Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
David R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
Another factor to be considered in the face of a paradoxical response is the time frame of the memory or image involved. If a test subject is holding in mind a given person and their relationship, the response will depend on the period the memory or image represents. If he is remembering his relationship with his brother from childhood, he may have
... See moreDavid R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.kinesiology .implementation
The Testing Technique Two persons are required. One acts as test subject by holding out one arm laterally, parallel to the ground. The second person then presses down with two fingers on the wrist of the extended arm and says, “Resist.” The subject then resists the downward pressure with all his strength. That is all there is to it.
David R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.kinesiology .implementation
Society constantly expends its efforts to correct effects instead of causes, which is one reason why the evolution of human consciousness proceeds so slowly. Mankind is really barely on the first
David R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.modelthinking
But our own research indicates that causality operates in a completely different manner, in which the attractor pattern complex “ABC” splits through its “operants” and is expressed as the seeming sequence “A, then B, then C” of perception. From this diagram we see that the source (ABC), which is unobservable, results in the visible sequence A→B→C,
... See moreDavid R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.modelthinking
The test procedure, the reader will note, is to use the muscle test to verify the truth or falsity of a declarative statement. Unreliable responses will be obtained if the question has not been put into this form. Nor can a reliable result be obtained from inquiry into the future; only statements regarding existent conditions or events in the past
... See moreDavid R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.kinesiology .implementation
For reliable results, it should be remembered that people process experience differently; some people primarily adopt a feeling mode, others are more auditory, and still others are more visual. Therefore, test questions should avoid such phrasing as “How do you feel?” about a person, situation, or experience; or “How does it look?” or “How does it
... See moreDavid R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.kinesiology .implementation
The world conventionally assumes that the processing of problems requires starting from the known (the question or conditions) and moving on to the unknown (the so-called answer) in a time sequence following definite steps and logical progression. Nonlinear dynamics moves in the opposite direction: from the unknown (the nondeterministic data of the
... See moreDavid R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.modelthinking .philosophy very similar to the concept of start from the end. The end statement that problems seemto be of definition and access is very critical
love is more powerful than hatred; truth sets us free; forgiveness liberates both sides; unconditional love heals; courage empowers; and the essence of Divinity/Reality is peace.
David R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.psychology
The most striking finding of kinesiology initially was a clear demonstration that muscles instantly become weak when the body is exposed to harmful stimuli.
David R. Hawkins • Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
.psychology