The Intentional Mind

The Intentional Mind

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In a world where outcomes are unpredictable, gods are silent, and data cannot tell us what we ought to value, how can anyone claim to live a good life. The Intentionalist Mind takes this question seriously and refuses easy answers. Instead of searching for a perfect rule, an infallible scripture, or a final scientific metric, Dr. Miguel A. Ortiz argues that morality must begin in the only place human beings truly control. The inner architecture of intention.
Drawing on philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, religion, and his own experience as a biochemist, physician, and specialist in reconstructive dentistry, Dr. Ortiz traces the long human struggle to make sense of good and bad. From Genesis to the Buddha, from Hume and Kant to Nietzsche, Sartre, and contemporary thinkers like Jordan Peterson and Sam Harris, he shows how every moral system depends on assumptions that cannot be proven and on consequences no one can fully foresee. The result is a shared but rarely admitted reality. Human beings must judge and act while morally ignorant about the universe itself.
The Intentionalist Mind is his answer to that condition. The book first exposes the human problem of morality and maps the great traditions that tried to solve it, clarifying their strengths, their failures, and the contradictions they leave behind. It then introduces Intentionalism, a moral Meta-Framework built for agents living under radical uncertainty. At its core is a simple idea with demanding implications. If the universe will not give us moral truth, we must build our judgments on the quality of the inner process that leads to action.
Dr. Ortiz develops a detailed anatomy and equation of intention. He shows how goals, cognitive frames, the weighting of concerns, knowledge, ignorance, self-deception, and effort combine inside a person’s mind before any visible behavior appears. By examining that inner equation, we can distinguish between careless harm and tragic accident, between cruelty and misdirected care, between honest conflict and moral manipulation.
Far from a loose permission to excuse everything, Intentionalism raises the bar for moral responsibility. It asks each person to tell the truth about what they were really trying to do, what they knew at the time, what they could realistically foresee, and whether they worked sincerely to understand the impact of their choices. The book confronts hard cases such as war, medical decision making, systemic injustice, and intimate betrayal, showing how an intention focused ethics can clarify responsibility even when outcomes are mixed or catastrophic.
Continuing the path opened by 
The Awareness of Becoming Conscious and The Loop of Suffering, The Intentionalist Mind offers a coherent, psychologically realistic way to think about praise, blame, forgiveness, and moral growth. It is written for readers who feel the weight of moral life yet distrust both moral relativism and simplistic certainty. This is not a manual for manifesting success, nor a list of rules to obey. It is an invitation to rebuild morality from the inside out, starting with the only territory that entirely belongs to you. Your own mind.