Communicating our Experiences
Our
transference of life's experiences to others has enabled the accumulation
of experience among people and usefulness on into the future beyond the
originator, a primary part of the ongoing creation of civilization.
There are several different ways
in which a person experiences life. In
other words, there is a natural major variation in the ways that different
people experience their own ongoing life. To
most effectively communicate with a particular person, present it in the
mode in which the person most naturally experiences life.
Here are several sets of experiential
modes among which a particular person would be experiencing their ongoing
life:
-
According to their "dominant sense"
in which they most naturally experience life:
-
visual,
-
auditory or
-
tactile-kinesthetic.
(for example, my own dominant sense
is "tactile-kinesthetic", I usually first experience the part of my ongoing
experience that involves movement and touch; then afterward I experience
the visual, then the auditory parts. Most people instead experience life
visually first.).
-
Action:
-
Cognition:
-
Triune-brain:
-
R-Complex, the part that tends to our
physical sensation and our physical actions.
-
Limbic, the part that tends to our emotions
and our socially structured existence.
-
Cerebral Cortical, the part that tends
to the reasoning and imaginative part of our life.
The "R-complex", the "Limbic", and
the "Cerebral Cortex" parts of each person all simultaneously experience
life in their independent fields.