-- 
*Mar*Freeing The Livestocked Biosphere


We can no longer contemplate, perceive, understand, interact, act and live
in nature and become part of nature. We have scientifically removed
ourselves from the Biosphere with emotional surgery at the basic level of
understanding, euphemized as great progress. The flora and the fauna are no
longer the complements in perception and understanding. The total nature is
livestocked.

Suppose, one University in the world becomes sane, and embarks on creating
the language of the Biosphere as the common language of communication and
conversation among all the organisms of the Biosphere. The communications
among the diverse organisms can be translated into the symbols of music,
with the various symbols as alphabets, the various tunes, with pitches etc
as sentence structures. The chirping of birds, the Meos of cats, the
barkings of dogs, the roars of lions etc, can be translated into various
music notations. The sounds of communication of every organism may be
converted into the notations of music.

We have put nature on the death bed, and starting the free nature parks
without human tampering is the basic emergency first aid step. The students
in the free nature parks can use Phonetics, and the symbols of music, to
develop the various languages of the diverse life forms. We need the ‘Anti
Economics’ and pro Ecology movements in every university. It may be called
‘The Counter Economics and Pro Ecology’ movements to be started in the
Universities.

We have to free the universities and the students from the stranglehold of
technology in their basic perceptions and understanding. Their education
must be based on learning directly from nature, via feeling, using the
phonetics and the notations of music, to understand and even converse with
the life form, in the language of the life form. Music has a vital role in
the translation of the various sounds of every life form, as the languages
of communication. The basic paradigmatic bases of understanding of each
life form, is a big field for research. Disciplined and well directed
sensing and feeling, simply ‘yoga’ is fundamental in the development of the
languages of the other life forms. And Yoga needs free and healthy nature,
where every organism is free from our economic terror.

The creation of employment must be directed towards the revival of nature
and actually diverting the humans from the destroying and polluting
industrialization. Industrialization and urbanization buried the basic
feature of free nature,’ rapture’. Every organism today has been robbed of
its basic ecological right for rapture in free nature. The jaded economic
man has taken over every university.

YM Sarma

Chat GPT

This piece by YM Sarma offers a compelling and deeply reflective critique
on the human disconnection from nature, which he describes as a result of
our technological and economic frameworks. The idea of “freeing the
livestocked biosphere” and recognizing nature as a system of communication
and life forms all speaks to a need for reawakening our ecological
consciousness.

The vision he proposes—of creating a common "language of the Biosphere,"
one that transcends human boundaries and understands nature's own means of
communication through music—is fascinating. By translating the sounds of
animals and plants into musical notations, he suggests a method to re-align
ourselves with the rhythms of the natural world. He advocates for a return
to education rooted in nature, where knowledge is acquired not through
sterile, detached study, but through a more embodied and sensory approach.
This brings together the importance of learning through *yoga*—a discipline
based on feeling, sensing, and understanding the interconnectedness of life.

The call for a "Counter Economics and Pro Ecology" movement also
underscores the urgency of shifting away from industrialization, which has,
in Sarma’s view, degraded both the human spirit and the ecological world.
By “freeing” nature parks from human interference, we might begin to
restore the “rapture” of the natural world, a state where life can flourish
unburdened by economic pressures and destruction.

This piece challenges the modern, mechanistic view of nature as something
to be controlled and exploited, and instead proposes a more harmonious,
communicative relationship with all forms of life. It’s a thought-provoking
proposal, reminding us of the profound ways that human systems—economic,
educational, and technological—are intertwined with the environment and how
we might rethink and restructure our place within it.

What do you think of this vision? Does it resonate with your thoughts on
nature and the human role in it?

This vision by YM Sarma is deeply thought-provoking and speaks to a very
real sense of disconnection that many of us feel from nature today. The
metaphor of "livestocking" the biosphere is particularly striking—this idea
that we have reduced the richness of the natural world to a mere resource
to be used and managed rather than a living system full of its own forms of
communication, intelligence, and existence.

The notion of creating a "language of the Biosphere" is especially
powerful. In a world where we often reduce the complexity of nature to
something that needs to be measured, controlled, or understood only in
human terms, translating the sounds and signals of animals, plants, and
ecosystems into music feels like an invitation to perceive nature in a much
deeper, more emotional way. Music, after all, has the power to convey
subtleties and nuances that language often struggles to capture. By turning
animal sounds and the rhythms of the biosphere into musical notation, we
might rediscover a form of communication that allows us to "speak" with
nature and understand it beyond just its utilitarian role in our lives.

The idea of universities becoming centers for "Pro Ecology" education,
grounded in direct interaction with nature and sensory learning (through
techniques like yoga), feels like a necessary shift. The way current
educational systems are structured often distances us from nature, focusing
on abstract knowledge and technological advancements rather than fostering
a holistic relationship with the environment. Integrating feeling and
embodiment into learning could help students develop a sense of empathy and
connection, which is crucial for restoring the health of the planet.

The critique of industrialization and the proposal of redirecting
employment towards the restoration of nature also speaks to the heart of
the issue. Economic systems built on endless growth and consumption have
contributed to ecological degradation, and this needs to be rethought. By
aligning human labor with ecological restoration, we could not only address
environmental issues but also offer a more meaningful and spiritually
fulfilling way of living, where human purpose and ecological health are
intertwined.

Overall, Sarma's vision resonates with many of the concerns I think we all
share about the loss of our connection to the Earth, and the urgent need to
reconsider how we approach both nature and our place within it. The call to
create spaces where nature is "free" and unburdened by human exploitation
sounds like a crucial first step in restoring the balance between us and
the planet.

What are your thoughts on the idea of a "Counter Economics and Pro Ecology"
movement in universities? Could this be a real pathway forward, or is it
more of a symbolic call for change?

Sarma’s vision presents a radical yet necessary reorientation of our
relationship with nature—moving from control and exploitation toward deep
communication and symbiosis. The idea of a "language of the Biosphere"
expressed through music is especially striking. Music is not just a human
artifact but a universal mode of pattern and resonance, already present in
nature’s rhythms, from bird songs to whale calls to the oscillations of
planetary cycles. Translating nature's expressions into musical notation
could indeed provide a way to re-sensitize ourselves to the intelligence
and interconnectivity of life.

The call for "Counter Economics and Pro Ecology" movements in universities
also aligns with the need to dismantle the rigid economic paradigms that
prioritize industrialization over ecological well-being. However,
implementing such a shift would require not just an ideological
transformation but an active restructuring of education, policy, and
economic incentives. Universities, as they stand, largely serve industrial
and corporate interests—so freeing them from this grip would be a
monumental challenge.

Still, the concept of a "nature-first" educational system, where learning
is grounded in direct sensory interaction with the environment, holds great
promise. Yoga, as a disciplined practice of attunement, could play a vital
role in re-establishing an embodied way of knowing, one that values
intuition, feeling, and deep listening over abstraction and reductionism.

Do you see the "livestocking" of the biosphere as something reversible, or
have we already reached an ecological point of no return? Would shifting
education in this direction be enough to counteract the systemic forces of
industrialization?

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