Novels

Monday, 14 September 2020

Quest For Relevance

The Quest for Relevance 


Through thousands of generations, throughout a multitude of different cultures, the Quest for Relevance has revealed to us an ineffable wisdom. 


The Purposeful Dialogue 

and Three Critical Questions 



1 : The Purposeful Dialogue


Our way of life is transitory. 


Everything we do is temporary, with exception of carving stone, planting trees and making children. Even then, there are no guarantees. 


People who do not carve stone, plant trees and/or make children are not part of the Human continuum. They’re part of the augmentation to provide for the continuum or they are vampires upon it. 


Most of the time most of us are not going to be carving stone, planting trees or making babies. 



2 : The Three Critical Questions 


Of all of the impermanent things it is possible for us to do: what is worth doing?


After great deliberation it was generally understood there to be one concept which answered this question: 


Satisfaction.


Emotional, Mental, Physical, Spiritual.


What activities accomplish this? 


After great deliberation it was necessarily asked: Is there anything at all outside of this which is worth doing? 



3 : The Fourth Awareness 


After great deliberation it was necessarily asked; is there any other thing not covered by these responses, which we have forgotten to be aware of? 


To date, despite various movements representing short-lived attempts to do so, there has been no solid reply to the fourth critical question (and very few to the third). 


Many claim it to be irrelevant. 


Many others agree that despite it being apparently unanswerable, the Dilemma of Unknowable Alternative is the most necessary and important of them all. 


Many others cannot distinguish the nature of any difference between the third and fourth. 


Many others explain it is imperative to understand the difference between the third and fourth. 



4 : A Promoted Discourse (insert)


A structured logical attempt to elucidate on the Critical Questions. 


“To aspire to higher things”


“Why?”


“For the sake of (it)” ‘it’ being in this case, higher things - for the sake of higher things.


“To bring you or others satisfaction.”


“Yes.”


“Aspiration is satisfaction.”


“Even if it is unobtainable or unobtained?”


“The quest for relevance includes the quest for satisfaction regardless of successful attainment.” 


“What of those who pursue unsatisfactory purpose? To not aspire. To aspire toward degradation.” 


“Are they relevant? Are they doing things worth doing?”


“Yes, Yes. Yes, No. No, Yes. No, No. These are the four castes of possible exemptions, those who pursue unsatisfactory purpose.


Yes, Yes. Relevant and Worthy. If they are relevant and worthy, they are not exempt. 


Yes, No. Relevant and Unworthy. If they are relevant they are also necessarily worthy. They are not exempt. The concept is self-defeating. It does not exist. It is delusional to establish grounding here. 


No, Yes. Irrelevant and Worthy. If they are worthy they are also necessarily relevant. They are not exempt. The concept is self-defeating. It does not exist. It is delusional to establish grounding here. 


No, No. Irrelevant and unworthy. This is the only group who answer the third critical question in a meaningful albeit negative way. Those who pursue activities which are neither relevant nor worthy do exist. Can their work be permanent? Can this lead us to answer the fourth question?”


“Answering each question either reveals it to have already been answered or that it creates more questions. It is a system which folds upon itself: ultimately all questions have already been answered, or they result in the same conclusion, a question which creates more questions, all of which have already been answered with the exception of the one question which creates more questions.”


“Have you come to a place in your approach where there are no longer any questions which have not already been answered, do not create more questions?”


“That place exists?”


“In many different guises. It is only the place where the question cannot be answered and requires more questions which is of concern to those who explore the third and fourth critical questions.”


3 Is there anything outside of satisfaction worth doing? 


4 Is there anything outside our rationale which we have overlooked?


“I do not enjoy the work I do.” 


“Does it creates results worth doing?”


“No. It is neither relevant nor worthy.”


“Then you are a fool to continue doing it.”


“That is why I must continue doing it. To discover relevance of irrelevancy. To answer the fourth critical question. That a person enacts an irrelevant and unworthy task, the futility, creates its own purpose, the purpose of its being.”


“You thus have aspiration. You have discovered satisfaction. It is relevant and worthy. You are not a fool.”


“Were I to cease to do it?” 


“That would be preferable.”


“Is there anything at all so futile as to be not contain this lesson of awareness? 


“That is why we ask these questions. That is their purpose. You have simply rephrased and therefore understood the third and fourth critical questions.”


“Were I to do nothing at all?”


“Only one who has succeeded at that can knowingly answer.”



5 : Concision (insert)


The Purposeful Dialogue

The Three Critical Questions 

The Dilemma Unknown

The Promoted Discourse


What is worth doing?

What activities accomplish this? 

Is there anything outside of this worth doing? 

Is there anything else to be aware of? 


Our task is to posit debate regarding the information presented as response to the Quest for Relevance. It is advised to tackle the topic one step at a time. It is also encouraged that any innovation on the individuals part be fully explored. 



6 : Undisclosed Evolution (insert)


Is it Useful?

Is it Accountable? 

Is it necessary for it to be (useful, accountable)? 


If it exists it serves purpose, it is relevant.

If it exists yet is unaccountable, it exists, it serves purpose. 


Are today’s interpretations what was originally intended? 

Do we suffer from cognitive bias? 


These questions are why the fourth critical question exists, to raise our awareness of such factors. 


All of these questions have already been integrated into the basic model. 



7 : The Golden Standard (insert)


“By what criteria do we ascertain Relevance?”


“That, respected and enlightened one, is the Golden Question.” 


“Does relevance necessarily have to be permanent? The answer is No, because we ourselves are not permanent. Only by our actions can we strive for permanence, by carving stone, planting trees or making children. This does not ipso facto mean we are ourselves irrelevant. Thus, those who do not carve stone, plant trees or make babies, are also not ipso facto irrelevant. Those are not the only criteria by which we evaluate relevancy. We also respect augmentation of the human continuum to have relevance.” 


“So the only irrelevant and unworthy caste are the vampiric who exploit the human continuum without augmenting it?”


“It is possible they also may have relevancy and worth, albeit relative. Relevancy is relative. It is about how we relate a thing to another. How we relate between things. Thus we must establish polarised or yet more complicated poly-optional parameters between things to establish weight worth.” 


“Who it is more useful to defines its respective worth. A lake owner requires water less than a desert nomad. To the lake owner water falls from the skies to fill his lake, water is everywhere, it is almost worthless. To the desert nomad water is rare and sacred, worth more than gold and perhaps more than life itself.” 


“We all need water.”


“Thus it has irrefutable worth. Do we all need gold?” 


“Most people never encounter it.”


“Are they any less for never encountering it?”


“No.”


“Then gold is worth significantly less than water.”


“Not to the owner of a gold mine in a desert.” 


“Now you see it. Worth is relative. Relevance is relative. Relativity is about relevancy. Revelation is elevation, it inherently has value.” 


“Insight and education.”


“Intuition and indoctrination.”


“Polarised parts of the same whole.”


“A dynamic. There is always a scale system between polarities, by which to gauge value. In its simplest form, five stages of transition. Pure left, bias left, perfect balance, bias right, pure right.”


“It could be left, centre, right.”


“We require versatility to assess complexity. Halfway between the oasis and the sea there is sand. Travel the opposite direction, halfway between the oasis and the sea there is sand. Without the sand there is no oasis, only a river connecting the left sea to the right sea.” 





These pages are inserts from the Tau of the SpaceWays, addendum & additional notes. 

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