the practice, the root of suffering, and the all-pervasive nature of suffering, are discovered. While mindfulness is useful to the realization in first-hand experience of such immutable truths, experientially we solely are limited to insights gleaned from the gaze into the present moment. Mindfulness enables further recognition of the nature of consciousness, but the story is not completed by such pursuits, it is only partially informed. (Mindfulness and Phenomenology)

In practicing mindfulness, or Vipassana, we become aware of the noema (Husserl’s terminology), or the conscious mental manifestation of phenomena as viewed subjectively. The noema is the experiential aspect of the present moment, whatever content may arise is a given noema. It is the act itself of what is intentioned by our conscious directing in the present moment. It is the content of experience, as we are able to view it. We can push mindfulness to a higher resolution image of these contents through retrospective phenomenological analysis of the content manifested in the present moment. This analysis is done through discrimination, retrospectively, upon the mode of Being, the field of consciousness, which gives rise to the phenomena available to be gleaned in mindfulness.

The pursuit of this content, that of the noesis, is purely the job of the phenomenologist, for purposes which range from psychological to metaphysical, from the advance of our understanding to our personal development. In discerning phenomena using a mindfulness process, we direct our attentional gaze using both subjective intuition and logical reduction of the phenomena to find their essence, i.e. we seek to discover the noesis which is present in the manifestation of the noema, which is available to us introspectively. The groundwork for such phenomena can be found tricky to reduce from the neomatic content, which are ever transient in their appearing, yet philosophers such as Husserl, Heidegger, and Hegel have sought to classify, organize, describe, and relate the different modes of being and their progression through their influential works.

While the phenomenological method has been dictated in many forms, the practical implementation of a phenomenological examination in the course of a detailed practice has been lacking in a structure which is available to be practiced by the general public.

This is a topic which I am seeking to pursue, how to conceptualize a process for the identification of noeses behind noema, and for the ability to utilize such information once it is acquired towards the promotion of the wellbeing of the individual, as well as a higher resolution of the truth of our own, of my own, of the phenomenologist’s own, consciousness, and thus of reality. This is truly a task for those who wish to seek the truth of their Being, and while mindfulness meditation and practice opens the door, phenomenological analysis into the groundwork of conscious modes of Bring which lays behind the phenomena is truly stepping through the door. While science can depict aspects of the neural underpinnings of the cortical mass which can be linked to emotion, thought, and relational hierarchical reasoning, and other modes of sensual representation in their displays to consciousness, the phenomenologists and thus the philosopher seeks a task which only he himself can pursue. These grounds are subjectively discoverable and give us an insight into the objective realization of the structure of our consciousness, and our Being. Only through retrospective phenomenological analysis into the information gleaned through a mindfulness practice is it to be acquired.

The implications of such pursuit are vast, what insight and beneficiality there is to be gained through recognition of structural modes of being which lay behind the perceived phenomena arising in consciousness is something to be discovered, which can be discovered, and we would be wise not to ignore them. The directing of our current mode of being towards such content necessarily places us in a new mode of being separate from the (time/content) to be analyzed, allowing for an infinite regress of content to be explored. What immediately is clear is that modes of being can overlap, and several can be present within the present moment, dependent upon the content thus produced. It is the task of the philosopher to parse out the constituent defining characteristics of such modes of beings, and furthermore to the interrelatedness of the modes, viz. how they interact, and how the separate thesis’s which are used to describe them overlay in their totality to form the synthesis which comprised the synthetic unitary mode of consciousness which contains them. This synthetic unitary mode is all encompassing in its definition, and applies to the field of which all modes of Being are connected, yet they are discretionary in their arising, due to causal factors which we can also further elaborate on. It is clear that this enterprise is vast in its scope and deep in its implications, but the utilization of it, and the insights which are possible to be discovered, appear to be ever vaster.

In reference to the beneficiality of such practice, here noted as phenomenological practice, we are going to base the further discussion upon the insights gleaned through Vipassana, or as will further be described as mindfulness (as the insight meditation practice focusing attention upon the contents of consciousness). In mindfulness we learn how certain contents, and habitual formations arise, and in response to what triggers them. We learn how to cope with such phenomena in a way which is beneficial to us, or in alignment with our morals, or preconceived value and care structures. We can apply our value, moral, and care structures to the navigation not only in response to the shifting contents of our consciousness, but to the modes of being discoverable and thus subsequently recognizable in their manifestation through phenomenological practice. E.g. we discover through the exclamation of certain truths, or of conceptual exertions of truth-claims (valued as certain through our doxic (belief) structure) as being contained in a mode of being of certainty. Thus we state something with absolute confidence, perhaps in a conversation, as being categorically true. Upon reflection upon that content which manifests itself in our awareness through being mindful of the moment, we can later reflect upon such memory, or stored representation of the present moment, and seek to reduce the mode of consciousness which we inhabited in the moment of exertion. Of course the topic on hand is relevant to the mode of being we find ourselves in, but we strip that away further, and find that beneath the content, beneath the circumstances, beneath the external and internal causality which conditions the response in us of exerting what we believe to be a truth-claim, that we are inhabiting a mode of consciousness of “certainty”.

If our moral and value structure is thus formulated to be one of fallibility (Intro to Fallibilism), in the spirit of continual progression and abhorrence to dogmatic claims, we find the mode of certainty to be truly dissonant in respect to our value structure. Thus we can consciously direct our efforts to avoid pursuing the mode of being thus recognized as “being certain” and through conscious training become habitualized to act otherwise than the prior causally condition habitual response. We are not looking in grounding our actions to be counter to the manifestation of the content which is elicited by the mode of being of certainty, but instead to be counter to the mode of “being certain” itself. Such an effort in affecting our mode of being will subsequently produce actions and intentions which are directed from a mode of being counter to the original mode of being, and properly in line with our conscious value structure of remaining fallible.

In a similar sense as the Buddhist works at conditioning himself away from unwholesome thoughts and towards the propagation of wholesome thoughts, and likewise in speech, views, and actions, we seek to condition ourselves towards wholesome modes of being, and away from unwholesome modes of being. Thus in the case where such further encounters with the mode of being of certainty, we can quickly recognize the triggers to its manifestation, its formal manifestation, and in response, move away from making neomatic claims (actual acts) and seek to inhabit the mode of being fallible, in order to produce a reactive response which is in line with our moral and value structure, which isn’t overpowered by the “archetype”, so to speak, of certainty, but instead that of fallibility. This mode of being more accurately represents the synthetic unitary mode of Being, to me at least (in this personal example) which is a more authentic representation of the totality of who we are, rather than the one dominant mode being which seeks to overexert itself, namely, that mode of “certainty”.

In this way we can, in addition to mindfulness, consciously direct ourselves towards the implication of a phenomenological practice, the fruits of which can be used in a practical manner not only to provide information depicting a higher resolution image of the truth of our Being, and thus reality, not only towards the beneficiality of our wellbeing in the navigation away from dominant modes of being which we contain yet don’t desire to be prominent, but we additionally can give a more authentic representation of ourselves in our thoughts, speech, and actions, through the practical application of its findings, and work towards habitualized, consciously directed, practice. The progression of our understanding, in our pursuit for truth, and in the realization and authentication of our moral and hierarchical value structures is of paramount importance for the individualization, and progression of the individual, to becoming more fully actualized in his conduct and cognitive apprehension of reality (Value System Instantiation). Thus if we seek to be moral, and seek truth, we should endeavor to push past mindfulness practice into the newly discovered field of phenomenological practice.

In summary, what underlies the present moment act, or mental activity, which presents itself in mindfulness, is the type or mode of acting which is taking place. Here we are defining the content as the noema, and the acting, or mode of consciousness producing the noema, as noesis. (Husserl’s Terminology) The noema is consciously directed toward an object, whether in that moment it be memory, a thought, a perception, a feeling of sensual origination, etc. The mode of being giving rise to such content, is described linguistically as remembering, thinking, perceiving, feeling, etc. What we seek to discover in our analysis is first, the noema, secondly, the noesis, thirdly, the conditions and essential nature of the noesis, fourthly, the causal connectedness of underlying factors producing the noesis (external circumstances, inner disposition, biological/hereditary/cortical processing (neuroscientific explanations)), fifthly, how to navigate the reduction and the instigation of modes of being or noesis in a consciously directed way in order to give an optimal result in our experience of life and the manifestations of our actions, which is dictated by acquired knowledge, and implemented using practical wisdom (phronesis).

Where the intention from which acts in the noema stem from are to be uncovered through discovery of the noesis present in their manifestations, we can also look to what is manifesting the noesis itself. This entails seeing the causal relation between modes of being changing, whether it be directed through conscious instigation, environmental factors, or necessary progression. We can seek to reduce from the given information present to us what are the causal conditions which allow the synthetic unitary consciousness, or the Totality of our Being, to give rise to the mode of being discoverable in the noesis. We can find this to be conditioned through unconsciously formulated pathway of reciprocity to present situations, which has roots in biological processes and, in short, the totality of our experience through life (starting with hereditary and environmental factors).

While these are surely relevant to us, what is more valuable is the course correcting away from sub optimal, or dissonance causing modes of being (in contrast to our consciously formulated value structure). Consciousness is constantly undergoing an updating process as new experience and data is collected through our perspectival horizon, this datum enters into its triage, which is collected through the value system’s discrimination, and in turn the filtration system itself is modified. This modification of the value structures filtration of perceived content subsequently affects the relevant experience presented to us in our subjective experience of consciousness itself. We are interested in how to affect this system consciously, in the most optimal way for our Being, that which we are in our entirety. This is to be done through the aforementioned noesis recognition, a conscious system of noeses which are discerned as more optimal, and the consciously directed self-conditioning of the instigation of modes of being in line with the pre thought-out value structure. Just as we learn anything through experience, practice, and self-training, the same principle applies to the adjustment of our mode of being. Once we learn to recognize the manifestation of an unwanted or wanted mode of being, and are able to conscious recognize such content through the noema present to us in proper mindfulness, we are able to utilize that information towards the cessation of unwanted modes of being, and the arising of wanted modes of being. The desire structure which is inherent in all content is not able to be avoided, or replaced by simply the “denial of the will” as Schopenhauer puts it, as even such a denial is a manifestation of the desire structure – such phenomena as our desire structure we must learn to live with, and utilize to our benefit, through the phenomenological practice directed towards the modes of being which are of greater interest to us in our hierarchical structure. Thus we can utilize the tool which causes us suffering, in order to minimize, or move to a mode of being which contains less suffering, through directing our mode of being in this way.

Where is the proper direction to head? Which modes of Being do we value more than others? How do we manifest different modes of Being? How do we find the synthetic unitary consciousness with which we should seek to authentically represent in our speech and actions through instigation of proper modes of Being? All these questions are relevant and discoverable to the philosopher. And thus an existential question is posited, towards which end ought we head? And using which metric should we follow? It is here that the individual philosopher must make a stand. He must formulate answers to these questions, and seek to embody them, for the development and authentic representation of his being depends on it. We can move in degrees towards the peak of the mountain which we so choose to climb, while one may choose a pathway designated by the current cultural zeitgeist, another may choose the hedonistic peak, while another may follow a whim, it is up to us to decide. There is morality in question, there is truth in question, and there is living in alignment with what we will, there is also, most importantly, that pathway which leads to optimal wellbeing for us. This path towards optimal wellbeing may necessarily involve suffering in its formulation, and is in no way opting for a utopia of the mind which is universal, what is truly the best mode to inhabit for one person, may not be for another, and there is no form in which to generalize such conclusions.

While moral realism holds ground if it is based upon solid foundations, as formulated by Sam Harris, that doesn’t mean that we all will be competent enough to discover what is truly best for us, although our degree of success will always be placed upon a spectrum towards the unknowable height of perfection. What phenomenological analysis enables us to do is to discover the roots of our mode of Being, and what phenomenological practice does is allow us to condition ourselves in the direction we wish to head. While every path objectively is meaningless, and it always is full of meaning to us, subjectively. Thus it is of paramount importance that we discover what is meaningful to us, which modes of being we as the individual who has to subjectively experience this life must further experience. This information, and this uncovering, will allow us to formulate the location in which we are to direct our phenomenological practice towards achieving.

 The expression of our inner state in the form of our actions / content of consciousness isn’tof primary importance to us here, what we are more interested in is the mode of being from which all content stems from. For we can alter our speech and actions within a given domain of Being, and they will all reflect the same state, albeit in slightly altered forms. What we must optimize is the mode of Being which we inhabit given a certain set of problems / circumstances which we seek to oppose. There are better or worse solutions to the problems in our lives, navigable to lesser or greater degrees. What we must seek to find is an optimal mode of being from which the appropriate response can flow from.

I find the danger in strict dogmatism in regards to moving forward with utmost confidence in a frame of mind of infallibility. This, I believe, is a trademark of the modern man, and of utmost importance to be corrected from. The archetype of the tyrant, the man who claims to know the answer, the soul who seeks to dominate reality with his current understanding. This mode of Being runs rampant, and plagues the development of the individual to grow, learn, and optimize his current understanding. It is not merely the claim that we know the best solution, nor is it solely claiming that we simply “don’t know”, which is surely true but inconclusive. The mode of being I think that can best correct, and improve the individual, is to have logically conclusive beliefs, in which harmonize with the conceptual unity of the individuals metaphysical doxic structure, yet, simultaneously, the individual must hold that these beliefs are merely beliefs. This doesn’t mean that knowledge is unattainable, it solely means that whether we have true knowledge, or are ignorant, that there is a possibility that at the very most this information is partial. There is always more “background” truths to be uncovered, there is always more information to be had, more time to be spent, more “wisdom” to be encountered and utilized towards a “better” optimal solution. We may be truly correct, objectively, yet when one maintains a fallibilistic mode of being in regard to truth claims, what happens is that we gain a pragmatic advantage in every area with which we are ignorant, whether it be in areas of known unknowns, or unknown unknowns, yet while passionately holding a belief, we do not resign from action and evaluation, or in decisiveness. We lose certainty and we gain every possibility for ever growing inner expansion. If we don’t hold this mode of being close, we risk losing out, on something we may not even know we are missing. The only knowledge and information we have to work with in response to novel problems arising necessarily stems from experience, and it is natural to seek to move forward with preconceived knowledge in the confrontation with chaos. While we must not stagnant, we must also hold firmly in mind that any decision we make, any truth-claim we state, can be improved upon, can be better informed, can come from a mode of being which altogether transcends our current one. The amount of time taken in pursuit of more optimal solutions, and towards which issues we direct our conscious attention to analyzing, falls under the domain of wisdom. While we must look to overcome challenges, if something is a challenge to us, it necessarily implies an unknown. In order to combat it we must seek to recognize that there is an unknown, and transfer it into our conceptual framework for “known unknown”. This requires relinquishment of the mode of being of absolute certainty.

Phenomenological Bracketing, Analysis, and Insights Gleamed

Originally Written: March 2nd 2020

We begin a phenomenological analysis by bracketing all that is included in the transcendent domain of experience, as that which is wholly external to the subjective experience of consciousness, which here is defined as “immanent”. We bracket judgments, perceptions, beliefs, scientific truths, and externally gained insights (includes forms of speech). External content isn’t our focus, neither is our perception of appearances, only what the content of the consciousness doing the perceiving is essentially consisting of. In short, we do not deny or affirm the validity of the transcendent world (of that which exists beyond consciousness) we merely remove ourselves from the domain of the consistent striving to describe it, in order to focus on the essential nature of consciousness. In so doing, we neutralize any belief and judgment, and remove any causal explanation for conscious phenomena which we had acquired from a non-phenomenological method. What is left over after the bracketing is the space of immanent consciousness, which, unfortunately, if we wish to convey the experience of, and relate an essential structure, we must use a form of communication such as language which itself is not implicitly originating in consciousness, but is itself produced by consciousness as a coherent string of symbolic representation of any kind (mathematic, scientific, logical).

Although the objects in the “bracketed world” to which the form of communication we use is directed at describing isn’t itself part of the phenomenological structure which we are seeking to analyze, the object of the “unbracketed world” is for us, it does exist for us, in that it lies within the perceptible horizon of our gaze. The communication used in that representation is an experiential representation of the underlying subconscious structure, and the only insight we can gleam in a conceptual form of which produces a logically shareable structure depicting this inner immanent domain requires the use of the communication system which we contain in the acquired skill of language (used in tangent with other cortical structures in representation). To represent accurately phenomena outside of the immanent domain that isn’t itself part of the phenomenological Being “of consciousness”, is wholly the job of the Sciences. Thus the language which arises in conscious experience (thought / speech) is a phenomenon which is an acquired trait through social and biological conditioning methods, and is an output of the Being which we are in the way any intentional act, or content of our psyche (which is available in awareness, self-reflectively), also respectively is. The phenomena of language itself in its relation to the foundational, essential aspect of our psyche which gives rise to it, is a direct expression of that subconscious structure and bears a direct relation to it. In analyzing its arising in the manner just described, we can look for ways in which the experience of language in thought, in its manifestation, can point to truths about the nature of consciousness in its essential aspects.

The consciousness which gives rise to language in the form of thought, which we probably recognize as conceptualization of other phenomena, whether past, present or future, is contained in a mode of consciousness specific to the content of the thought just produced, and has many traits which separate it from other modes of non-conceptual mental states, or modes of Being, which is an area for deep inquiry and further expansion. The causal and correlative nature of different modes of Being in respect to each other, and their relation to the unit of the synthetic whole, is a web of causal interconnections which, if properly differentiated and sufficiently analyzed, we can tease apart to recognize individual relations as they relate to a phenomena available in experience.

So, we opt to attempt a description of the essentiality of consciousness and its different modes of which we are able to experience, and we can discover phenomenological truth which, due to bracketing, is far from verifiable outside of the context of our own experience, but since we have discovered it in our own experience, its validity is therefore never to be diminished as the truth of our perception of our own consciousness. We must use the gaze of conscious awareness in order to grasp conscious manifestations, or phenomena arising in consciousness (Mindfulness and Phenomenology), and we must use language to attempt to give a description of the phenomena and their arising and subjectively verify their place within the realm of consciousness. The findings in such a realm of inquiry are potentially limitless as the quantity of experience, place in time which we discover, and the reduction towards the isolation of experience is continually progressing. In other words, every moment of conscious experience is potentially a subject to phenomenological analysis, on the first degree, but even an analysis upon the consciousness which itself is performing the “first level” phenomenological analysis (a phenomenally directed mode of Being) is possible to be undertaken, in a “second level” phenomenological analysis, ad infinitum. Therefore, every moment which contains content in consciousness can be subject to a reduction and separation from the external world, and viewed “as it is itself” and thus we can discover thematic elements which constitute its essence and place within the sphere of the synthetic unity of consciousness.

Upon further work, we can later document the discoveries in the phenomenological sphere, and post analysis unbracket the scientific tools and discoveries which conventional knowledge has provided us with. The application and attempt of explanation of the phenomenologically derived “fact” by means of the now unbracketed realm of resources may provide insightful into the application, lineal development, causation, origination, and biological constituents which can be related to the phenomena. That being said, it would in practice be the applying of objective knowledge to subjectively acquired datum. Thus we can look at the intentionality, belief structure, or value structure, which we find to be acting upon our consciousness of a certain object, found to be characteristic of all experience in a phenomenological depiction of the present moment, and look for a description in evolutionary biology towards how the genes would benefit in survivability or profundity by the ability to manifest such behaviors in its host organism’s survival machine. We can apply psychological tools towards the optimization of such mechanisms, and test the efficiency of said modifications upon the subjective structure (how different value/belief structures affect subjective wellbeing). The realm of application for subjectively discovered and philosophically expounded descriptions of the nature of consciousness has real, objective consequences which, other than a mere depiction of reality as initially posited by the philosopher, can be used for practical expansion in every other domain of inquiry.

The conceptualization of phenomenological truths which we can discover in the essence of modes of Being which constitute consciousness, allows us to visualize the foundations for which every objective realm of inquiry necessarily stems from. The thought, the idea, the perception, the action, the speech, the phenomena, is only manifested through the human consciousness. The essential components of consciousness are metaphorically the filter between reality and our conscious understanding of reality, and it is here which is the root of all objective discovery. It is therefore not only beneficial but wholly necessary to have a phenomenological grasp of the Being which is the “background” to the arising of all subjective experience, and thus the point of departure towards which any truth-statement or conceptualization of reality must pass through. Consciousness itself must be thoroughly described as an aspect of the reality which it is part of, it is essential in any truth-statement, and it is always there lurking as the mediator between what is objectively discoverable and what is able to be subjectively experienced (including thoughts / formulations of transcendental reality i.e. what is not immanent consciousness, what is other than consciousness itself).

Original, naive, “natural” beliefs about the conditions of consciousness erode under further scrutiny when the proper aspects of understanding are bracketed. Ideas such as free will, or the positing of a self who controls consciousness, can become intuited as nonsensical when one is mindful of the essence of consciousness in its separateness from preconceived beliefs. Free will isn’t a phenomenon, and thus never presents itself phenomenologically, it only appears to be a concept that makes sense on surface level subjective intuition. There is no sense of the universe or logical explanation as to how such a thing could even exist, it simply is impossible and at a conclusively demonstrated (through phenomenological analysis) level its non-existence could be no clear. This doesn’t mean the idea of “freewill”, or a belief in it doesn’t exist, as we can obviously gleam from social interaction, most people act as if they have freewill, and it’s arising as a concept is merely a subjective misuse of language, and a fundamental misunderstanding into the nature of the organism which inhabits our consciousness.  In the unbracketed sphere of the “natural world” we find use of the concept of referring to “ourselves” and of the notion that “I” am in control of this organism’s manifestations, and we use such forms of speech to interact with others in a way that holds meaning in terms of practicality of ownership and responsibility. But, as to the essence of consciousness producing such states, and to the fact of the matter itself, we find that a confusion is found in the distinction “I am directing my attention”, from the true notion of the phenomena being “attention is directional, and being directed”.

A similar line of thought holds true for other contents produced by our fundamental belief and language structures, such as the belief in the existence of ideas such as depicted in supernatural claims, as well as religious certainties and the notion of a “self”. Different modes of consciousness are related to different degrees of “certainty” in form of “possibility”, “probability”, and “doubt”. The problem I see which should be crucially examined is our mode of being in “certainty”, which leaves us closed off for further investigation and truth-revelation. As long as we avoid any state of “certainty” and always acknowledge the probability of the relationship between our conceptualization of reality in its matching up to reality itself, including probability of inaccuracy, we remain in a state of consciously instituted fallibility, and thus are open to error correction and further development. In discovering which beliefs are more or less likely (in a probabilistic way) to be accurate depictions of reality, we can harken back to a phenomenological approach in order to analyze if the grounds for such claims are truly present in our experience, our experience being the formal dictator of all logical and necessary truths, through which we must thoroughly seek to remove any falsehood from, and actively seek to better inform the beliefs which underlie the modes of consciousness which direct our life the most. Due to the inherent belief structure which is actively present in our actions, thoughts, Being, and which work to manifest our subjective experience, and thus our wellbeing, we are wise to examine that the beliefs from which our behavior and thus our mental state arises from, are wholly in tune with reality in a way that is logically explainable to us, without which we run the risk of being prey to false notions of belief, and thus less than optimal experience and manifestation of a truth expressing character. As belief plays an optimal role in the formations of the path of our lives, and our experience is limited by the time in which we are alive on this path, we would be remiss to not work to form a foundation of belief which is on firm ground, at least, insofar as we are philosopher, and lovers of truth.

What is the best way to which discover our doxic (intellectually discoverable belief) structure and its validity in corresponding to the reality which we find ourselves in? (Value Structure Instantiation) Through a phenomenological analysis, and later through a psychological examination, and lastly, through usefulness, beneficiality, and accurate truth-representing in everyday life situations. Through differentiations in input (of belief), and output (psychological state), together with real, meaningful results (real life application and usefulness), we can determine which beliefs we desire to contain, desire being used in a way to describe which we would most like to contain. Of course it is impossible to consciously believe in something we do not bodily believe in, analysis into the validity of our beliefs will necessarily close us off from this possibility, to the ability that we as human Beings, are able to accurately conceptualize the truth, and the proximity we have to it will be in direct proportion to our environmental factors, experience, and knowledge. The production of this process would be the foundation derived through wisdom, in the production of wisdom, which can be used to guide our behavior in life, and therefore affect others, and thus produce a system I have described elsewhere as “wisdom ethics”. The component of wisdom ethics thus described in this portion of writing is upon the foundational belief structure, and the phenomenological analysis used to uncover it, which would give rise to the most optimal wisdom schemata, if we wish for the implications of our ethical conduct to be grounded upon the truth, to the best of our ability in uncovering it.