Worldview Practice: Article #6

What is the dominant worldview and what are the supporting worldviews, if any, in this article?

Twelve Worldviews
Materialism
Spiritism
Realism
Idealism
Mathematism
Rationalism
Psychism
Pneumatism
Monadism
Dynamism
Phenomenalism
Sensationalism

You Are the Origin Point

We’ve been trained to think of ourselves as products — shaped by culture, parents, neurochemistry, trauma, algorithms. There’s some truth in that. But it’s not the whole truth. Because there are moments — quiet, inward, defiant — when something speaks in us that was not programmed, not inherited, not borrowed. It just is. And it speaks from the center of who we are.

Freedom doesn’t begin in reaction. It begins in self-generated direction — when we stop waiting to be formed by the world and start listening for what we alone are here to express. We are not echoes. We are sources.

This isn’t a manifesto for isolation. We belong to the world. But we don’t belong to it as empty vessels waiting to be filled. We belong as beings who carry something original, something only we can bring into the stream of time.

The idea of individuality has been cheapened by marketing and identity politics. But individuality is not a brand or a demographic. It is a spiritual fact — not proven by logic, but lived through acts of moral clarity, creative thought, and inner responsibility.

There is no formula for who you must become. No external command can tell you the right path. But the ability to receive a moral intuition, to shape it into a concrete deed, and to stand within that deed as its spiritual author — that is freedom.

We are not mechanical parts in a system. We are origin points. Not better than others — but irreplaceable. And the task is not to dissolve into collectivity, nor to dominate, but to become a being who can say: “This act, this thought, this direction — it began with me.”

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