Our seemingly accurate experience of the world is, in part, a constructed configuration of value.
When one liberates the mind from “concepts”, it becomes possible to re-value the world, thereby transcending the constraints of preconceived notions that shape one’s perception of reality.

Language, and other symbols, play a key role in this process, as the symbols we use to describe our world are not merely labels but frameworks that structure our understanding of it.
This raises a critical question: why do we value and articulate observations in the particular ways that we do?
At this intersection of linguistic convention and cognitive structuring, tradition and transformation converge, highlighting the dynamic interplay between inherited frameworks of meaning and the potential for conceptual innovation.
Thus spoke Thorpe Brown