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fport's avatar

This was going somewhere else:

Myth vs. Paraphilia:

The myth is akin to parasitic patterns, which create agency through belief and attention without needing external validation. It reinforces reality by making individuals believe even if they don’t fully understand it.

Parasitic Patterns:

These patterns amplify existence through belief and attention, reinforcing reality regardless of its validity or construction. They function as a loop that remains real whether the myth is true or constructed.

Heidegger’s Life Being Lived:

The life becomes an illusion to a personified face, who gains agency by believing in it. This mirrors how parasitic patterns reinforce belief and attention without needing external validation.

Schmitt’s Distinction on Exceptions:

Schmitt distinguishes between exceptions proving everything (breaking down mechanisms) versus normal cases not proving anything. The myth of the general strike is similar to exception, where power comes from belief and attention rather than facts or critique.

Falsification as Exception:

Falsification occurs when exceptions are used to distort reality into political actions, creating a loop that reinforces existence through agency without needing external validation.

In essence, both Schmitt’s concept of exceptions in politics/society and the myth of the general strike rely on belief and attention to amplify existence. They create power by reinforcing reality through these mechanisms, making them effective even if they are not entirely real or constructed.

BIG WILD MIND MACHINE's avatar

In the Hundred Acre Wood there once appeared a Very Strange Idea.

Nobody knew exactly where it came from.

Owl said it came from Philosophy. Rabbit said it came from Politics. Tigger said it came from “THE VIBES.” And Eeyore suspected it had probably been there all along waiting for everybody to notice and ruin the afternoon.

The Strange Idea spread quickly because it had an important feeling to it.

It whispered: “The more creatures believe in me, the more real I become.”

Piglet did not care for this at all.

“Can ideas do that?” he squeaked.

“Oh yes,” said Owl importantly. “Entire forests have been rearranged by ideas. Some ideas become so large that creatures begin living inside them without realizing it.”

Pooh thought about this while staring into a honey pot.

“Like bees?” he asked.

“Not exactly,” said Owl.

But Pooh was already imagining very ideological bees.

Now the Strange Idea became especially popular after Rabbit announced that the Forest was in Terrible Danger.

“The Woozles,” Rabbit declared, “have infiltrated the carrots, the weather, and possibly language itself.”

This caused great excitement because every creature suddenly began noticing Woozles everywhere.

The breeze sounded Woozlish. The clouds looked suspicious. Even Kanga’s soup seemed vaguely coordinated.

And because everyone kept discussing Woozles, the Woozles became larger and larger until even Pooh felt rather uncertain about things.

“It does feel,” said Pooh carefully, “as though the Forest is thinking about Woozles very hard.”

“Exactly!” cried Owl. “Belief amplifies reality!”

“Mm,” said Pooh.

Now Christopher Robin listened quietly for a long while before speaking.

“You know,” he said, “there is something tricky about ideas that feed on attention.”

Everyone leaned closer.

“They can begin as observations,” Christopher Robin continued, “but if creatures stare at them too intensely, they sometimes become costumes the creatures start wearing.”

Piglet gasped. “Even me?”

“Especially you,” said Eeyore.

Then Owl unfurled seventeen diagrams proving that the Woozles had created an Exception Event in order to trigger a Mythic Reality Spiral.

Nobody understood the diagrams except Owl, who was very pleased by this.

Pooh looked worried.

“But Christopher Robin,” he asked, “if an idea grows stronger whenever everyone believes in it, how do we know whether we are understanding the Forest… or merely feeding the idea?”

Christopher Robin smiled.

“That,” he said, “is the difficult part.”

Just then Tigger burst through the bushes wearing night-vision goggles and carrying anti-Woozle preparedness pamphlets.

“THEY’RE EVERYWHERE!” shouted Tigger happily.

Rabbit immediately began constructing emergency anti-Woozle trenches.

Piglet fainted a little.

And Owl announced he would soon release a twelve-part lecture series entitled: PARASITIC MYTH PATTERNS AND THE SOVEREIGN HONEY CRISIS.

Only Pooh remained thoughtful.

After a long silence he said: “Perhaps ideas are a little like honey.”

Everyone stared.

“If you taste a little honey,” Pooh explained, “it is comforting and rather useful. But if you fall completely into the honey pot…”

“Yes?” asked Piglet nervously.

“…you may begin believing the pot is the whole Forest.”

There was another silence after this because it was an unusually wise thing for a Bear of Very Little Brain to say.

Even Owl wrote it down.