Site icon John Rector

Redefining the Subsystem: From Habit to Transformation

The fastest way to break a habit is not to chip away at it one step at a time. It is to redefine the subsystem itself. In the framework of Love the Cosmic Dance, every denominator is built from two components: the predictor (P) and the imaginary contribution of ideas (). Almost everything comes down to these two.

This is why redefining a subsystem is so powerful. If your subsystem is “my weight,” then P collapses to a number on a scale. The shape of Expectation is stiff, defined by thousands of prior days. Habit persists. But if you redefine the subsystem to “falling in love with the divine,” then the denominator changes instantly. Weight becomes minutia inside a much larger denominator. Habit is broken not because you attacked it rectangle by rectangle, but because the subsystem itself no longer defines the shape.

Individuation in C

Individuation shows up most clearly in C. In the Money Lab, everyone had the same (six dollars). The system-level predictor was identical. But each student’s Expectation was different because of the imaginary component C—the ideas that biased them toward $8, $4, or $3. The individuation lives in C and its phase angle, not in P.

The Duck Example

Think about the duck. If I show you a single duck on the board, you are not seeing P at all—you are seeing C. The duck by itself is the host, the patient zero for ideas. You can ask: what ideas attach here? What angles of bias enter through this host? But if I show you the duck with its pond, the air, the marsh grass, and other animals, then you are seeing P. You are seeing the system that collapses to a number.

The Lesson

This framework lets you see why tradition persists over thousands of years (system-level P), why ideas spread one host at a time (C and angle), and why a single moment of redefinition—falling in love with the divine—can dissolve a personal habit overnight.

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