“Survival itself is triadic: to survive
- by finding / taking in food,
- by defending itself/ escaping a predator, and
- by finding a mate/reproducing itself ( figure 2c).
Survival, or persistence-in-form, thus relates the one-brained creature to the present moment, the near future and the distant future.”
Keith A. Buzzell, Man, A Three-brained Being, (Fifth Press, 2007), P. 31.
Search results for “survival triad” in Keith Buzzell’s books about the Fourth Way
The term “Survival Triad” appears in Buzzell’s writings and is indexed below. These results come from using the “Search Books” tool from the menu above. The full search results are accessible by typing “survival triad” into the search books tool. For convenience we have placed them at the bottom of this page.
Perspectives On Beelzebub’s Tales (2005) — 2 hits | ||
p. 174 | the creatures. Instead of having all of their motor patterns devoted to manifestation of the survival triad (discussed on p 179 in this chapter), the possibility appeared of patterns of moving that were | |
p. 179 | future of the species. These three highly organized sensory-motor functions can be called the “Survival Triad” of the first brain (food – predators – reproduction). During the same long time interval |
Man, A Three-brained Being (2007) — 3 hits | ||
p. 47 | understanding. The triad that MacLean refers to has a most interesting resonance with the survival triad of the second brain, as was noted earlier. The inner (family) triad comprises the functional | |
p. 47 | and child rearing role with the family group (perpetuation of species) Family Triad The “Survival Triad” of the Second Brain playnurture 9 audio-vocal communication | |
p. 65 | anchored to the space they inhabit and the objects and creatures around them. Empowered by the the “survival triad” of 1) staying alive in the moment, 2) finding food, 3) finding a mate and patterned |