(June 25, 2017 at 3:30 am)Astreja Wrote:(June 25, 2017 at 2:20 am)AtlasS33 Wrote: To serve the idea well, you have to develop feelings for it.
I agree with this. If you have no particular feelings for something, it would be unlikely to play a major role in your life and there would be little incentive to do it, let alone do it well.
Quote:Emotions, idea, acts.
"Emotions" to an illusion is the problem's core.
Feelings come first.
I think the idea would have to come first, as an illusion would have to establish some sort of presence in the mind before generating any emotional response (as emotions are reactive rather than proactive).
I think about it as emotions building up the proper environment that would produce the act we're searching for.
Some believe because emotions were the kick; the door opener. I think a perfect example would be an argument from design that led a thinker to get attached to an abstract figure in their head; then completed it with comparing different religions and picking the one more suitable to his/her previous thoughts.
You can strengthen the example more if we imagined the thinker's own emotions towards the design.