TFB & Spirituality

The axis that connects us to something greater: exploring the dimension beyond comprehension

Beyond Comprehension

There is a dimension of human experience that escapes total explanation: finitude, loss, suffering, the meaning of existence. Reason reaches a certain point. After that, silence begins—and it is precisely there that spirituality resides.

The Theory of Fundamental Belief dialogues with spirituality by recognizing that the internal axis—the fundamental belief—operates not only in what we understand, but also in what we cannot comprehend. It is the element that moves us forward even when understanding is not enough.

TFB and the Reading of Christ

TFB and Christ

The Theory of Fundamental Belief does not propose itself as a religious interpretation, nor as validation of any specific spiritual tradition. However, as a structural lens of human functioning, it allows an interesting reading of historical and spiritual figures, such as Christ.

From the perspective of TFB, Christ can be understood as an example of an axis deeply aligned with feeling before thought. His central teachings — love for one's neighbor, forgiveness, individual responsibility, coherence between intention and action — reveal a functioning oriented by an organized and stable feeling, which did not depend on momentary emotional state.

He was not "in" love. He lived from an axis oriented by love.

This is not a theological statement, but a structural one. The coherence between discourse and behavior indicates an alignment between axis, sub-beliefs, and action. Even in the face of conflict, pressure, or suffering, the functioning remained consistent.

Spirituality, in this context, is not dogma, but organization of the axis toward continuity and care for others. Christ, then, is not presented as proof of the theory, but as a historical example of deeply integrated functioning.

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TFB and the Reading of Allan Kardec's Spiritism

TFB and Spiritism

The Theory of Fundamental Belief does not present itself as a religious system, nor as an official interpretation of any spiritual tradition. However, as a structural lens of human functioning, it allows dialogue with different currents of thought, including Spiritism codified by Allan Kardec.

In Kardecist spiritism, there is a clear emphasis on individual responsibility, the law of cause and effect, moral improvement, and the continuity of life beyond matter. From the perspective of TFB, these principles can be read as expressions of an axis oriented toward responsibility and continuity.

TFB neither affirms nor denies spiritual concepts such as reincarnation or spiritual communication. What it observes is the functional structure: the idea that each individual is responsible for their choices, that there is no eternal guilt but consequence and learning, and that transformation occurs from the inside out.

The dialogue with spiritism, therefore, is not theological, but structural. It reveals that, regardless of tradition, the search for responsibility, continuity, and internal reorganization is recurrent in human history.

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TFB and the Reading of the "Force of the Universe"

TFB and Universal Force

The Theory of Fundamental Belief does not propose to explain the universe, nor to define what the "force" that sustains reality is. However, as a structural lens of human functioning, it allows reflection on the idea of a universal force from an organizational perspective.

Many spiritual traditions speak of a force that sustains everything: energy, field, universal consciousness, creative principle. TFB neither affirms nor denies these interpretations. What it observes is that, in human functioning, there also exists an invisible foundation that organizes before any thought.

The axis, in TFB, is not the force of the universe. It is the structural manifestation of an organizing principle in the human field. It is not cosmic energy, nor metaphysical entity. It is a condition of functioning.

TFB does not transform spirituality into scientific explanation. It preserves mystery in its proper place. If there is a greater force that sustains the universe, it does not need to be captured for us to recognize that, at the human level, there is also something that sustains before any consciousness.

The dialogue, therefore, is not about proving the cosmos, but about recognizing a pattern: at different levels of reality, what sustains is not always what appears.

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Respecting Singularity

TFB is so singular, so humble, and so integrative that it respects the opinion and singularity of each person. It does not compete with religious beliefs or spiritual practices. Instead, it recognizes that:

  • If your belief is dogmatic, religious—that is fine. TFB does not conflict with that.
  • If your force is God, He is what moves you. This axis is part of Him.
  • If you believe in the force of the universe, the same applies.
  • Regardless of your belief beyond comprehension, the important thing is to believe—because from science to spirituality, everything is involved.

From Biology to Metaphysics

TFB is a theory that goes from biology to metaphysics, from the most basic functioning of organisms to the spiritual dimension beyond comprehension. It does not exonerate, it does not remove guilt—it only exchanges it for the responsibility of each person. It recognizes that the same axis that moves us forward also moves us backward, moves us in life and moves us beyond comprehension. This element can be called by many names—and TFB respects them all.

Enjoy your journey. Believe.