FINAL CONCLUSION
You were born in a specialized society, shaped by the division of labour. Your assumptions rest at the base of a three-sided pyramid (the tetrahedron). From there, you can see only one or two sides at a time. This incomplete view creates contradictions, cognitive dissonance, anxiety, self-deception, and evasion of reality, as the Ash experiment demonstrated. Your paleocortex defends this limited view as a moral reference. You and your culture live at the base of the pyramid. It is a familiar, comfortable zone.
To become the rational champion of yourself, you must climb to the top of the pyramid of knowledge and see all its sides simultaneously: philosophy. Not just any philosophy, but an objective philosophy derived from the existence of the universe itself — given, natural, and absolute.
If you remain at the base, you will see no benefit in studying philosophy. Why? Your paleocortex — and those of your society — will oppose it. Automatic psychological defence mechanisms resist it. Nobody in your group wants to leave comfort zones, acclimate their minds to higher knowledge, or think with valid concepts.
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