Prologue: The Structure of the “Cage” Self-Imposed by Humanity
Hello, Esteemed Readers. The philosophies we advocate—”Singularity Thinking” and “The True Essence of Laozi”—focus on leaping over the “fences (fixed ideas)” erected by existing intellect. However, those fences were not built by any specific malicious force.
They are “Logical Cages” unintentionally created by the greatest minds in history who pursued the optimal solution of a logic that convinces everyone.
1. The Abandonment of the “Hyperspeed Line” Discovered by Plato
In the ancient world, Greek philosophy and Katakamuna aimed for the same peak of universal truth. Yet, their methodologies were decisively different.
Plato’s Path (The Analog Line)
A time-consuming analog line relying on repetitive trial and error through reason and analysis. While his image as a philosopher became a symbol of authority, the method lacked speed and immediacy.
Katakamuna’s Path (The Hyperspeed Line)
Reaches the ultimate answer directly through a nearly unbelievable hyperspeed line known as Pure Intuition.
The Limits of Cartesian Dualism
The tragedy of modern philosophy lies in the fact that it did not question the peak of truth discovered by Plato, but rather failed to notice the existence of the “Hyperspeed Line” inherent in Katakamuna. Modernity stared only at immediate reality and fell into the “cul-de-sac of human-centeredness.”
2. Kant’s “A Priori Trap” and the Finitude of AI
Following Descartes’ “separation,” Kant’s philosophy completed the self-regulation of intellect by defining the “OS of Common Sense” that AI now references. He established that the “Thing-in-Itself” (Noumenal World) is forever unreachable, sealing the truth within a self-intoxicating definition of rational contemplation.
“No matter how perfectly AI tries to convey beauty through theoretical solutions, that ‘tremor of the heart’ can only be tasted by those who experience it.”
3. The Trap of Psychology: The Conflation of “Emotion” and “Intuition”
Psychology sought the source of originality through the “Unconscious,” but Freud defined it as a “warehouse of pathological emotions,” causing the most valuable originality to be treated as indistinguishable from delusion. Jung, too, lacked the tool to definitively separate emotional desire from Pure Intuition.
4. Katakamuna: The Next Quest
Katakamuna logically transcends these flaws. When logical thought reaches its limit, the flash of insight brought from outside the frame is what we call Intuition.