Cognition organizes information into six perspectives. These perspectives answer six questions: Who or what? How many? Where? When? How? Why?
The mind organizes information into six perspectives. These perspectives answer six questions: Who or what am I seeing? How many are there? Where are they in relation to me? When will I intercept it? How do I intercept it? Why should I intercept it? The Why question has an infinite number of variations, but it is possible to rank the answers in terms of importance.
All animals that have the ability to move towards energy seem to have the ability to conceptualize each of these perspectives.
Bees communicate the six perspectives through “body language” in the form of dances. These dances transfer operational information about the nectar sources in the surrounding area. People communicate these perspectives with written words, tone, sounds, and body language.
Cognition is based on understanding six perspectives at snapshots in time. If these perspectives were understood at the "Here and now" point, and represented visually, the person experiencing the moment in space-time would have a complete understanding of cognition at a single snapshot in time. If these snapshots are sampled continuously, the resulting visualization creates a dynamic, visual representation of all of the perspectives in the energy and information system.