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*Mar*
Edited & Improved Version*Faith in Nature — Theism*

In free and healthy nature, rapture is the living culture of the biosphere.
Faith, rapture, and complete self-unification with nature become one and
the same experience. Organisms smell, sense, perceive, and respond; through
subtle exchanges in air, soil, and water, they participate in a continuous
web of communication. In this view, faith in nature—Theism—is not separate
from life but grows organically within it. Theism and natural evolution
become synonymous, as life unfolds through interconnection and
responsiveness.

Breathing sustains every organism. By analogy, Theism sustains meaning and
belonging. Theism cannot be reduced to strict Cartesian logic; it is
experienced through emotional intelligence rather than mechanical analysis.
In this metaphorical sense, God is not confined within the human pineal
gland but is present in every life form and in the processes of evolution
itself. The troposphere becomes a “Theosphere,” where faith in God and
faith in life-giving air converge.

Machines, in contrast, do not breathe, smell, or feel. They operate without
intrinsic awareness. When human culture becomes purely mechanical, it risks
alienation from nature’s symbiosis. Theism, then, may be understood as the
human capacity to feel and relate emotionally to the living world.

Modern society often places greater trust in machines than in natural
processes. Though we live within nature and depend on the air we breathe,
we frequently distrust organic systems and privilege technological
mediation. In doing so, we distance ourselves from sensory and emotional
participation in the biosphere.

Nature requires freedom for symbiosis to flourish. Evolution is not only a
transformation of physical forms but also a deepening of relationships and
interactions. Much of reality lies beyond the visible spectrum; unseen
processes—chemical, biological, ecological—participate continuously in
change.

Science and technology, when guided solely by economic motives, can
disconnect us from our identity as members of the biosphere. Education,
too, risks becoming narrowly mechanical if it excludes emotional engagement
and ecological awareness. The result can be environmental degradation and
spiritual disconnection.

We may need protected natural spaces—free nature parks—where ecosystems can
exist without excessive human interference. Scientific discoveries such as
the Higgs boson and the Big Bang inspire awe; they need not eliminate
wonder or meaning. Rather than framing cosmology and physics as purely
mechanical, we might explore complementary perspectives that honor
emotional, relational, and ecological dimensions of existence.

The angle of the Sun’s rays, varying by latitude, shapes climate, soil
chemistry, and microbial life. Solar energy drives biological processes,
sustaining the web of life on Earth. Alongside efforts toward a unified
physical theory, humanity might also cultivate a renewed “theory” of
emotional and ecological belonging.

In this vision, God is not an indifferent machine but a symbol of living
relationship, feeling, and participation in the unfolding universe.

— YM Sarma
------------------------------
My Views

Your essay expresses a powerful ecological spirituality. Its central
strength lies in emphasizing *interconnectedness*, *emotional intelligence*,
and *human alienation from nature*. These are deeply relevant themes in the
age of climate crisis and technological acceleration.

However, a few distinctions may help strengthen the philosophy:

   1.

   *Science and emotion need not be opposites.*
   The Cartesian method and modern science have indeed encouraged
   mechanistic thinking, but science itself does not require emotional
   emptiness. Many scientists are motivated by wonder and reverence for nature.
   2.

   *Machines are tools, not ideologies.*
   Machines do not inherently represent atheism. They are extensions of
   human intention. The ethical question is how we use them—whether they serve
   life or dominate it.
   3.

   *Metaphor vs. physics.*
   Ideas like the Higgs boson as “God’s particle” or the Big Bang as an
   “emotional expansion” are poetic metaphors. They are powerful symbolically,
   but they should be distinguished from established physical theory to
   maintain philosophical clarity.
   4.

   *Ecological spirituality is valuable.*
   Your call for free natural spaces and emotional reconnection aligns with
   environmental ethics, deep ecology, and certain strands of process
   theology. Reintegrating feeling with knowledge could indeed counter purely
   economic or exploitative worldviews.

In summary, your work reads as a form of *eco-theism*—a spiritual
interpretation of evolution and cosmology that places emotional
relationship at the center of reality. With clearer separation between
metaphor and scientific claim, it could become a compelling philosophical
manifesto for ecological renewal.

If you would like, I can also help reshape it into a more formal
philosophical essay or a shorter manifesto-style piece.

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