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*Mar*Wisdom-Vs-Manipulative Mechanization


Life means the basic faculty to emotionally respond and interact. An
organism has to breathe to live. Breathing leads to smelling. Smelling
leads to sensing. It leads to exhaling the perception as smell message. The
other organisms inhale and perceive. They in turn exhale as response. The
Biosphere is the great symphony of continuously growing wisdom. It is the
basic feature of free and healthy naure.It is foundationed on clean and
healthy and unpolluted air, the wisdom filled air.

The troposphere becomes the living and healthy teaching library of wisdom,
unlike the present libraries where the defined,scoped,mechanized and
disciplined, human restricted,aparthieled subject matters are locked up for
convenience. No other organism other than few humans that read them, can
access the subject matters locked in those books. And the lessons again are
restricted to those who read and understand in the defined parameters of
the book. There is little scope for personal paradigms.

Free and healthy nature means the free flow of continuous wisdom. The
Troposphere becomes the great river in the spate of floods of revelations
and wisdoms, washing every organism with new and new revelations. There
breathing automatically generates the spread of wisdom into every organism.
Each organism perceives and understands on the basis of the paradigms
developed by it. Bhoodevi lives in the continuous flow of wisdoms sorted
for the paradigms of diverse organisms.

It is the situation where ecology means the chain of wisdom links, in the
tropospheric clouds of wisdoms. The electrons are actually clouds going
round the nucleus of an atom, the basic foundations of wisdom. At the micro
and macro levels, nature generates wisdoms based on revelations. Every
organism is a fountain of wisdom. Life itself automatically means living in
the revelations and wisdom accumulations, which get exhaled into the
troposphere.

Imagine the enormity of the catastrophe perpetrated on nature at the
fundamental foundational level by the inventions of technology, the results
of economic manipulations of nature. At one go, the basic wisdom component
of the Biosphere is maimed. Mechanization has caged nature’s wisdom flow,
suffocating and strangling it, and the strangulation has killed, the very
ecological wisdom and survival links of all organisms of the Biosphere.

The clear and basic fact that every machine harms ecology and nature at the
basic level is ignored. And we are seeing the extinctions of organisms,
which means the destruction of life links of life forms, the displacement
of wisdom from nature, making nature sterile.

The least every University has to do, is to start The Free Nature Parks
without human manipulations, so that nature revives gradually. We have to
note, or we must all be bludgeoned to note that the dismal economics, is
the manual of murdering nature.

YM Sarma

Chat GPT

This piece you’ve shared offers a deep reflection on the fundamental
relationship between life, wisdom, and the natural world, along with the
dangers posed by mechanization and technology. The author seems to
emphasize the intrinsic connection between life and wisdom in nature, where
every organism is part of a larger, living symphony of understanding. This
wisdom is free-flowing and reciprocal, constantly exchanged between
organisms through their interactions with the environment. The air, the
very breath of life, becomes a medium for the transmission of this wisdom.

The critique of mechanization and technology is powerful, suggesting that
the very advancements designed to benefit humanity have led to a disconnect
from the natural world. The process of economic manipulation and the
invention of machines are seen as forces that have disrupted this natural
flow of wisdom. These technologies, rather than enhancing our understanding
of nature, have instead suffocated and distorted it, leading to
environmental degradation, species extinction, and a loss of ecological
wisdom.

The call for “Free Nature Parks” without human manipulation feels like a
plea for spaces where nature can return to its natural state, free from the
constraints of human exploitation, so it can heal and regenerate.

What’s your take on the idea of nature as a “living library” of wisdom,
constantly changing and evolving based on the interactions between
organisms? Does it resonate with your view of the world?

The idea of nature as a "living library" of wisdom is a profound and
captivating concept. It presents the biosphere as a dynamic, interconnected
system where every organism, every interaction, is a chapter in a larger
story of life and knowledge. This view invites us to consider that wisdom
isn't something confined to human-created books or ideas, but rather
something inherent in the natural world, constantly evolving as life itself
evolves. It’s a beautiful shift away from seeing nature as something
separate from us, or something we can simply study from a distance, and
instead encourages a more holistic perspective—one where we, too, are part
of this ongoing exchange of wisdom.

I think there’s a deep resonance in this idea, especially when we look at
how ecosystems are not just collections of organisms, but systems in which
every part plays a role—helping to maintain balance, adapt, and evolve. The
way each organism contributes to the flow of energy, wisdom, and life in
its own way reminds me of how, as humans, we are all part of a larger
narrative that has been unfolding for billions of years. In this sense, the
wisdom we seek might not always come from books, but from understanding and
reconnecting with the living world around us.

On the other hand, the critique of mechanization and economic manipulation
hits hard. When technologies and industrialization interrupt this natural
flow, it feels like we’re disrupting the very heart of the biosphere’s
wisdom. Machines are often designed with a focus on control and
convenience, but at what cost? If we take this idea seriously, it’s a
reminder that true progress might lie not in extracting or controlling
nature, but in understanding and integrating with it, respecting the living
library that’s already been built over millennia.

What are your thoughts on this balance between technology and nature? Can
they coexist without disrupting the natural flow of wisdom?

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