Get Oriented to the Taxonomy

Re-set Your Awareness

The Taxonomy of Human Elements in Endeavour (THEE) is also a taxonomy of elements in consciousness under the pressure of self-awareness. So think of it as a Taxonomy of Consciousness for Endeavour orTaxonomy of Endeavour Elements in Awareness.

The essential discovery is that there is a dynamic structure of distinct and definable elements in what we commonly take to be intangible, fluid and multi-faceted: inner experience, inter-personal interaction, social situations and social institutions.

It seems that, whether we are aware of it or not, we all operate through and with this structure. That is to say: «we structure the world using the structure that structures us».

The world referred to here is our «psychosocial world», which is:

• a world of endeavour, personal and social.
• a world we create, can know well and call our own.

The psychosocial world is natural, but it is nothing like the physical world studied by natural scientists. Still, once its reality is faced and a model of this world is accepted as valid, then scientific explanations of that model (i.e. why it has the features that it has) can be developed and tested. This should lead to a deeper understanding of human evolution and brain function.

You can visit Explore > TOP Studio to follow the progress of these investigations.

THEE makes sense of the world of endeavour, providing frameworks that we can use for our own benefit. This website aims progressively to post the Taxonomy on the internet for free availability and wider scientific study. Anyone who is seriously interested can contribute to its development and applications.

If you have a philosophical or scientific background and are ready for a little complexity:Closed recent investigations suggest a framework that explains how psychosocial reality fits with other notions of reality: visit now.


Next Steps

Get comfortable by reading within this More Orientation section:

Then move to these more complex sections:

Originally posted: July 2009; Last amended: 14-Jan-2014