Site icon John Rector

Thinking as Perceiving

Thesis: Thinking is not creative in the first-person sense; it is relational—like vision and hearing. We do not manufacture thoughts; we stand in relation to thought patterns. Ideas are a subset of those patterns.

From “As a Man Thinketh” to Perception

The proverb as a man thinketh, so does he act is often misread as if we fabricate thoughts and then choose behaviors. In practice, thinking behaves like perception. You do not create an object with your eyes; you relate to it. You do not create a sound with your ears; you hear it. Likewise, you do not create thoughts; you perceive them. Action follows the patterns you are in relation with.

Thought Patterns and Ideas

Let’s separate two layers:

Using the color-wheel analogy, cardinal ideas map to primaries (red, green, blue). Secondary ideas (yellow, magenta, etc.) are composites. But there are also arbitrarily fine endpoints—say, 80.34567°. That endpoint belongs simultaneously to multiple families:

Students should learn to see families rather than reify single “atomic thoughts.” What grips us is typically a family pull, not a lone point.

Relational, Not Creative

When you say “I had a thought,” treat it like “I saw an object” or “I heard a sound.” The stance is relational, not authorial. In this stance, two things become possible:

Why This Matters for Practice

If thinking is relational, then practice begins with current ideation—the patterns you are in relation with now—rather than archaeology of the past. Calculate the resultant of your active families (the “vector of pull”), observe its magnitude (how tight the grip) and direction (where it pulls), and then cultivate relation with diverse families so no single one dominates. The aim is not to exterminate ideas but to diversify relations until dominant pulls cancel and freedom of action returns.

Seeing Like a Philosopher (or Theologian)

Train perception:

Takeaway: Thinking is a mode of perception. Treat thoughts as perceived patterns, ideas as families within those patterns, and practice as widening relation until no single family monopolizes your attention—and action follows.

Exit mobile version