Planet X: Your OWN Mind
To those who would say these postings comes from a cult leader, I will
post a long-standing ZetaTalk writing, done in the early days of
sci.astro debates, 1997, on thinking for oneself, allowing autonomy in
others, empowering autonomy in others, granting information so that
others can do their own thinking, etc. Something cults and the
Shepherds of Sheep of sci.astro do NOT want you to do, but ZetaTalk has
always treated as a prime directive. Self autonomy. Self choice. Free
thinking. Right to know. Free choice.
Students who think for themselves are on the right
track, when they grope into areas that are not
discussed or presented in school as they sense that
they are only being given part of the picture, when
they reject rigid explanations they have been given
of how things work, or explanations that were based
on only part of the puzzle and not the whole. This
can never be wrong, but they are treated otherwise.
The student is expected to accept the rigid
explanation and toss away any new pieces of the
puzzle they discover because it upsets the rigid
explanation. Thus the anger of professors when they
are asked questions that seem to counter or contradict
the going theory. In truth, more bright students, the
thinking type, leave school than stay in, and those
that stay in are in pain.
Where most humans like to think of themselves as
intelligent creatures, and even the only such creature
so gifted in God's creation, they are more often
willing to accept the conclusions of others than to
think for themselves. This is because emotionally
they are children. Look to the discussion on why
the planets continue to revolve as an example. It's
Newton's law. Once motion starts it continues
unless stopped. When there is obvious
contradiction to this so-called law, which in fact is
not law but only describes behavior, the children
are discombobulated. It is not that Newton cannot
be challenged, it's that the children cannot think
for themselves.
Look about you, at how small children deal with
the complexities of life. They ask their parents to
explain, and whatever reason is given out becomes
the answer, is repeated to other children, and is
angrily defended. The child needs the parent there
to explain matters, and the emotional overtone of
desperation overrides any capacity for logical
thought the child may possess. Having been raised
to the level of gods, the parents can do no wrong,
until adolescence arrives and new gods are clung to
with the same desperation - gang leaders, movie
stars, athletes. Most adult humans, grownup on the
outside only, are still children on the inside,
clinging to whomever acts like a self-proclaimed
god by either claiming to take care of the adult
child or claiming to have the answers.
Scientific principles, once stated by such a god,
are not allowed to be challenged unless this is
done by another god. No matter how illogical
the scientific principle becomes, the precepts of
the religion are repeated mindlessly, and any
challenge to this devotion meets hostility. How
dare you challenge the god's laws! This tendency
to behave as a mindless child is most dramatized
in scientific communities, where logic and the
ability to think matters through is assumed. In
stark contrast to what humans expect from their
scientists, the adult child prates the laws of their
gods and refuses to put obvious contradictions
alongside of these laws. They look the other way.
They throw insults. They walk off in a huff.
Anything but be forced to grow up and think for
themselves!
ZetaTalk, Independent Thinking
(http://www.zetatalk.com/beinghum/b68.htm)