Many assume that an illusion is unreal. Or that an illusion doesn’t exist, or that it’s merely a trick. Blah blah blah...
We will speak in absolutes, so that the farthest limits are clear, so that the boundaries of possibility are clear, and we can position things correctly without ambiguity.
Dimensional Bias
To be "illusioned" means understanding reality from the perspective of dimensional depth while still perceiving within the same dimension.
Thus, an illusion is a state of understanding a certain depth of reality that differs from the reality being experienced, yet both remain within the same context.
Dimensional bias, on the other hand, is the assumption that reality is as understood, while in fact, the truth is deeper than the perception at present.
There is no deception here, only the result of perceiving from the viewpoint of different dimensional depths.
Cognitive Bias
Similarly, cognitive bias is a state of perception that fails to recognize something as it should be within the same dimension.
Deception
Those affected by cognitive or dimensional bias seem to be deceived, as if tricked by magic, but with a difference in the depth of reality involved. In cognitive bias, it is as though one is deceived in the same place, whereas dimensional bias feels like being tricked by something outside the box.
Cognitive bias is like seeing a mirage but understanding it as the same reality, assuming it corresponds to experience (thinking there’s water when there isn’t). Dimensional bias is like observing quantum phenomena but interpreting it with classical physics (the body is made of particles, but it appears solid).
✅ So, illusion is a state where perception does not match cognitive or dimensional boundaries, but it is still part of reality.
✅ Thus, illusion is not deceiving us; instead, we are deceived because our perception cannot compare cognitive or dimensional differences properly.
There is no issue in accepting the existence of illusion without having to deny it.
Because illusion actually affirms the depth of reality, which will increasingly make us aware of the roots of reality and help realize the universal truth underlying it. Why? Because the stronger the illusion, the more it involves a deeper reality that brings us closer to the fundamental reality understood as absolute truth.
The more aware we become of the differences behind the illusion, the more we realize its depth, and the more we see the diminishing cause-effect relationships, making it clearer in which direction universality leads.
Dreams
Just like dreams, which are considered illusions or whose laws seem unclear, inconsistent, or absurd. But that’s because we don’t understand a more fundamental cause-effect law, which, if understood, could be applied to control the structure of its dimension, aligning it with the reality dimension outside the dream. A synergy.
How to Respond to Illusion?
Whether it’s illusion, imagination, or a dream, as long as it can exert influence, it should be approached with caution.
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