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Reflective Inquiry

A traditional term used within TST.

Reflective Inquiry.

Reflective Inquiry is the practice of clearing self-illusion.

Chapter 8 of 30 Philosophers described it like this:

“Reflective inquiry is the act of exploring and examining one’s own thoughts, beliefs, and assumptions to clear the illusions of life.”

This traditional philosophical practice is not self-attack. It is not rumination. It is not endless doubt. It asks you to examine the illusions closest to you. A social construct like money can feel natural even though its not. A political tribe can feel like truth itself even when it’s feeding you a selected story. A stereotype can turn a person into a category before you see them clearly. A trauma memory can make the present feel like the past. A fear can dress itself up as wisdom. A model or map can become so familiar that you forget it is not the thing itself.

Some illusions are not “out there.” They are inside your own thinking. They live inside your identity and habits. Reflective Inquiry slows all that down.

It asks:

What am I assuming? What am I defending? What am I afraid to see? What story am I treating as reality?

Reflective Inquiry also helps with the deeper illusion of separation. You may feel separate from nature, but that’s an illusion. In one sense, you are an individual. In another, you are also part of nature. The separation between yourself and nature is an illusion.

In a general sense, enlightenment can be described as the process of shedding illusions so you can see reality more clearly. Use Reflective Inquiry to do this. Use it to notice an illusion, test it, revise it, and live a little more clearly. Then you do it again.

The goal is to clear enough illusion that the self can live authentically.

The End.

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