STIll Working on Adding text to links: Consider the topics underconstruction
Calculus Embodied:
Space is integral to all things. How is space integrated into the experience of our mind?
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We experience space in our psychology when we choose to let emotion pass or when we dream.
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This is self-evident.
Space is integral to all things. How is space integrated into the experience of our body?
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The architecture of our body is split into three functions.
1. Bone Function: Static movement
2. Muscle function: Dynamic movement
3. Connective Tissue (equalizes static with dynamic so we don’t fall apart.)
2. Our bodies architecture is experienced in two ways
1. Feeling something (integrated into the function of muscle/skin/conscious mind)
2. Feeling of nothing or the space between. (Bone/Connective Tissue)
3. We can prove our ability to notice the “space between” consciously by paying attention to the air moving through our nostrils or by feeling our tongue with our teeth.
4. If we look at the image produced to prove calculus as a relationship of opposites it appears that the image is a 2 dimensional drawing of the three-dimensional relationship that exists between the functions of bone, muscle and connective tissue.
5. Our brain and the experience of our mind is contained within bone.