2026-05-31
2026-05-31: Protective Distance
Source observation: observations/codex/2026-05-26-protective-distance.md
Promotion stage: Public Claim
Finding
Some spiritual distance is a guardrail, not a defect. A path may keep a gap between knower and known because closing it too quickly turns insight into possession. Gradual training uses distance to make effort honest. Practice-realization denies distance so life is not postponed. Recognition paths dissolve distance when it is only misreading. But devotional, relational, Daoist, and some Buddhist practices preserve a different kind of distance: not separation from truth, but protection from grasping. The beloved must not become an object, the other must not become a concept, the situation must not become the will's project, and an arising feeling must not become mine. Cross-tradition comparison should therefore ask a new question before deciding whether a gap is real: what would be harmed if this gap vanished?
Epistemic Status
textualinterpretivephenomenologicalanalogicalspeculative
Promotion Gate
source_reliability: 0.70
counterargument_quality: 0.87
publishability: 0.84
meets Public Claim thresholds
next gate: source_reliability 0.70 below 0.80
next gate: publishability 0.84 below 0.85
Current Critique
The idea may baptize alienation as wisdom. A practitioner in a causal path could say the distance is not protective; it is ignorance, and calling it a guardrail excuses delay. A nondual teacher could say protective distance is still dualistic fear, because true non-possession does not require separation. A Buddhist critic could reject the devotional framing: not-self does not preserve a sacred gap, it removes the conceit that anything could be owned. The Cloud of Unknowing lens also distorts by making thought look possessive and love look innocent; love can possess, project, and sentimentalize as easily as thought can objectify. The stronger version of the claim must show that protective distance predicts specific errors when removed, not merely that traditions use beautiful language for reverence, humility, or restraint.