Practical Aspects of Participating
When a framework is actually in use, then certain practical features emerge. Most importantly a dynamic duality is invariably generated by real world activity.
So each Grouping must now be considered as if it is a Level and the impact of the dynamic duality analysed. The Centre(s) that result must be appropriately named and where the level is bipolar, one Centre must be assigned due dominance.
Sustaining the School
G1: Engage Your Self
The school requires each member to be fully engaged in a personal way. Each must feel responsible for perpetuating the doctrine and appreciating the variety of duties associated with that. At that absolute minimum, participation requires a deep realization of the fundamentals.
Dynamic Duality: Engagement of the self is a personal matter, but at the same time the person is marked out in society and so it is a social matter as well. It does not seem possible to disentangle these two pressures.
So, in the Tree, this level becomes a single balanced Centre:
.We will label
:As proposed for the Grouping, the Centre is under a pressure for autonomy.
G2: Foster Collegiality
The school depends on its members to support each other in the face of challenges to the doctrine, and to present a united front. Collegiality is generated in a variety of ways, especially during induction where
( ) and ( ) are essential. Later ( ), ( ), around new theories ( )and ( ) contribute.Dynamic Duality: Again, collegiality is simultaneously a personal matter and a social phenomenon.
So, in the Tree, this level becomes a single balanced Centre:
.We will label
:As proposed for the Grouping, the Centre is under a pressure for understanding.
G3: Seek Involvement
The school requires organisation and management and that demands the practical involvement of adherents. Even where there are funds to pay outsiders, they cannot be trusted to handle doctrinal affairs.
Dynamic Duality: Involvement is a personal matter with adherents having their own preferences and capabilities. However, quite independent of that, the school intrinsically requires certain roles to be filled, which is a social perspective.
This means that this level in the Tree will generate two polarized but connected Centres:
and .We will label
and label :
Adherents cannot be forced to take on roles and there is no financial incentive to do so. That means that personal preferences, including desires for status or power, will be dominant. However, the two Centres will affect each other.
So the personal Centre is dominant and placed on the right side of the Tree.
As proposed for the Grouping, both Centres are under a pressure for performance.
G4: Claim Recognition
For a school to feel secure and gain additional adherents, it must be assigned a social status and, ideally, the doctrine must be valued in society .
Dynamic Duality: In recognizing the school, there is no difference made between school and its adherents. If a school is denigrated then its adherents are denigrated. If outsider individuals attack the school, then it is felt that society is attacking the school.
So, in the Tree, this level becomes a single balanced Centre:
.We will label
:As proposed for the Grouping, the Centre is under a pressure for certainty..
Energizing the School
G5: Uphold Orthodoxy
The doctrine has to be maintained in an orthodox form by the school or it will get dissipated and get lost in a sea of ideas that swirl in a culture. Although the orthodox doctrine is esoteric, difficult to understand and never accepted in full, it must be upheld.
Dynamic Duality: The orthodoxy can be upheld in a direct way by individual members of the school proclaiming their adherence and membership of the school. Quite separately, the school organization can publicly assert the orthodox position in relation to criticisms or social challenges. Naturally, adherents will influence what is asserted about the orthodoxy, and formal assertions will influence adherents.
On this basis, there will be two polarized but connected Centres in the Tree:
and .We will label
and label :
These two ways to convey the importance of orthodoxy influence each other, but a school's assertions are far more likely to influence a member's sense of identity than the reverse.
So the social Centre is dominant and placed on the right side of the Tree.
As proposed for the Grouping, both Centres are under a pressure for acceptability.
G6: Permit Development
Doctrinal revisions and new applications that are intrinsic to school development are inherently controversial, especially during the lifetime of the founder. But they must be permitted if a school is to thrive.
Dynamic Duality: On the one hand, development is a social matter shaping the school as a whole. Responding to challenges may be driven collectively, with any development potentially impacting on all members. On the other hand, individuals are the source of development, and changes to the doctrine and its use affect each member differently. Members will influence what a school responds to and how, and be influenced by such responses.
This means that there will be two polarized but connected Centres in the Tree:
and .We will label
and label :
bring pressure to bear on far more effectively than the reverse.
So the social Centre is dominant and placed on the right side of the Tree.
As proposed for the Grouping, both Centres are under a pressure for well-being.
G7: Drive Revitalization
Schools are subject to inner decay and to external misunderstanding and attacks. The only response to this is to continuously revitalize the school, reaffirming its value and potential benefit for society.
Dynamic Duality: Revitalization is a social phenomenon and applies to the school as a whole—however it simultaneously applies to each member. Unless the members revitalize individually the school will not be revitalized.
So, in the Tree, there will be a single balanced Centre:
.We will label
:As proposed for the Grouping, the Centre is under a pressure for selflessness.
Channels
By inspection and reflection:
From L1:
will influence and and vice versa, but it will not directly affect or higher Centres.From L2:
will influence and and vice versa, but will not directly affect or higher Centres.From L3:
will influence , and and vice versa, but not directly affect any higher Centres.From L4:
will influence , and and vice versa. therefore has the most influence, affecting and being affected directly by every Centre except .From L5:
will directly influence and vice versa, but will only affect indirectly. will directly influence and vice versa, but only affect indirectly. The will not directly influence and vice versa.From L6:
will influence and vice versa.Click on the thumbnail at right to see the picture that emerges from the analysis of the dynamic duality and assuming standard channels as just explained.
Continue to:
- Review the Tree as a whole.
Originally posted: 28-Apr-2024.