Inicio › Foros › Course Forums › The Science of Human Emergence › Our Inner Program › Can you find a single action that does not follow the law of maximum benefit? Try to notice the law of maximum benefit at work in your life. Can you share new insights that you have discovered?
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- July 4, 2020 at 3:41 am EDT #33179
Gil ShirModeratorCan you find a single action that does not follow the law of maximum benefit? Try to notice the law of maximum benefit at work in your life. Can you share new insights that you have discovered?
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- January 22, 2022 at 11:47 am EST #223131SandraPartÃcipe
No I can not! That realization was difficult to accept at first but when I understood this is how we were created a huge load of guilt and shame was lifted. How to transform the program to an altruistic one is a challenge every day but I’m trying my best to choose to feed my mind wholesome “food” that continues to help me understand . THANK YOU KabU and kabbalah info. com for all the resources!
- January 12, 2022 at 1:58 pm EST #222219Ed MereoarăPartÃcipe
Defiantly not but I had discovered something new which it is against ego.
- December 17, 2021 at 2:58 am EST #220010heatherPartÃcipe
One single action that does not follow the law of maximum benefit is in the law of nature. Try food from the forest floor that nature provided, like some mushrooms and becoming sick. The law of gravity is most benifet to life on earth.
- December 6, 2021 at 7:03 pm EST #219130SeraphimPartÃcipe
No. Not unless intentions (and the actions emerging from intentions) count as actions. If so, then my wish (or “desire”) to be able to perform the miracle of acting unselflessly, and the altruistic actions that arise from this wish, can at least give me the illusion that I am not acting for my own self-interest.
Obviously, the tacit or unconscious motivation for this wish (to perform a selfless action) is itself selfish since, deep down – even unbeknownst to me. Perhaps it is even the ego’s deepest and most diabolical wish: to be seen as an altruist, and to hoodwink oneself into believing that one is an altruist, when in fact this is the great triumph of self-deception.
Perhaps this why the goyim hate George Soros so much, since he has come out publicly with the confession that he only gives billions of dollars to charity because he is paying to feel like the greatest altruist in history. People probably see right through Soros’s diabolical egoism, and he is hated as a result. This would explain the concomitant, unconscious anti-semitism that goes with hating Soros, as well. The nations unconsciously feel like, “Well, here is a powerful Jew who could actually do some real good and have some quality of bestowal like Creator, and yet he deliberately refuses to do so, choosing egoistic ‘altruism’ instead.” Now it all makes sense!
- November 28, 2021 at 9:03 am EST #190544JosephPartÃcipe
The law seems as an illusion as my actions may be wanting maximum benefit or believing it will attain maximum benefit but the benefit comes and goes never being the maximum benefit, the benefit that stops the constant seeking and longing. So I know I need to do something different, thus my participation here.
- November 27, 2021 at 2:27 pm EST #190474zohrehPartÃcipe
We are always looking for our own interests, because this is our nature. It is important that we align our interests with the interests of others and unite.
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