Hi dude,
rico wrote:
I did not see that there was already a forum discussion under the tutorial 9 heading, so I am going ahead and starting one here now.
...Maybe we should have called this thread, “Tutorial 9 Reloaded” : )
[r]In tutorial 9 we read about CC sets like polarity, continuum, balance, cycle and spiral and density. I personally picture these as graphics and I wondered if it is in the grid cells within N3 that these graphics actually occur.
Wow, nice thought; this is very interesting ...I guess I'd see the 'whole grid' as a continuum though***, similar to the way 'the whole universe' is a continuum, or the 'whole sky' is a continuum...If all events are then located in that continuum it would make sense to classify them as points IN that continuum (like, a galaxy would be an emergent event involving agents (stars, planets etc) in the 'background' continuum of space).
However, my mind is having difficulty bridging the gap between this and core concept sets per se... so we'll go on with the questions and maybe that will help me to do so...
[r] I mean are these CC sets directly related to the 6 archetypes as they would be "eidectly" represented on the grid?
As far as I can understand the question, yes. Ordinarily eidetics seem to be 'placed' according to associated location (coordinates) on the overall grid (part of N2's input to N3).
Ordinary concept sets (such as, 'color') are physically represented in the grid as the patterns of neuronal firing associated with events, things or backgrounds relevant to those coordinates, and ALL coordinates in the same area (of the map) will relate to one core concept (color relates to density, for example).
But if we jump to a core-concept set such as 'the electromagnetic spectrum', we find it is legitimately associated with every core concept (eg, space = amplitude, time = frequency, power = intensity, E=mc2, and so on.) Every core concept can be usefully associated with 'the electromagnetic spectrum' in ways that enable us to measure and learn things.
[r] And it seems obvious to me that continuum is most associated with matter, polarity with space, density with weight, cycle with time and spiral with energy and balance with power.
I don't get how you get most of these associations (did that make sense?) : ) They are not in the same category...I get 'weight' for density. But 'spiral', 'continuum', 'cycle', 'polarity' are one type of phenomena/concept, and 'balance' is another kind of concept and weight yet another. the weight of an object is usually taken to be the measure of the force on the object due to gravity, afaik. Mathematically, density is defined as mass divided by volume. But 'spiral' etc is not a measure of anything; do you get what I'm saying here? To make congruous associations, all the things we are interpreting must be of the same sort (for example “gravity, electromagnetism, the weak force, the strong force” -all these are of the same category -they're ALL fundamental forces, and we could legitimately try to associate one with each core concept.)* But we can't take, say, “Gravity, electromagnetism, a triangle, balance” and make a congruous comparison, because triangles and balance are not forces.
To be congruous, we also have to be able to explain (and so understand) consciously why the association exists; for example, a spiral is a repetitive phenomenon and so associates with time, a cycle is a series of repetitive events, the very thing we use time to measure**. A polarity is something which has two 'ends', usually in some type of opposition or complementation; for example positive/negative. We encounter this concept most often in terms of electromagnetics (batteries & magnetism) so I would tend to go with 'power' although 'energy' would be a possibility. There has to be (at the unconscious end) a real world physical association, for congruity. If a concept is congruous, the conscious mind should be able to elucidate that physical reality.
Hope this helps, I think we need to discuss this a bit more for me to really know where to go from here, so over to you dude : )
Best,
AR
*Don't try this at home, folks!
**'Time' is a concept we use to perceive and measure repetitive events. We could not find any meaning in the concept 'cycle' if we had no concept for time.
***Or is it a map of the continuum? LOL : )