Now, we’re going a bit beyond metaphor. Yep that’s right — our mental space isn’t just something to talk about, it’s being constructed right now.
Let me frame our understanding differently…
Imagine your mind as an architecture firm. You have blueprints — inherited and you choose them (your thoughts). Then there’s the construction site — your perception. And finally, there are buildings being built already — your reality.
This isn’t just an interesting analogy. It’s the core paradox: We shape our own mind, and our mind shapes us.
Here’s why this architecture metaphor is powerful because it allows a deeper analysis than the previous article
Part 1: The Foundation
What is this “mind” we’re talking about?
- Modern View: From cognitive science, psychologists explain the mind as processing information based on past experiences interpreted through current belief systems (“cognitive schemas”). It’s the hardware behind our thinking.
- Stoic View: Epictetus might say, “It’s not other people or events that disturb us. It is our judgment of them.” So, same foundation, just different interpretation! Judgment sits at the center.
- Buddhist View (tangentially): Meditation isn’t about building things, but perhaps it’s like uncovering parts of reality obscured by mental architecture.
Part 2: The Structure — What We Build with Our Thoughts
Not the foundation, perhaps our thoughts are like tools or raw materials (“hyle”)?
Unconscious Constructs: Our minds constantly build narratives in our head. Why do you have recurring dreams about flying or failing? Because somewhere, deep down, your mind thinks that contributes to “you” being the way you are.
Examples:
- You think “They hate me.” Now, why do I have that perception because… your mind isn’t wrong using its tools! It took a potential disagreement and a distorted imagination from social media, maybe Protagoras’s perspective filter if you’re overly sensitive or judgmental towards others.
- You plan “I’ll run this marathon.” Your mind uses past experiences (“last week I ran a half-marathon!”) present belief systems (“my training schedule works”) and future expectations to build the structure.
- Perceptually, you might see failure or success depending on how your mind filters input.
Part 3: The Blueprint vs Reality
This is where Stoicism shines again. Let’s use Marcus’s “imagination needs judgment” concept here.
- Mind Constructs Blueprints: People often talk about mental “filters” or “scripts.” These are built-in systems we use to interpret the world.
- Example: You meet someone new. Your mind draws from past experiences, perhaps judgment confirms or denies them based on assumptions.
- Stoic Actionable: Marcus wouldn’t leave judgment undefined. He would ask: What reality am I projecting?
Is your “blueprint” based on judgment or imagination?
- If it’s Imagination: Your mind is flooded with images from movies, social media (“ideal life”), or past regrets. These feel like reality.
- If it’s Judgment: You are logically assessing what is within your control and making practical plans. Your reality matches the blueprint.
Protagoras said Consciousness is the measure. He emphasized subjectivity.
Our mind’s architecture reflects this: It builds a subjective reality out of objective input. That dream might be your mind’s way of coping with something judgment didn’t handle well.
The Crucial Question: What Kind of Mind-Building Do You Want?
- Imagination-Driven Architecture: This is the mind running wild with stories, leading to emotional distress or dissatisfaction. Your reality feels distorted.
- Judgment-Oriented Architecture: This is the mind making practical assessments, acting “strenuously” towards goals within its capacity (“iron determination”). Your reality feels manageable.
Focus Area: Mind Architecture → Explore perception, the construction of self (ego) and illusions
Exercise Idea: Practice Negative Visualization. Imagine your worst-case scenarios or desires failing… not just emotionally, but logically. What judgment would you need to make? Why iron determination might prevent or facilitate this.
Until we understand the tools our mind wields, how can we manage our perception or align it properly with Stoic judgment? Share your thoughts in the comments.