The Challenge of Changing one Thought

November 30, 2022 Cognitive Insights No Comments

The degree of challenge depends on the thought. Deeply embedded thoughts are more challenging to change.

The difference between deep and superficial-level thoughts is crucial.

Embeddedness

Surface-level thoughts are more Lego-like. You can, so to speak, quickly take out one small block and put in another. Of course, there are no pure Lego-like mental blocks in the mind/brain. This is, there are no purely Platonic concepts in one’s mindscape. Any thought has some degree of depth.

The deeper in mind, the less Lego-like mental contents are and the more overlapping/embedded. In-depth, they are like elements hanging together with many little hooks. Each element hangs on to several others that hang on to several others. Pulling at one, you are pulling at many before you know it.

Comparing surface-level and deep thoughts, this difference becomes so significant that it may be confusing to use the same term (‘thought’) for both without further explanation ― which you just received.

Herein lies the challenge

Changing one profound thought has repercussions on many others. This way, deep thoughts are more stable as they should be, and as anyone can experience. The set of deep thoughts together corresponds well to one’s personality ― which is notoriously difficult to change, especially with means appropriate for the surface-level side: taking out elements and putting in others.

Exclusively changing one thought in-depth is not possible. Moreover, forcefully trying to do so may engender internal conflicts in the to-be-changed person. This may lead to what is called cognitive dissonance. The afflicted person will experience an urge to get rid of the dissonance, such as by reversing the half-baked change.

Mental resistance

Others experience the above as mental resistance to change. If the pattern hangs on to other deeply embedded patterns, there will be deep resistance, even if it seems illogical or counterproductive. People don’t always act in their apparent interests.

One can see this, for instance, in politics ― especially in populist demagoguery. The involved brainwashing is a brute-force undertaking. This may damage people deep inside, but the demagogue generally doesn’t care. Once accomplished, it is difficult to reverse the changes by rational argumentation. Deeply embedded thoughts are just not so easily changeable, even if they appear at the surface level. This can be baffling to people who are used to much conceptual mental change ― intellectuals.

More generally, this makes it difficult to dis-illusion.

Managing the resistance

As experience shows time and again, the idea that rational persuasion must change any irrational thought can lead to increasing dissonance and resistance. It doesn’t work. Indiscriminately draw, and you shall be drawn against. Trying to re-brainwash the person into the ‘correct direction’ – as is frequently done – carries profound ethical issues, especially if it is the only manner used.

In a paradoxical strategy, one may first follow and even exaggerate the direction of the resistance, which may lose its strength through this. With the guards down, change may be more straightforward. However, I’m cautious with this and seldom use it. What happens when the guards come to their senses again?

Toward mental growth

Apart from this, it’s good to know when the drawing will be genuinely effective and when not. This is a crucial part of the aim of coaching and of changing an opinion, generally. The ideal way is only to change what the person is ready for ― congruent with his present mental constellation.

The latter kind of change is called mental growth.

The ethically best and probably most durably effective way to accomplish this is by genuine invitation from the inside out. That is autosuggestion.

If done well, this is not the end but the beginning of a path toward mental strength and health.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

20. The subconscious: dustbin or city of angels?

There are two very opposing views on matters of the subconscious. As the title of this text suggests, one is rather negative and the other, well, altogether more positive. ◊◊◊ Freud is exemplar for looking at the subconscious as mainly a kind of dustbin for repressed emotions and things that in one way or another Read the full article…

Lifting Maya’s Veil

Seeing beyond the illusions that shape our perception requires a fundamental shift in awareness ― a deepening of our relationship with reality beyond habitual mental constructs. This is not just an intellectual exercise but a transformational process that involves our whole being. From the AURELIS perspective, this can be approached in several interconnected ways, described Read the full article…

From A.I. Agents to Society of Mind

In this blog, we trace the evolution from artificial agents to emergent mind by reflecting on Marvin Minsky’s Society of Mind and integrating modern insights from both neuroscience and A.I. We uncover how modularity, structure, and pattern completion form the bedrock of both artificial and human intelligence. The blog also proposes that consciousness isn’t a Read the full article…

Translate »