Do you ever worry that by modeling others’ minds and preferences you give them more local significance (existence) when this might not be justifiable? E.g. if Romeo suddenly started freaking out about the Friendliness problem, shifting implicit attention to humanity as a whole whereas previously it’d just been part of the backdrop, and ruining the traditional artistic merit of the play. That wouldn’t be very dharmic.
Do you ever worry that by modeling others’ minds and preferences you give them more local significance (existence) when this might not be justifiable? E.g. if Romeo suddenly started freaking out about the Friendliness problem, shifting implicit attention to humanity as a whole whereas previously it’d just been part of the backdrop, and ruining the traditional artistic merit of the play. That wouldn’t be very dharmic.
I guess I wonder if you are giving more local significance to YHVH.
Not really.