Self-Destructive ‘Issues’

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
3 min readApr 11, 2021

We all have a self-destructive side. How are you dealing with yours?

Photo by Sam Moqadam on Unsplash

We know, for sure, we all have a self-destructive side. This is because ‘reality,’ and, thus, ‘humanity,’ is, continually, ‘divided into ‘two’.’

That is, it isn’t possible to have a ‘one’ without at-least, and, technically, at-most, one ‘other’ one.

This is known as the ‘theory of other’ which shows up in many disciplines, predominantly, philosophy, physics, and psychology.

Theory of Other (One) (Token for Other One)

Theory of Other

The ‘theory of other’ is proven by the conservation of a circle. That is, you cannot have a zero without a one because you cannot have a circumference without a diameter, meaning, technically, the arithmetic number ‘two’ is the basis for everything (the only ‘real’ number in Nature) (the only ‘natural’ number in Nature).

Circumference and Diameter (Zero and One)

You could use many (any) other words to describe an ‘other’ ‘one.’ Technically, every ‘word’ describes an ‘other’ one.

So, that’s where we get the self-destructive ‘self.’

Identity

That is, ‘self’ is an other word for ‘mind.’ Meaning we use our minds to inter-react with ‘self.’ That is, there are many ‘selves’ within one ‘self.’

Again, this is a confusing way of saying you cannot have a circumference without a diameter (pi, technically, is the correct term for mind, and ‘self’).

Pi

Therefore, 50–50 is the constant and the norm for everything (including ‘self’). Meaning the other self continually cancels out (two steps forward, one step back) the self. So, no need, actually, to worry all that much about the self-destructive self. It can only be ‘active’ half-the-time.

Reality

However, half-the-time, from a circle’s point of view, is all-the-time, because it is impossible to have a half without a whole. So that’s where 50–50 kicks in (half-the-time self-destructive, no matter what we do).

So, there it is. Everything you need to know to understand self-destructive ‘reality.’ It’s not destructive, actually. It’s creatively destructive, because, again, you need a half to have a whole. Explaining creative disruption, in general.

Half and Whole
Conservation of a Circle

Conservation of the Circle is the core, and, thus, the only, dynamic in Nature.

Amazon.com: Euclid’s Error: The Mathematics behind Foucault, Deleuze, and Nietzsche eBook: Yardley, Ilexa: Kindle Store

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