A poetic discourse on the necessity of Humanity’s integration

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readJul 10, 2020

“One and many

All for one and one for all as D’Artagnan cried

Quis custos etc

I’m genuinely trying to figure out how to be a solipsist again

Life was easier

Though if I was to be an empiricist I’d like you as two…”

I agree, we all would like to solipsist again and we would like others to be “in two”.

The “problem” is that Nature’s evolution — driving the whole system towards integration — obligates us to enter the state of “one for all for one”, and not in a way the musketeers and Humanity in general through history exercised unity — uniting against others.

This time we all have to be “as one” as otherwise, we can’t reach compatibility with Nature.

As another great “book” (the Torah) writes at its most dramatic “scene”, “…Either you accept unity, mutual guarantee as one man with one heart, or this will be your burial place…”.

“Ahhhh

Finally the epitaph (ha — I get a gold star — self-awarded)

Evolution is not what you seek

You seek intuition

Careful what to ask the gods

And fear what they might bestow

But risk is just to beat the odds

And to change what one might know”

Again, I agree.

Evolution is not we seek, it is a given, predetermined.

And the “gods” — Nature’s forces — give us what they want to give us, as predetermined by evolution’s plan in order to drive us towards our unique, Human evolutionary purpose.

Our task is to figure out what they want to give us so we could ask exactly what is on offer. Then we reach synchronicity, mutual flow with evolution, and become utterly free to do anything we want — as long as we do what evolution wants us to do, going always a step ahead of its steamroller.

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Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.