Pratixas are formed when we are exposed to an event or situation. We are aware, but not conscious, of its existence. There is no need of any effort to generate pratixas . Rather, it is effortful and impossible to inhibit its formation. After the formation, Pratixas will become ever-time ready references for us to anticipate on any event we are exposed to. The continuum of pratixas will act as direct reference points of most of the cognitive outputs [where anticipations have a role] such as decision making, planning, imagining, criticizing, predicting, and speculating and so on. The behaviour we show, and the actions we do, have strong relationships with pratixas . While anticipating, we will make ‘activated pratixas ’ our reference points. Activation occurs due to certain environmental cues. For instance, pratixas will be activated in the skilled athletes by observing the body cues of the opponents, which will further help the skilled athletes to anticipate the outco
An event is anything that comes to our experience. Experience of events differs with their valence and intensity. Valance is the negative or positive psychological value assigned to the event, as we experience it. Intensity is the impact the event makes on the individual. Human life proceeds through various events. Each event arrives with a spectrum of possibilities. For instance, drinking a cup of water is an event. The possibilities associated with drinking a cup of water are quenching of thirst, enhancement of fluid content in our body, feeling of satisfaction by the drinker, feeling of happiness, the water entering the windpipe or nasal area and subsequent coughs, and ‘more.’ The term ‘more’ indicates that the possibilities may go infinite and hence, it is a spectrum. It is impossible to idealize all the possibilities associated with the event. During our exposure to the event, we will trace some of the possibilities and form of a continuum of pratixas . Using a