Appendix 1: Elementary Spirituality
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Introduction to Spirituality
conscious
Expression level
Strength and survival
Growth and regeneration
Internal compromise effect and internal assimilation effect
External compromise effect and external assimilation effect
spirit
Indulgence
Traditional Exorcism and the Three Laws of Hemer
Mechanical Exorcist and Consciousness Assimilator
Bundle and Containment
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Introduction to Spirituality
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Spirituality is the study of the nature, characteristics, and forms of existence of consciousness, as well as other related fields.
Spiritualism holds that consciousness is independent of matter and energy.
"Expression" is an abstract concept that is unique to spirituality. This concept refers to "the process from meaninglessness to meaning". In other words, neither matter, nor energy nor consciousness has meaning until it is expressed.
The result of the expression of matter is a certain form.
The result of the expression of energy is a certain change.
Matter and energy can be expressed directly, but consciousness needs to be expressed with the help of a carrier. This carrier can be either matter or energy.
The result of the expression of consciousness is a certain emotion (when the carrier is matter) or tendency (when the carrier is energy).
The act of attachment of consciousness to a carrier is called "carrier attachment".
Consciousness that is not attached to a carrier is called "free consciousness". Consciousness in this state has no meaning and cannot be expressed.
The consciousness that has completed the attachment of the carrier is called the "attached consciousness". Consciousness in this state still has no meaning, but it can make sense of itself through expression.
Human beings, for example, are consciously attached to matter.
Spiritual research has shown that the best carrier of consciousness is living things, followed by non-living things, and the last is energy.
Non-living beings who are consciously attached are called "spirits".
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conscious
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The unit of consciousness is Vint, or vin for short, taken from the surname of the psychiatrist Conrad Witt.
Free consciousness is usually denoted by the lowercase letter p.
Attached consciousness is usually denoted by a capital letter P.
The result of the expression of the attached state consciousness is determined by the waveform of its vibration. There are three types of vibrational waveforms of consciousness. The Ξ± and Ξ² waveforms are "active waveforms" and the Ξ³ waveforms are "inactive waveforms". The attached consciousness that vibrates in an active waveform is called "active attachment consciousness" and is denoted as Pa. The attached state consciousness that vibrates in an inactive waveform is called "inactive attached consciousness" and is denoted as Pi.
The total consciousness carried by a carrier is denoted as Pt, and there is Pt = Pa + Pi.
If all consciousness on the current carrier vibrates in a Ξ³ waveform, i.e., Pt=Pi, then the consciousness on the carrier has no expression and has no meaning.
If the attached consciousness of X vin vibrates with a non-Ξ³ waveform W, and thus completes the expression result E, then X is said to be the "consciousness required for expression" of E, which is denoted as Pe; W is the "waveform required for expression" and is denoted as We.
The conditions for attaching consciousness to complete a single expression are: Pa=Pe, Wa=We.
When a single expression can only be completed under the condition of Pe>1 vin, the consciousness of 1 vin will be the first to enter the active vibration state. The consciousness of this 1 vin is called the "mother consciousness" of this expression. At this time, Pa < Pe, and the expression cannot be completed. To complete the expression, the mother consciousness activates the active vibrational state of 1 vin Pi, causing it to become 1 vin Pa. If the Pa is still less than the Pe at this time, then all the current Pa will activate the active vibration state of 1 vin Pi respectively. The same activation behavior is repeated until Pa=Pe. This process of accomplishing the single expression of attached consciousness is called "lianlian vibration".
In a single expression, the vibrational waveforms of all Pa are consistent with the vibrational waveforms of the parent consciousness. The vibrational waveform of the parent consciousness is the same as the waveform (We) required for expression.
If all Pa currently involved in the expression can activate the vibration state of 1 vin Pi respectively, the current joint vibration is said to be "full joint vibration".
When Pe is not to the power of 2, some Pa will give up activating Pi in the co-vibration that prompts Pa=Pe. The continuous vibration that occurs in this situation is called "semi-complete continuous vibration".
For example, if the condition for completing the expression is Pe=7 vin and We is the Ξ± waveform, then the consciousness of 1 vin will be the first to enter the active vibrational state and vibrate in the Ξ± waveform, becoming the mother consciousness. In this case, Wa=We, Pa=1 vin. Because Pa When a full confederation vibration occurs multiple times, there will be a situation where some of the existing Pa cannot activate (rather than give up) the Pi. The continuous vibration that occurs in this situation is called "incomplete continuous vibration". When incomplete conjunctive vibrations occur, even if Pa < Pe, the conjunctive vibrations are forced to terminate and the expression is not completed. ββββ Expression level ββββ Expression level definition: The degree to which the attached consciousness is expressed. The expression accomplished by the attachment consciousness by vibrating Ξ± waveform is called "forward expression". The expression accomplished by the attachment consciousness by vibrating in Ξ² waveform is called "negative expression". For material-based consciousness, positive expression generates positive emotions. The higher the level of expression, the stronger this emotion is. Similarly, for material-based consciousness, negative expression can produce negative emotions. The lower the level of expression, the stronger the emotion. For energy-based consciousness, positive expression will produce a positive trend. The higher the expression level, the more pronounced this trend becomes. Similarly, for energy-based consciousness, negative expression will produce a negative tendency. The lower the expression level, the more pronounced this trend becomes. In the forward expression, remember We=Wa=1. When expressed negatively, remember We=Wa=-1. Under the two active waveforms, the expression of the attached consciousness is divided into -6 to +6 levels according to the number of times the full conjunctive vibration occurs, for a total of thirteen levels. Expression Level 0: When Pa = 1 vin (i.e., only the parent consciousness vibrates in an active waveform), it is independent of the vibrational waveform, and the level of consciousness expression is level 0. Positive Expression Level: When 2 vinβ€ Pa<8 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ± waveform, the level of consciousness expression is positive 1. When 8 vinβ€ Pa<32 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ± waveform, the level of consciousness expression is positive 2. When 32 vinβ€ Pa < 128 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ± waveform, the level of consciousness expression is positive 3. When 128 vinβ€ Pa < 512 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ± waveform, the level of consciousness expression is positive 4. When 512 vinβ€ Pa 2048 vin, and vibrates in a Ξ± waveform, the level of consciousness expression is positive 6. Negative Expression Grade: When 2 vinβ€ Pa < 8 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ² waveform, the level of consciousness expression is minus 1. When 8 vinβ€ Pa < 32 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ² waveform, the level of consciousness expression is minus 2. When 32 vinβ€ Pa<128 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ² waveform, the level of consciousness expression is minus 3. When 128 vinβ€ Pa <512 vin, and vibrating in a Ξ² waveform, the level of consciousness expression is minus 4. When 512 vinβ€ Pa 2048 vin, and vibrates in a Ξ² waveform, the level of consciousness expression is minus 6. ββββββ Strength and survival ββββββ Definition of strengthening: the characteristic of the consciousness that uses matter as the carrier to actively pursue stronger expression. Tendencies are a characteristic common to all material-based consciousnesses. Spirituality usually divides matter into two categories: living and non-living. In being the vehicle of consciousness, living and non-living things differ in nature (sometimes in complete opposite directions) and have different tendencies. Consciousness with living organisms as the carrier will actively pursue a higher (closer to positive 6) expression level; Abiotic consciousness will actively pursue lower (closer to minus 6) expression levels. Definition of Survival: The property of material-based consciousness that actively resists the ability to continue to express itself when it is possible to lose consciousness. The limit value of the carrier carrying consciousness is called the "maximum carrying capacity" and is denoted as Pm. Pm may be different for different vectors. On a single vector, Pm is a variable that is affected by the current expression level. For the consciousness of living organisms, the stronger the expression (the closer the expression level is to plus 6 or minus 6), the smaller the Pm. For abiotic consciousness, the weaker the expression (the closer the expression level is to 0), the smaller the Pm. When Pt > Pm, the consciousness that cannot be carried will be transformed into free consciousness, resulting in impaired consciousness. Existential impaired consciousness can be avoided in a number of ways β one of which is incomplete conjunctive vibrations. ββββββ Growth and regeneration ββββββ Definition of growth: The characteristic of the growth of total consciousness (Pt) over time on biological carriers. Abiotic carriers do not have growth. The rate at which consciousness grows in the presence of living beings is called the "growth rate" and is expressed in VG. VG is usually measured in Witt per year (Vin/Y). As Pt grows, so does the amount of Pm corresponding to different expression levels. As a result, organisms will be more likely to reach higher or lower expression levels as they age. For biological vectors, VG is inversely proportional to age. VG reaches its maximum when a creature is born and zeros out when the creature dies naturally. Spiritualism holds that the growth of Pt occurs after the end of each conjunctive vibration. As a result, creatures with higher mood swings tend to have higher VG. Definition of regeneration: the property of consciousness regeneration after the impairment of consciousness occurs on the biological carrier, and the remaining attached state consciousness is regenerated. Abiotic carriers are not reproducible. When the biological carrier loses consciousness for some reason, the remaining consciousness on the carrier regenerates the attached consciousness that is the same as the lost consciousness. The rate at which consciousness is regenerated is called the "regeneration rate" and is expressed in VR. VR is typically measured in Watts per second (Vin/s). In spirituality, the commonly used unit of vin/s is often written as Randall, which is derived from the surname of the spiritualist Homer Randall. Lost consciousness (converted into a free state of consciousness) is recorded as PD. For biocarriers, VR is inversely proportional to PD. When PD=0, the biological vector has a theoretical maximum VR, expressed as VRM. In biological carriers, when Pt grows due to growth, its vrm will increase in a very low proportion. When pd=50%Pt, vr=0. When pd > 50% Pt, the biocarrier loses its reproducibility. The condition of pd > 50% Pt is called "irreversible damage". When irreversible damage occurs, the carrier loses all its carrying capacity, and the attached consciousness it carries will be transformed into free consciousness in a short period of time, resulting in the death of the carrier. ββββββββββ Internal compromise effect and internal assimilation effect ββββββββββ On a single carrier, consciousness can be expressed two or more times at the same time. In multiple expressions, each expression is completed by an independent maternal consciousness. The vibrations caused by each mother's consciousness are independent of each other, and the activated consciousness is only active in its own expression, and does not superimpose to cause stronger expressions. If the vibrational waveform of all parent consciousness is the same, the multiple expression is called "multiple expression in the same direction". If at least 1vin of the parent consciousness has a different vibrational waveform from the other parent consciousnesses, the multiple expressions are called "heterotropic multiple expressions". When multiple expressions occur in the same direction, the Pa involved in each expression will affect each other, and eventually the Pa of each expression becomes the average of each expressed Pa, that is: Pa=οΌPa1+Pa2+Pa3β¦β¦+PaNοΌ/N The vibrational waveforms of each expression remain the same, i.e.: Wa=Wa1=Wa2=Wa3β¦β¦=WaN This phenomenon is known as the "internal compromise effect". When the internal compromise effect occurs, the expression of the original Pa lower than the average Pa will perform more conjunctive vibrations to increase the Pa, while in the expression of the original Pa higher than the average Pa, the last part of the Pa activated by the conjunctive vibration will be converted into Pi to reduce the Pa. When heterotropic multiple expressions occur, all expressions with the same vibrational waveform will have an internal compromise effect, and thus produce two average Pa vibrating with different active waveforms, denoted as PaΞ± and PaΞ². On a single carrier, the average Pa of the same amount vibrating with different active waveforms cancels each other out and is converted to pd at the same time. Namely: pd=2*min{PaΞ±οΌPaΞ²} This phenomenon is called the "internal assimilation effect". When the internal assimilation effect occurs, the small expression of PaΞ± and PaΞ² gradually disappears. The expression of the original Pa is larger and does not change the vibration waveform, and the remaining Pa becomes the final Pa of expression, and the vibration wave is formed into the final vibration waveform of expression, and the expression result becomes the "final expression result". Namely: Pa=|PaΞ±-PaΞ²| Wa=WaΞ±*[οΌPaΞ±-PaΞ²οΌ/οΌ|PaΞ±-PaΞ²|οΌ] ββββββββββ External compromise effect and external assimilation effect ββββββββββ The interaction between different expressions is not only present on a single vector, but also between two independent vectors. This effect (i.e., the amount of variation in Pa) is the same for the two independent vectors, but the magnitude of the effect is attenuated by the straight-line distance between the vectors (r) and the drag coefficient (k) of the medium at the straight-line distance of the carriers. Denote the weakening rate of two vectors when they interact with each other as T, which is: T=K^-οΌr1*k1+r2*k2+r3*k3β¦β¦+rN*kNοΌ where K is the assimilation constant. It is not difficult to see that when the two vectors coincide (i.e., different expressions are performed on a single vector), or when the drag coefficient of the medium between the vectors is 0, T = 1 and is the maximum value of T. Let's say that vector A completes the expression of Pe=PaA and We=WaA. Vector B completes the expression of Pe=PaB, We=WaB. When WaA and WaB are the same, an external compromise effect occurs between the two vectors. The change in Pi (Ξ΄Pi) is the same for both vectors, including: Ξ΄Pi=T*[max{PaA,PaB}-οΌPaA+PaBοΌ/2] Among the two vectors where the external compromise effect occurs, the support with a smaller original Pa will have Ξ΄Pi activated as Pa, and the carrier with a larger original Pa will have the Pa of Ξ΄Pi converted to Pi. When WaA and WaB are different, an assimilation effect occurs between the two vectors. The amount of change in PD (ΞPD) is the same on both vectors, including: Ξ΄pd=T*min{PaA,PaB} The vibrational waveform expressed on both carriers remains unchanged. ββ spirit ββ For non-living consciousness, when the expression level is infinitely close to 0, the maximum carrying capacity of the carrier will also be infinitely close to 0. That is to say, after the spirit has completed its first expression, the final vibrational waveform expressed after it can only be the same as the vibrational waveform of that expression. The first expression of the Spirit is called the "decisive expression." Loose consciousness will use any living thing as a carrier. In contrast, the formation of the spirit is more coincidental. Most spirits are formed within a short period of time after the death of a biological carrier - the consciousness attached to the biological carrier selects the nearby non-living thing as a new carrier before it completely enters a free state, and completes the attachment of the carrier. This condition is called "sudden carrier attachment". The completion of the sudden attachment of the carrier does not mean the formation of the spirit. If the expression level of the surrounding attached consciousness is close to 0, or its vibrational waveform is opposite to the vibrational waveform of the spirit's decisive expression, the external compromise effect or the external assimilation effect will indirectly reduce the Spirit's Pt. If its pd exceeds 50% Pt, the spirit will disappear due to irreversible damage. Of all known creatures, humans are the most ideal carriers of consciousness. Its average Pt and Pm are the highest among all organisms, but they also have the greatest chance of sudden vector attachment when the vector dies. According to the American spiritual organization "Guild", every 380,000 deaths of an ordinary human will result in a sudden attachment of carriers. Approximately 0.32% of psychic abilities that complete sudden vector attachment survive after completing decisive expression. More than 99% of the decisive expressions were expressed at negative levels. Almost all spirits can manipulate consciousness attached to the ontological carrier to some extent. This manipulation includes, but is not limited to, the active transformation of a part of the ontological consciousness into a free state, the attachment of the consciousness that is actively transformed into a free state to other carriers, and the conversion of consciousness into energy. Originally, spiritualism referred to the manipulation of consciousness by the spirit as "indulgence." With the development of spirituality, a very small number of human beings have also been discovered to be able to manipulate the consciousness of the body, so the term "longitudinal spirit" has gradually become a general term for the ability to manipulate consciousness. In addition, sudden attachment of vectors is very likely to occur when a creature capable of performing indulgence dies. ββ Indulgence ββ Definition of indulgence: The ability to manipulate consciousness to a certain extent. There are seven types of spiritual abilities. According to the rarity from low to high, it is divided into: "active free", "heavy attachment", "active transformation", "energy attachment", "matter attachment", "free absorption" and "reverse transformation". Active Release: Definition: The ability to transform a partially ontological consciousness into a free state of consciousness. Active dissociation is the most basic form of indulgence. Only the active consciousness of the non-maternal consciousness can be transformed into a free consciousness. The transformed free consciousness is called "active free consciousness" and is denoted as PDA. If the PDA is meaningful again, the expression result will be the same as the Pa and Wa before the transformation. The compromise effect affects the PDA as well as the assimilation effect, so all PDAs in an active free time can only vibrate in the same active waveform. The rate at which proprioceptive consciousness is actively transformed into a free state is called the "free rate" and is expressed in VD. VD is usually measured in Virt-per-second (Vin/s). When actively free, VD=PDA/s With the decrease of Pt, the inhibition of active dissociation by survival will gradually increase. As with pd, when the pda > 50% Pt, the conscious body will also suffer irreversible damage. Reattachment: Definition: The ability to reattach active free consciousness to its own carrier. The ability to actively free is a prerequisite for reattachment. The regenerative nature of organisms can interfere with the reattachment process to a certain extent. If a creature regenerates a certain amount of consciousness between the beginning of active dissociation and the end of reattachment, this part of consciousness will replace the same amount of PDA attempting to reattach, keeping the creature's Pt unchanged. The replaced PDA is transformed into a free state of consciousness and is no longer controlled by the ontology. The reattached consciousness loses contact with its pre-active maternal consciousness and thus enters an inactive state. Active Conversion: Definition: The ability to convert active dissociative consciousness into energy. Being able to actively free is a prerequisite for active transformation. The rate at which active free consciousness is converted into energy is called the "conversion rate" and is denoted as vt. VT is usually measured in Vitt-per-second (Vin/s). On a single vector that can be actively transformed, VT is inversely proportional to PDA. When PDA=0, the vector has a theoretical maximum vt, expressed as vtm. The VTM of a single vector generally does not change significantly. When pda=50%Pt, vt=0. The VTM of a vector that can be actively converted is typically between one and four times that of its VRM. The essence of active conversion is the conversion of PDA into energy. According to the formula for active energy conversion proposed by the psychiatrist Homer Randall (because the scientist Albert Einstein proposed the mass-energy equation in the same year, the formula for active energy conversion is also jokingly called the energy equation by spiritualists): Et=pda*Pa^2*L (where Et is the energy generated by active transformation, Pa is the active consciousness of the final expression of the body during active transformation, and L is Randall's constant) The formula for active conversion power can be derived: Ew=vt*L*Pa^2 That is, the rate of active conversion to generate energy is proportional to the ontology conversion rate and the square of the ontology expression level. Energy Attachment: Definition: The ability to attach active free consciousness to non-ontological energy. The ability to actively free and reattach is a prerequisite for energy attachment. Consciousness that uses energy as a carrier does not have the ability to strengthen, exist, grow, or regenerate. When the energy attachment is complete, all consciousnesses attached to the energy will enter an inactive state due to the loss of connection with the parent consciousness. The result of the expression of consciousness that has completed energy attachment is determined by the body that has carried out the energy attachment. Substance Attachment: Definition: The ability to attach an active free consciousness to non-ontological matter. The ability to actively free and reattach is a prerequisite for material attachment. The consciousness that has completed the attachment of matter is no longer controlled by the ontological body that is attaching to the matter, and can perform indulgence in the same way as the ontology. Free absorption: Definition: The ability to attach a free state of consciousness to the carrier of the ontology. Free absorption is the only way to increase the Spirit's Pt. The consciousness acquired through free absorption is called "absorption consciousness" and is denoted as Po. When the Pt of a single vector increases due to the increase of Po, the maximum bearing capacity (Pm), regeneration rate (vr), and conversion rate (vt) of the carrier do not change. When the vector loses Po, Pm, vr and vt do not change. The object of free absorption can be either ordinary free consciousness or non-ontological PDA. When Po increases due to absorption of ordinary free state consciousness, Po vibrates in an inactive waveform on the carrier. When Po increases due to the absorption of non-bulk PDA, Po vibrates on the carrier with the active waveform of the absorbed PDA. This part of Po will have an internal compromise effect or an internal assimilation effect with the original active consciousness on the carrier. Reverse Conversion: Definition: The ability to convert some non-noumenal energy into proprioceptive consciousness. Reverse conversion exists only in spiritual theory, and there is no record in the history of spirituality to prove its true existence. ββββββββββ Traditional Exorcism and the Three Laws of Hemer ββββββββββ For the spirit, the smaller the Pa, the smaller the Pm. Because spirits are not regenerating, any assimilation effect that reduces the spirit's Pa may result in permanent impairment of its consciousness (permanent reduction of its Pt). In addition, the vast majority of spirits can only express negatively, while living beings tend to express themselves more positively. Therefore, in order to prevent the assimilation effect with nearby organisms, spirits will often cause damage to living beings through indulgence, thus forcing them to express themselves negatively. "Exorcism" refers to the practice of irreversibly damaging the spirit through a series of means. Traditional exorcism involves three steps: finding out the location of the spirit; restricting the movement of spirits with spiritual faces; Causes irreversible damage to the spirit. In earlier exorcisms, those who were able to complete the first step were called psychics, those who were able to complete the second step were called binders, and those who were able to complete the last step were called exorcists. However, with the development of the exorcism industry, various exorcism methods came into being, and the term "exorcist" gradually became the general term for all exorcism workers. Andrew Hemmer is one of the most prominent spiritualists in history. The Three Laws of Hemer proposed by him served as the theoretical basis for exorcism, and led generations of exorcists. Heimer's First Law (also known as the "100% Law"): When two monomers are infinitely close, they are infinitely close to 100% affected by the external assimilation effect, and both lose equal consciousness. Hemer's Second Spiritual Law (also known as the "Law of Fifty Percent"): A single entity with the ability to actively transform loses 50% of its total consciousness has a conversion rate of 0. Hemmer's Third Law (also known as the "Law of Zero"): The maximum carrying capacity of a spirit at the 0 expression level is 0. ββββββββββ Mechanical Exorcist and Consciousness Assimilator ββββββββββ With the development of spirituality, traditional exorcism was gradually replaced by mechanical exorcism. Machines with special functions can not only cause faster and more stable assimilation effects, but also greatly reduce the probability of casualties in the exorcism process. Among the many machines with exorcism functions, the "Consciousness Assimilator" has the most outstanding actual combat performance, and its use in exorcism is also the most frequent. The working principle of this type of machine is to create a beam spirit sphere with air or light as the carrier, and continuously express the spirit at the positive level, and let this sphere circle the target until the target is irreversibly damaged. Spiritualists often refer to the Consciousness Assimilater as the Highly Embracing Mentality Generator, or Hemor, in honor of the late spiritualist Andrew Hemer. ββββ Bundle and Containment ββββ "Bundling" refers to the practice of reducing the spirit's total consciousness to 50% and then containing it with a special device without causing further harm to it. According to Hemmer's second law: when the spirit is pd=50%Pt, vt=0, that is, it loses its ability to actively transform, so it can no longer cause damage to living beings. Therefore, the effect of binding spirits and exorcism is almost the same, but the former does not deprive spirits of their right to live. The "Guild" was the first organization in the United States to contain spirits. Guilds usually have six members as the unit of action, and cooperate with auxiliary equipment such as spirit boxes and consciousness bracelets to complete containment work.