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After fifteen hours of hard thinking and writing, my exhausted father dropped his pen and fell asleep right on his desk. That would become a common scene over the years to come -- my father asleep on his desk from exhaustion after marathon runs of Neothinking and writing.
Four hours had passed when he awoke again. His desk lamp was still on. He picked up his pen and, oblivious to time in the middle of the night, he started writing again, with powerful passion. Unrelated thoughts would come to him, then in a hurried rush he would write something about that thought. He seemed to be rushing as if he wanted to get all his thoughts down on paper while his ability to make vast integrations lasted. Little did my father realize that, through Neotech (i.e., fully integrated honesty), the power to make vast integrations -- to Neothink -- grows instead of shrinks. Neothink builds upon itself like a growing puzzle. Yet, feeling Zonpower for the first time in his life, he wrote like a scientist making a major discovery with only a week left to live.
He wrote with abandon about everything that came to mind. His mind was never so open before, his thoughts never so clear. The first subjects that came through his pen seemed to be about personal self-improvements, specifically about sense of life, emotions, relationships, and thinking. It did not take my father long to Neothink those four subjects of self-improvement, as follows:
Sense of Life: A sense of life is an integral part of everyone's subconscious philosophy and psychology. Every person has a fundamental view or sense of life. While usually existing on a subconscious level, a person's sense of life largely determines his or her major actions. Sense of life falls into two opposite categories:
a. the knowledge that conscious achievement is the highest value.
b. the knowledge that the conscious mind is competent to know reality.
a. the belief that non-man-made values (e.g., nature, the universe, the cosmos) and mystical "values" (e.g., God, the State, society) are superior to man-made values.
b. the belief that the conscious mind is incapable of knowing reality.
The altruistic, malevolent sense of life finds virtue in sacrificing real, individual values to unreal, mystical "higher" causes such as God, the fatherland, nature, society. That altruistic, malevolent sense of life keeps one from acting in his or her long-range best interest to achieve power, prosperity, and happiness in order to produce competitive values for others. Those competitive values, by nature, require a rational self-interest, pro-individual sense of life combined with effort and honesty.
Emotions: Inseparable links exist between productive work, earned values, prosperity, psychuous pleasures, and happiness. Too many productive people live without experiencing their earned happiness or psychuous pleasures. That deprivation of happiness and psychuous pleasures is an unnecessary tragedy due to altruistic, mystical guilt inculcated into the value producer by the professional value destroyers.
Pride is the reflection of self-worth, which requires the rejection of mysticism. And that rejection of mysticism through the reflection of self-worth is what all mystics, existentialists, and neocheaters fear and attack. For, if all value producers recognized their genuine self-worth and felt their earned pride, they would reject mysticism to end the hoax of all neocheaters.
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