Sunday, May 30, 2010

Structure

These writings are minimal, lack specific examples, tedious details, and formal justification. The contents structure is meant to avoid specific opinion or perception based justification, because such content is meaningless to everyone but a small segment of those that share a similar perception.

In a very basic way, words that make an idea's description more specific also make the idea less true. Words are always very imperfect and quantity does not improve their quality, but instead only makes ideas more obscure.

People's perceptions always differ, so their agreement on a single source of information is inconsistent and random. To address this problem, the content is as simple as possible, it is as open-ended as possible, and as absolute as possible.

The content itself is not random but has been created in a makeshift hierarchy where the older entries are used to create newer entries. The old entries form a basis for exploring other abstract ideas. The goal of the content is to break down reality into abstract ideas about truth that can be useful for many people with their own unique perceptions. A person's perception is a lens that they see the world through and it dictates the application of the ideas contained herein.

Limiting the content to abstract ideas about truth helps to keep the ideas timeless and widely applicable for anyone that might take the time to read these writings.

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