Friday, April 1, 2016

PHILOSOPHY; SUB-PRINCIPLE: Non-Intention

Blog Article/Post Caveat (Read First Please: Click the Link)

The original author alludes to the act of non-intentions as an action without acting or action without mental fixation on a particular course of action. Since it is also about the mind making the body move, to fill it with energy and to commit it to action this seems redundant. Everything done by humans have intent. That intent may be known or in most cases unknown but we have intent be it conscious or unconscious. To have non-intention then becomes impossible so I prefer to say that our intent is not atomistic, i.e., we are shown specific actions to which we are taught specific actions in response. The atomistic creates a hindrance toward instinctual actions that come from the situation rather than ROTE actions in response to ROTE actions.

Non-intention is a mind-set that perceives, not think, things in real-time and in that moment, no other. We must train to achieve a level of realty based non-intention level mind-set or rather an efficient ability through learning, training, practice and application that builds, promotes and encodes what can be called, “Cognitive Readiness.” 

Cognitive readiness is the mental preparation (including skills, knowledge, abilities, motivations, and personal dispositions) an individual needs to establish and sustain competent performance in the complex and unpredictable environment of conflict and violence (originally directed toward modern military operations).

This is the true nature of this sub-principle even if improperly symbolized by the term non-intention.

Bibliography (Click the link)


No comments:

Post a Comment