Baruch Menache's Podcast

The Biology of Intent: Deconstructing the Will


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In this episode, we explore the first major deviating factors that lead individuals away from the universal spectrum of process. Deviation is not framed as personal failure or moral lapse, but as a structural consequence of distance, acclimation, and biological necessity within broader systems of participation.


The discussion begins with geographical distance—not merely as physical separation, but as a hierarchical and perceptual condition that shapes habituation, social integration, and reintegration. Using spatial metaphors and systemic reasoning, the episode examines how distance creates deviation through acclimation, and why reintegration cannot occur through proximity alone, but must account for the acclimated process itself.


The episode then turns to intention as a deviating factor, analyzing how intention is inseparable from biological necessity. When biological tendencies are platformed through intention—such as work, production, or participation—the individual may unknowingly shift from intentional engagement to necessity-driven dependence. This shift marks a deeper deviation from process, one that cannot be resolved without addressing the biological foundation that has become determinant.


This episode lays the groundwork for a broader series on deviation, integration, and systemic participation, with future discussions addressing additional deviating factors and their cycles of orientation and resolution.


Ideal for listeners interested in philosophy, social systems, psychology, process theory, and structural analysis of human behavior.



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Baruch Menache's PodcastBy Baruch Menache