Comprehensive Framework
According to August Comte, a Comprehensive Framework, is an overarching intellectual structure that organizes human experience and activity towards specific ends, specially the exploitation of planetary resources.[1] The term is syncretic within the Lightning Path (LP) as a Creation Template and also as a Human Development Framework.
Comte's Terms
Syncretic Terms
Creation Template > Comprehensive Framework, Discourse, Existential Narrative, Existential Paradigm, Functional Narrative, Ideology, Master Narrative, Master Story, Meaning Structure, Ruling Ideology
Human Development Framework > Comprehensive Framework
Related LP Terms
Comprehensive Framework > Developmental Guidelines, HEALING Framework
Non-LP Related Terms
Notes
Integration into the Lightning Path (LP) Context
Within the Lightning Path framework, a Comprehensive Framework or Human Development Framework organizes human thought and activity towards specific ends. Comte's framework is focussed on the needs of the [Accumulating Class]] while the LP Human Development Framework organizes human thought and activity towards Healing and Connection and includes various elements that align with Comte's ideas, such as the integration of scientific principles and the promotion of social cohesion. The Lightning Path Human Development Framework aims to foster healing, connection, and the realization of human potential, overcoming the damage caused by Toxic Socialization and promoting a holistic approach to personal and societal transformation.
Key Components
- Moral Order: Establishes ethical guidelines and values that govern individual and collective behavior.
- Intellectual Order: Provides a coherent worldview and understanding of reality, often rooted in scientific or philosophical # principles.
Social Order: Organizes societal structures and institutions, ensuring stability and cohesion.
Footnotes
- ↑ Auguste Comte, The Catechism of Positivism; or, Summary Exposition of the Universal Religion, trans. Richard Congreve (London: John Chapman, 1852). https://archive.org/details/artofcreationess00carp