Core Language
These terms name the basic parts of the framework's operating sequence.
31 terms shown
Conscious Observation
Conscious observation is the witnessing presence behind experience. It is not identical to body, mind, thoughts, personality, or fixed identity. It is the capacity to notice those things and objectify them.
- Use
- Name the part of the being that can observe ego-state, perception, and conditioning.
- Boundary
- Do not reduce it to detached watching; it also carries free will through focus-pivot.
- Related
- Ego, Free Will, Objectification
Ego
Ego is the vehicle through which conscious observation acts. It contextualizes what matters, what can be cared about, what can be chosen, and what action feels possible.
- Use
- Describe the necessary interface for action.
- Boundary
- The problem is not having ego; the problem is mistaking one ego-state for the whole self.
Lens
Lens is symbolic language for ego: a way of seeing and acting through context. It should not become a separate technical mechanism unless it improves readability.
- Use
- Clarify how an ego-state makes some things readable and others inaccessible.
- Boundary
- Prefer ego-context when precision matters.
Free Will
Free will is the experienced ability of conscious observation to pivot focus. It does not mean escaping all conditioning at once. It means attention can move in a direction that changes perception.
- Use
- Explain how a different perception becomes possible.
- Sequence
- Free will pivots focus; focus shifts perception; perception shapes choice; choice produces action.
Focus
Focus is the directional movement of attention. It determines which layer of self, event, problem, possibility, or threat becomes foreground.
- Use
- Name the movement between observation and perception.
- Boundary
- Focus is not the whole mechanism; it changes what perception can organize.
Perception
Perception is the active way reality is received, organized, felt, interpreted, and acted through. It shapes emotional state, available choices, timing, behavior, relationships, and outcomes.
- Use
- Describe the reality-filter that turns attention into available action.
- Boundary
- Perception is not passive recording and not the same thing as belief.
- Related
- Belief, Choice, Perceptual Fluidity
Process Language
Rule Set
A rule set is a conscious or subconscious assignment about how reality works. It may concern self, world, possibility, consequence, identity, power, danger, visibility, or what is allowed to happen.
- Use
- Trace the deeper assumption behind a repeated perception or behavior.
- Boundary
- Rule sets are not always limitations; when conscious, they can be revised through action.
- Related
- Belief, Conditioning, Confirmation Bias
Belief
Belief is the accepted or expected shape of reality inside a rule set. It may sit quietly in the background until a situation activates it.
- Use
- Distinguish the expectation from the active perception that follows.
- Sequence
- Rule set produces belief tendency; belief tendency shapes perception.
Choice
Choice is the local expression of free will after perception has shifted enough for action to appear. It is not identical to free will; it follows the perception currently available.
- Use
- Name the moment where perception becomes selected action or withheld action.
- Boundary
- A conditioned reflex can feel like choice when the rule set is invisible.
Action
Action is the movement by which perception and choice become consequential. It may be behavior, speech, timing, silence, contribution, ritual act, symbolic act, or another transfer.
- Use
- Identify what actually leaves the private interior and enters conditions.
- Boundary
- Intention without action may not transmit the intended signal.
Signal
Signal is any transmitted pattern that reality, another person, a group, or a system can respond to. It is the actionable interface between inner state and outer response.
- Use
- Describe what is actually readable through action, tone, timing, posture, contribution, or symbolic transfer.
- Boundary
- Signal is preferred over vague terms when describing what is sent.
- Related
- Output, Correspondence, Social Karma
Output
Output is the response that follows from signal, action, and surrounding conditions. It may be internal, social, material, symbolic, or paranormal.
- Use
- Read what the signal produced without forcing it to confirm the original story.
- Boundary
- Output is not always the same as intention; it may reveal contradiction.
Correspondence
Correspondence means signal and output are linked. A transmitted pattern enters conditions, and the output corresponds to the signal plus the surrounding structure.
- Use
- Study the relation between action and result without reducing everything to wishing.
- Boundary
- Do not over-focus on whether potential pre-existed or was created; track signal and output.
Objectification
Objectification turns a perception, emotion, trait, ego-state, rule set, or identity into something that can be observed. Once objectified, it is no longer the whole self.
- Use
- Create room for another perception or ego-context to appear.
- Boundary
- Labeling is not enough if identification does not loosen.
Perceptual Fluidity
Perceptual fluidity is the practice of keeping perception flexible instead of rigid or binary. It lets a better path become visible even when the current ego does not know what better will look like.
- Use
- Name the ongoing loosening of one interpretation, one ego-context, or one narrative.
- Boundary
- Fluidity should still lead into action and output tracking.
Constraint Language
Continuity
Continuity is coherence within the observer's story. An event must remain readable, absorbable, or reconcilable within the observer's lived stream.
- Use
- Evaluate whether a change can be carried by the current reality stream.
- Boundary
- The more intense the change, the heavier the continuity burden.
- Related
- Karma, Contradiction, Output Annihilation
Karma
Karma is the counter-response required by continuity. It is the responsive side of existence: the consequence or counter-movement that allows coherence to persist.
- Use
- Name the repercussion, repair burden, resistance, or answering movement after action.
- Boundary
- It is not primarily moral punishment in this framework.
Identity
Identity is an arrangement of the self. It may appear as role, posture, self-understanding, or ego-configuration. It becomes limiting when treated as final, fixed, or total.
- Use
- Describe a self-organization that can be useful but should remain objectifiable.
- Boundary
- Identity can operate at personal and wider scales; keep the scale clear.
Attachment
Attachment is biased investment in a narrative. The being inherits what the story means, and the story begins shaping perception, expectation, choice, consequence, and reality path.
- Use
- Identify where perception is being routed through an invested story.
- Boundary
- Attachment does not simply mean wanting something.
- Related
- Confirmation Bias, Identity, Perception
Confirmation Bias
Confirmation bias filters perception, evidence, interpretation, and reaction so an invested narrative keeps confirming itself.
- Use
- Name the mechanism by which attachment becomes deterministic repetition.
- Boundary
- Fear, resentment, and identity can feed bias, but the core mechanism is narrative confirmation.
Conditioning
Conditioning is programming installed into the physical person through environment, culture, memory, trauma, repetition, social context, and prior action.
- Use
- Describe inherited default action before conscious observation reprograms it.
- Boundary
- Conditioning is not absolute fate; it is material that can be worked with.
Contradiction
Contradiction occurs when stated intention, hidden rule set, ego-context, behavior, and signal do not agree. It can prevent output or produce an output that reveals the conflict.
- Use
- Diagnose mismatch between intention and returned output.
- Boundary
- Do not treat contradiction as failure only; it is also information.
Output Annihilation
Output annihilation happens when intention fails to reach output because internal structure contradicts it, continuity cannot carry it, or the ego-context cannot transmit the action.
- Use
- Explain why internal intention does not become external result.
- Correction
- Read reality state, identify contradiction, objectify the blocking narrative, and reconfigure signal.
Inquiry Language
Objectivity
Objectivity is movement from isolated outlook toward a wider, more interconnected one. It includes freedom from confirmation bias, but it is larger than cold neutrality.
- Use
- Name the movement that removes blinders and makes better realities visible.
- Boundary
- Objectivity is wider coherence, not emotional numbness.
God as Objectivity
God as objectivity means the movement from narrow personal narrative toward whole-view. The term is handled in the objectivity layer rather than as an opening glossary term.
- Use
- Name the direction toward interconnected view and reduced blinders.
- Boundary
- Do not use the term as external authority replacing mechanism.
Noetic Science
Noetic science is disciplined investigation through direct self-evidence, sustained practice, precise language, and peer comparison among sincere practitioners.
- Use
- Frame investigation where detached proof-seeking alone is insufficient because the mechanism requires participation.
- Boundary
- Private certainty is not enough; the framework should still aim for clarity and repeatable signal-output patterns.
External Systems
Religions, spiritual systems, symbolic systems, and personal frameworks can be treated as interfaces: working languages and action patterns for engaging reality.
- Use
- Describe inherited or created systems as tools for action and continuity.
- Boundary
- They should not become final authority merely because they are external.
Looking Outward Too Early
Looking outward too early happens when the being seeks external proof, texts, validation, or final authority before reading its own reality state.
- Use
- Identify when external authority-seeking replaces observation and practice.
- Correction
- Return to observation, read conditioning and attachment, and use external systems as interfaces.
Social Language
Social Karma
Social karma is the stored consequence of repeated signal inside a group or domain. It appears as trust, credibility, access, relevance, exclusion, or reputation.
Domain
A domain is a social field with values, language, thresholds, leaders, peers, and tests of contribution. Access depends on whether the signal corresponds to what the domain recognizes.
Opportunity Becoming Bread
Bread means opportunity converted into nourishment, substance, work, provision, creation, or life-sustaining value.