A Gentle Way of Thinking for Noise-Sensitive Individuals

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Abstract

This paper offers a first-person, exploratory reflection on thinking, learning, and expression from the perspective of noise-sensitive individuals. Rather than proposing a general theory or methodological prescription, it examines how experiential noise, coherence, and dimensionality may interact during the process of reasoning.The paper introduces the notion of a high-dimensional but finite experiential space, in which thinking, reasoning, and language can be understood as gradual compression processes guided by coherence. Within this view, coherence is treated not as a static property, but as something that may remain engaged and be repeatedly re-aligned as thinking unfolds. Language, including mathematics, is discussed as a representational structure that may support this process, with mathematics described as a particularly reliable and internally consistent structure that allows coherence to be re-aligned during reasoning. Several tentative reflections are explored, including the role of first-person experience, intuition, uncertainty, learning pace, cross-disciplinary perspectives, and the limits of early formalization. These reflections are not presented as conclusions, but as possible ways of understanding how thinking may remain sustainable under heightened experiential sensitivity.The aim of this paper is not to provide ready-to-use answers, but to offer support and orientation. If the ideas presented here help noise-sensitive readers maintain confidence while continuing to think carefully, they may be taken as such. No agreement or adoption is required.

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