Repetition, Illusion, and the Phenomenology of Psychological Reality: An Inquiry into Mind, Identity, and Awareness
Key Points
This research explores how repetition affects perception and constructs identities rooted in fear.
Conducted a phenomenological analysis exploring perceptions shaped by repetition.
Examined the relationship between falsehood and lived experiences in identity formation.
Focused on the role of awareness in distinguishing constructive and non-constructive perceptions.
Identified that repetition can transform falsehoods into realities that influence identity.
Demonstrated that awareness serves as a critical counter to identity-based fear.
Revealed how perception is critically linked to the phenomenon of repetition.
Abstract
A phenomenological exploration of how repetition transforms falsehood into lived reality and constructs identity-based fear, emphasizing awareness as the only non-constructive mode of perception.