The ability to honestly assess somethingโcasting aside ideology and viewing phenomena through the clear glass of evidence/experimentationโis essential in propagating personal development, a sound democracy, and critical thinking. ย Unfortunately this is a painful thing if one has muddied their perception by lying to themselvesโchoosing empty platitudes instead of sussing through unpleasant causalities. ย But once refined, this ability is used in every endeavor and every arenaโฆfrom building complex structures to understanding the difference between whatโs humorous and whatโs not. ย It keeps problems small and manageable, rather than allowing them to mutate into giant beasts. ย It enables one to adjust for context and harmonize with the environment, and it also builds consensusโfor evidence-based truth can slice apart pretty-sounding crap and invoke widespread function.ย When our baser nature cries for the seductive comfort of self-deception, being honest with oneself can be an act of heroism; it adds another clear mind into the whirlpool of falsity that many drown in. ย Sure, there are personal benefits, but being willing to sacrifice obsolete views and seductive self-deceptions is, I believe, the very key to unlocking harmony. ย The implication that one must sacrifice or kill their useless aspects can be extrapolated from a plethora of belief systems from both the East and the West.ย ย
Nested in many of those implications is the idea that when an individual decides to fix him/herself, it is a heroic endeavor, and has the potential to fix the world. ย I happen to agree with that.


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