religious tenet that the religion's tenets are a generic prescription and anyone may freely violate them if they fully believe what they're doing is better; you will still be punished if caught because getting caught demonstrates your lack of full belief in what you were doing
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Replying to @endlessbats
incomplete belief directly causes getting caught, a guilty conscience makes you provide tells
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Replying to @chaosprime @endlessbats
both really though, if you don't have a guilty conscience and just get caught because you're disorganized you can be presumed to have been acting out of impulse rather than coherent belief
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Replying to @chaosprime @endlessbats
This means experimenting with the new and better way to violate the tenets has to be done secretly—which is perfect, because no one will attempt to imitate you until you have something that actually works
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By “works” I mean “innovative enough to produce a significant difference in outcomes, but you’ve figured out how to spin it as actually in accord with existing tenets”
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