Sophisticated Thinking

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
1 min readJun 13, 2017

X and Y is, always, X and X.

X and X are X and Y.

Duplication and negation are the first things children learn. They duplicate ‘ma-ma-ma,’ and ‘da-da-da,’ to get what they want. And then they learn ‘no-no-no,’ to figure out the rest. Colors and shapes, etc., differentiation and integration, how to code, essentially.

This is all due to, and because of, the conservation of a circle, where two (not-one) is the most basic number (complementarity is the basis for identity) (because duplicity is the basis for a unit).

There is a hidden circle (circumference and diameter) (zero and one) joining and separating any X and-or Y. This breaks the law of identity and makes us think more carefully about identity in general. It also explains code and decode (symbolic representation) (basis for mathematics).

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01B80U3FC/

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