The Four Relationships of Human Interior

作者:中国现代哲学家学会
发表时间:
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The Four Relationships of Human Interior: Consciousness, Thinking, Mind, and Soul

By Wade Y. Dong

1. Consciousness and Thinking: Whole and Function

The first relationship is between consciousness and thinking.

Consciousness is the whole awareness, issued directly from AA (the Absolute Absolute). It is the light, not the object. It is passive, but foundational — nothing is known, felt, or thought without it.

Thinking is the symbolic function, active, structured, representational. It belongs to the RR layer, built on RA (logic, math, law), and manifested in language, judgment, and reasoning.

Their relationship follows the classical 2+1 model:

Consciousness is the Whole (1); Thinking is the Function (1).

They are ontologically distinct: consciousness is non-representable, formless, and whole; thinking is sequential, representational, and constructed.

Without consciousness, thinking is mere algorithm.

Without thinking, consciousness is silent, undifferentiated presence.

2. Consciousness and Mind: Issuance and Field

The second relationship is between consciousness and the mind.

The mind is not the origin of consciousness; it is its host — the relational field where consciousness appears, moves, and interacts with other contents (thoughts, emotions, memories).

The mind spans both AR (life) and RR (human systems). It is the instance within which the absolute whole (consciousness) is joined with the relative structures (thinking, memory).

Thus:

Consciousness is issued by AA; the mind is the living interface that receives and carries it.

Mind without consciousness is mechanistic — like a computer.

But consciousness without a mind has no field in which to manifest or relate.

3. Thinking and Mind: Function and Medium

The third relationship is between thinking and the mind.

Thinking is one of many functions within the mind — others include feeling, imagination, memory.

The mind serves as the medium through which thinking is executed, managed, and directed.

But unlike memory or emotion, thinking actively organizes the contents of mind using symbolic logic and recursive patterns.

Thus:

The mind is the space; thinking is one function among many, though it often dominates.

When thinking overrides all else, the mind becomes rigid and lifeless. When thinking is absent, the mind becomes chaotic or dreamlike.

4. Soul as the Relational Instance of All Three

The fourth relationship is not between two elements, but the result of their interrelation.

The soul is the Instance formed when:

- Consciousness (Whole)

- Thinking (Function)

are actively united within the Mind (Field)

In this way, the soul is not a separate substance but a unique connection — a living Instance where the Absolute and Relative meet through Life.

It follows the 2+1 Principle:

- 1 (Whole): Consciousness

- +1 (Function): Thinking

- +1 (Field): Mind

= Soul: the living, self-aware instance of human existence.

This makes the soul a unique, once-issued whole, a convergence of formless presence and structured function, lived in a temporally bounded instance.

Conclusion: The Interior as a Structured Instance

In summary:

Relationship | Description

-------------------------|----------------------------------

Consciousness–Thinking | Whole and Function (AA and RR)

Consciousness–Mind | Issuance and Field (AA to AR+RR)

Thinking–Mind | Function and Medium (RR within AR+RR)

Soul | The 2+1 Instance formed by their dynamic union

The human interior is not accidental. It is a relational construction, issued and shaped by the same ontological principles that structure the universe. The soul is the Instance of human being — alive, aware, and thinking — grounded in AA, expressed through RA, lived in AR, and symbolized in RR.

Only when all these elements align does a person become fully present — not just biologically alive, but spiritually whole.