
A-Foundational - B-Basic - C-General - D-Pain - E-Conflict - F-Power - G-Structural - H-Love
You will find these principles organized into eight distinct types.
Foundational Principles lay the basis for anankelogy as a unique science. These create the foundation for the discipline study of need. As objective phenomena, many aspects of our needs can be examined by the scientific method.
Basic Principles ground aspects of your experience with needs in the science of anankelogy. These establish anankelogy as a unique social science.
General Principles add wisdom to experiencing needs anchored in the science of anankelogy. These provide insight into what this new profession of need-response can do that other professional fields cannot.
Pain Principles start applying anankelogy to be more "need-responsive" in our lives. These apply primarily at the personal human problem level.
Conflict Principles offer some insight for negotiating disputes you have with others. These apply primarily at the interpersonal human problem level.
Authority Principles apply anankelogy to the legitimacy of those in positions of influential power. These apply primarily at the power human problem level.
Law Principles apply anankelogy to the point of having laws and unwritten norms. These apply primarily at the structural human problem level.
Love Principles cap these need-focused concepts with mutual respect for each other's needs. These give context to all the other types as we function best when we support others to function their best. One word for such positive regard is love.

D02 Pain Principle
Natural pain is inherently good.
The more you moralize any pain as bad, the more likely you will miss its warning of some threat. Ignoring your anger leaves you painfully vulnerable to what you likely cannot accept. Ignoring your fear leaves you painfully vulnerable to what you cannot confidently handle. Embracing such uncomfortable emotions allows you to deal with these threats. You benefit from their painful alarms.

D03 Pain Principle
Pain is perhaps nature’s least appreciated gift.
The more open you keep yourself to enduring evoked discomfort, the more you can resolve the underlying needs. The more you embrace the natural warning signs of threats to be removed, and you promptly remove them, the quicker you can move beyond the pain and remove its source. The more fully you can function. The better you can function because of pain, the more you can value it.

D04 Pain Principle
Pain is not the problem as much as the threats your pain tries to report.
The more you react to your pain instead of addressing the needs behind that pain, the less you can address the source of that pain. The less addressed, the more it festers and can grow into a terrible problem of its own. The more you promptly respond to the warnings your pain seeks to report, the quicker you can resolve the underlying needs and remove its cause for pain.

D05 Pain Principle
Reacting to your pain tends to leave you in more pain.
The more you try to avoid your pain, the more you end up ignoring the threats causing such pain. The more ignored, the more such threats persist to cause you more pain. The quicker you get to the source of your pain and remove the underlying threat causing you intense discomfort, the less pain you ultimately must suffer. There is no such thing as pain apart from unresolved needs.

D06 Pain Principle
Any unquenchable desire becomes another pain.
The less you can resolve a need, the less you can function. Which feels painful. The less you can replenish what your life requires to function, the more your body warns you of this limitation as a threat. If unable to eat anything all day, you experience your obsessive hunger as something painful. Talking about pain can also refer to the painful desires you can ever adequately satisfy.

D07 Pain Principle
We typically prefer the pain we feel over the pain we fear.
The more you become familiar with a recurring pain, the more you tend to favor it over the unknown pain of a less familiar way to deal with it. Natural pain tends to be sharp, in contrast to the relatively dull pain of partially eased needs. You know how to handle the dull pain of your partially resolved needs. Risking an unknown solution could produce results you’re unsure how to handle.

D08 Pain Principle
Take the easy course, then life gets hard. Take the hard course, then life gets easy.
The more you indulge yourself to avoid the discomforts of fully resolving your needs, the more your unresolved needs result in lingering pain. The more you face upfront the intense discomforts necessary to fully resolve your needs, the more you will enjoy some long-term fruits and suffer less lingering pain. Your life typically reveals a pattern of favoring one or the other.

D09 Pain Principle
A life full of comfort is a life not fully lived.
The more you surround yourself with every comfort and convenience available, the more you risk missing the deeper things in life. Life creates more meaningful results with a natural balance between unpleasant challenges and pleasant rewards. Too much shallow pleasure from nice things denies you the deep pleasure of enjoying a meaningful life independent of material things.

D10 Pain Principle
A life full of pain is a life filled with too many unmet needs.
The fewer of your needs fully resolve, the more increasingly overwhelmed you find yourself with mounting levels of pain. Even if you can resolve most of your needs and must settle for less in a number of key needs, your full potential gets denied. Anankelogy refers to this as ‘symfunctionality’. It’s where you cope with your dull pain by becoming impersonally dependent on each other.

E01 Conflict Principle
We cannot solve our specific problems from the level of generalizing that created them.
The more you rely on generalizations to address your problems, the more you risk overlooking the specifics essential to fully resolving such needs. Problems typically arise from overgeneralizing. We often generalize to avoid pain or to avoid losing a fragile coalition of support. The more we try to fix our problems while ignore the details of specific needs, the more our problems persist.

E02 Conflict Principle
Opposing what others need does not extinguish moral conflict, but enflames it.
The more opposition goes against what the other side inflexibly needs, the more their defensiveness gets naturally provoked. Either side can possibly change what they do about their needs, but neither side can change the needs themselves. That’s impossible. Too often, their provoked defensiveness gets misinterpreted as willful stubbornness. If you cannot change your needs for them, why expect them to change theirs for you?

E03 Conflict Principle
A rush to debate usually skips the details that really matter in life.
The quicker you assert your stance against another, or argue against an opposing position, the more likely you overlooked some vital details supporting the other side. The rush to debate often betrays avoidance of uncomfortable details. The more you can keep a disagreement at a controlled rational level, the less you risk exposing any embarrassing details you cannot defend or emotions you cannot control.
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