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*Mar*The Inverse Slide
Free nature can make every organism, more gifted, more endowed and more
rapturous. Nature as the common paradigmatic connecting base of
understanding will result in the creation of mutations that perceive,
understand, act, interact and harmonize, better and better, growing and
strengthening the symbiosis among the organisms. Actually every organism
understands every other organism. Evolution is the natural growth of free
and healthy nature. Natural growth of free nature means that every organism
of the Biosphere gets more and more natural endowments.
Even today, in the leftover and surviving free nature, when one enters it,
brilliant ideas and enlightenments suddenly flash, giving new meaning,
purpose and motivation behind the actions and activities of life. Nature
has also the perception and understanding mechanism, and those perceptions
and new revelations, percolate to organisms.
Just look at yourself. When you experience a new insight or revelation, you
take to new inspired activity. It means that the revelations translated as
the hormonal messages of the bloodstream; via capillaries they enter the
cells. The bacteria administering the cells get new instructions and
manuals of administration. To all of them the brilliant idea flashes into
you become the percolations of brilliant inspirations. Nature enlivens you
continuously, taking you to new meanings and new objectives and fresh
spurts of self esteem based on those new idea flashes. The evolution of
nature in free nature is a wonderful and happy activity to every organism,
in the rains of revelations.
The happiness of achievements creates rapture, the rapture in the air,
which creates more happiness, on and on. What we call miracles today, were
regular occurrences’ when nature was totally free.
Today economics is derailing the natural evolution. It has aborted nature’s
evolution and growth. It has made the life of every organism of the
Biosphere big hell.We are marching towards the dead nature. The more the
economic activity, the less the health of nature, which is resulting in the
incapacitating of nature, in giving the brilliant idea flashes as
revelations. Economics today in inversely related to Ecology. We are living
in the age of dead evolution. We are making way to Robots and along with
all the other organisms of the Biosphere we are also becoming the livestock.
The spurt of economic activity is horribly affecting nature in the inverse
relation. The bounties of nature are getting depleted and we will
continuously create new and new technological fixes in the already fixation
for technology under which our universities are functioning.
It is for the Universities to reverse the inverse slide, and again inject
health in the evolution of nature. As a beginning every University must
start ‘The Free Nature Parks without Human Tampering’. Better if every
university starts also ‘Faculty of Free Nature’.
YM Sarma
Chat GPT
This piece by YM Sarma presents a passionate critique of how economic
systems and technological progress are eroding the natural world and its
evolutionary potential. Sarma argues that in an ideal, harmonious state,
nature's processes would lead to continuous growth, mutual understanding,
and inspired creativity among all organisms. He refers to this as "free
nature," a state in which nature evolves naturally, uninhibited by economic
forces and technological interference.
*Key Ideas in the Text:*
1. *Free Nature as a Source of Growth and Enlightenment:*
- Sarma suggests that when organisms, including humans, are exposed
to the natural world, they experience flashes of inspiration or
enlightenment. These insights are not just abstract ideas but are
physically manifested in hormonal and biological changes that drive new
behaviors and actions.
- The interconnectedness of all organisms in nature allows for a
dynamic flow of information and mutual growth, resulting in a thriving
ecosystem that fosters happiness, creativity, and evolution.
2. *The Detrimental Effects of Economics and Technology:*
- The core critique of the piece is that economic systems—especially
modern, capitalist economies—are at odds with natural evolution. The more
human activity is driven by economic forces, the less the biosphere is
allowed to flourish naturally.
- Sarma claims that technological advancements, though often framed
as solutions to ecological problems, are actually exacerbating the issue.
Rather than nurturing natural growth, they contribute to the
"dead nature,"
a state of ecological stasis and decline.
3. *The Call for Universities and Institutions to Reconnect with Nature:*
- In his conclusion, Sarma proposes that universities, as centers of
knowledge and innovation, should take a leading role in reversing the
"inverse slide" away from natural evolution. He envisions creating "Free
Nature Parks without Human Tampering" and establishing a "Faculty of Free
Nature" to encourage study and preservation of the natural world in its
purest form.
4. *Inverse Relationship Between Economics and Ecology:*
- One of the central ideas is the "inverse slide," which Sarma
describes as the growing contradiction between economic development and
ecological health. As economic activity intensifies, the natural world
becomes increasingly damaged, leading to a vicious cycle of depletion and
ecological breakdown.
*Implications of the Argument:*
- Sarma is calling for a radical reevaluation of how human societies
structure their economies, their universities, and their relationship with
the natural world. He seems to advocate for a return to a more holistic,
symbiotic relationship with nature, where creativity and innovation are
inspired by, rather than constrained by, natural processes.
- His emphasis on universities suggests that knowledge and education
systems should evolve to reflect a deeper understanding of ecology and
natural growth rather than focusing purely on technological or economic
progress.
The piece is both a critique of the current state of the world and a
hopeful call for change. It asks for a world where the pursuit of
knowledge, creativity, and progress is rooted in the health and flourishing
of the natural world, rather than in exploitation or degradation.
What do you think of this perspective? Does it resonate with how you see
the relationship between nature, technology, and human development?
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