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Human consciousness largely operates through thought, memory, conditioning, and inherited structures of perception. While thought remains necessary for practical functioning, human beings frequently mistake psychological interpretations for reality itself. This paper examines the distinction between thought and direct perception, arguing that most human cognition is conditioned through authority, repetition, imitation, and collective psychological structures. It further explores anthropocentrism as a major limitation within human consciousness — the tendency to place humanity at the centre of existence. The paper proposes that direct perception becomes possible only when observation is no longer dominated by conditioned psychological movement. In such awareness, existence is no longer interpreted through human superiority, identity, or historical importance, but perceived as an interconnected movement beyond the self-centred structures of thought.
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Mayank Singh (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a080a41a487c87a6a40c1d1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/yxewb
Mayank Singh
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