There is no such thing as an idea

 There is no such thing as an idea only attitudes and recalling them when being 'asked' via pattern of sounds you've been trained to submit to.

...there is only states of mind used to reach the conclusion, called an attitude; The content of the idea [1]. Sharing ideas via verbatim is flawed. Experience is truth. [There is such a thing called a...] We use words to recalling ideas from the content of the past experiences we've experienced [refer ideal variable manipulation], other than that words are useless.

Ideas are a placeholder variable for flawed interpreting style, like listening to the content of what others have to say. What mental thought process are you practicing?

This implies that, all ideas, regardless of the way it's interpreted (refer emotional attachment formula), indicates a form of an attitude in order to understand why one feels the need to derive and pursue such an idea.

Note: The word 'asked' doesn't describe the situation in specific, rather describes the content of the information you were focused on via practice and repetition and mastered the moral expect mindset adopted through your trust not being abused.

Any effort used to recall an idea derived/interpreted from event experienced via judging, or a factual conclusion reached via curiosity, from past events experienced personally is merely recalling it from subconscious memory, (and is misplaced feelings) it is not something that should be used to ideally manipulate someone. The more out of touch with reality one is with interpreting the content of the present events you are experiencing, the more out of touch with reality you are [1] [2] [3] [4]. 

Most people don't even know how to describe their own mood or interpret others' behavior accurately. I mean- yes, we can see when someone is clearly sad, but often people hide that and practice suicide bombing.

In the brain, what even is an idea? What role does 'recalling' variables have to do with it?

Comments