The language of virtual materiality is also used in the Chinese medicine theory, although Fieldwork uses this language in a systematic inquiry process, rather than a prescriptive theory. This process is very integrating, and frees me from the interpretative framework that rejects or devalues certain feeling experiences.
Yes, most people find observing the finer, virtual material nuances of the actual feeling experience to be very validating. It's like, "Oh, you and I can both see what's actually there, instead of using this shared label to interpret and project what we *think* is (or should be) there."
The language of virtual materiality is also used in the Chinese medicine theory, although Fieldwork uses this language in a systematic inquiry process, rather than a prescriptive theory. This process is very integrating, and frees me from the interpretative framework that rejects or devalues certain feeling experiences.
Yes, most people find observing the finer, virtual material nuances of the actual feeling experience to be very validating. It's like, "Oh, you and I can both see what's actually there, instead of using this shared label to interpret and project what we *think* is (or should be) there."