realitymaps
We look at the world through the filters of our belief systems (which include a whole viseral component associated with conceptual beliefs). These filters define the reality that we experience, which is why they can be called realitymaps.
Each of us navigate our lives using different realitymaps in different situations and contexts. For example, just as we use a tube map for traveling by underground trains and a street map for above ground, we might use a materialist reality map at work and a religious realitymap at our place of worship. Of course, there is some correspondence between a tube map and a street map as they are connected, just as there is some correspondence between a materialist realitymap and a religious realitymap — they both are "drawn" with a 4-dimensional space-time setting in which things exist in a particular space and time.
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[under construction]