What are the laws of human nature?
Question from the Internet:
“What are the laws of human nature?”
Human nature is still in evolution.
Our basic “matter,” the force that drives us, is the desire to exist and to fulfill ourselves with everything we need.
This basic matter – unique empirical natural scientists call the “desire to receive” – is our building material that defines our existence and cannot be changed or erased.
But how, with what purpose and intention, we use this basic matter – which matter is also the only “material” of the whole Natural reality – is something we can consciously change and develop.
By default – and this is unique to humans – we use our basic desire to exist and fulfill ourselves with an inherently selfish, individualistic, and exploitative intention.
The rest of Nature exists and evolved together as a single system, where each individual element exists and fulfills itself in a way that, at the same time, contributes to and at all cost sustain the general balance and homeostasis of the system life depends on.
As a result, individual parts and elements – or animals and cells of our biological body – forfeit their own existence to facilitate that overall existence and homeostasis.
In contrast, human beings excessively overconsume and accumulate everything for themselves – in their given conditions and abilities – and they ruthlessly compete and succeed at the expense of others and Nature.
We exist and function in human society and Nature through our inherent intentions and aspirations, like cancer.
Our unique Human task and obligation are to take our development into our own hands and start changing and adapting it to Nature’s finely balanced and mutually integrated template – above and against our inherent intentions.
Through this, we will reach our predetermined, evolutionary Human purpose in Nature, to become the system’s only fully conscious, integrated, and at the same time independent observers and equal partners.