The whole of Nature exists only for Human evolution
Question from the Internet:
“What would life be without human evolution?”
It is hard to imagine, but without human evolution, without humanity, life in Nature would not make any sense, since the whole system was created for human beings to reach their unique, evolutionary Human role in the system.
Human beings are completely different from the rest of the Natural system. The whole system lives in general harmony and homeostasis, which are the prerequisite of life.
On the other hand, human beings are born outside of the system, opposite to the system.
All other parts of Nature are instinctively, automatically, by birth integrated into the whole, taking part in the so-called ‘circle of life”, never threatening the general balance, never boing beyond their Natural habitat — unless Natural catastrophes, human interference causes them to. In contrast, human beings behave, exist differently.
We are operated, driven by a uniquely human, subjective, self-serving, and self-justifying ego, that makes us behave like cancer towards each other and Nature. This ever-increasing, ever-intensifying ego separated us from other developed primates — that remained virtually unchanged for millions of years, fueling the incredible, cultural, social, technological human development — at the same time turning us against each other and Nature more and more.
This is not “our evil or sin”. Nature purposefully created us this way to give us independence, and an “outsider view” of the system on one hand, and on the other hand, to give us the free, conscious ability to change ourselves and find the integration into the system above and against our original instinctive nature.
As a result, we will become the Natural system’s only conscious, integrated but also independent observers, partners, the only truly conscious element in the system. This is what awaits us if we learn and accept what evolution wants from us.
If we do not, then Nature has its ways of awakening us and gradually turning us to accept our purpose and role in the system.