Twisting the Paradox
A<———B
( )
B———>A
What I know:
1) Each system has a co-dependant converse forming a linear paradox.
2) The relationship between the dependant and co-dependant is circular.
3) A linear paradox can also have a converse paradox, and coupled with the many degrees inbetween, will generate a spherical pattern (draw a line around a tennis ball horizontally, then vertically).
4) The center of the sphere is unreachable by conscious thought, one can only travel around the outside in any particular direction.
5) Contained within each paradox, presumably at the center, is truth.
6) Each paradox and it’s co-dependants share the same truth.
Without destroying the egg to see the yolk, there must be another way to direct my mental traffic into the center. When I was thinking in linear terms, I tried to breech the center by utilizing the reciprocol of the whole system, but I was presented with a sphere instead of a circle; a fortified iron gate instead of a locked wooden door. Dismayed, I simply assumed that all efforts to get a conscious grip on the center were impossible.. until recently. I was laying out on my porch, watching the leaves dance, considering two things; first, if I could only reap half the bennefits of each of my apposing personalities, and combine them, I would be thrilled; and second, how the only way to travel great distances in the universe is to fold space. And then the notion came to me; can a paradox be twisted? Like a figure 8 from a rubber band, or a strand of DNA?
A<— /—>v
v (BXB) v
v—>/ <—A
Does this process provide any insight to what is in the center, or does it just seperate the opposing elements? If it is merely the latter, what potential bennefits can be had?
Abstractly gripping.
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