The Function that Defines the Species

The purpose of the human race is often characterized through the examination of motives imposed onto man by nature. This reasoning concludes that man’s constant pursuits should naturally represent the objective of humanity. Humans often associate love with the meaning of life and procreation as being humanity’s ultimate goal. The desire to procreate is unavoidable, but this simple feat of survival is a misleading endeavor for such complicated creatures.

Earthly creatures possess an array of traits that define their purpose and function. Each creature attains unique attributes that separate it and its function from other entities. These unique attributes define the purpose of the creature and its function in relation to everything else. Each entity is defined by its primary function, which is unique among all other entities. Each creature maintains several secondary functions, but only one unique primary function defines its primary purpose. Other than the primary function, the underlying secondary functions categorize the species abroad. These secondary attributes are common among species with similar characteristics and are often associated as a means to the creature’s survival. Some of the common attributes shared among creatures are emotions, procreation, and so on. These features are subservient functions and do not define an entity’s purpose.

Any attributes in association with humans and other planetary creatures are not attributes that define humanity’s primary function. The attribute that defines humanity is unique and unlike any other trait possessed by any other creature. Humanity’s function in relation to all things is extraordinary and categorically foreign to the functions of other creatures. Reducing humanity’s function to that of another creature on Earth would place humanity on par with creatures that exist simply for survival. In this scenario, humanity would be slung back to the “caveman era,” where procreation was the only insurance for the survival of the species. The urge to multiply is an attribute ingrained in all living entities. Devices put in place to perform this primordial function do not define an entity’s purpose. Survival is not by choice but rather is imposed, similar to breathing. An emotional void has been transposed upon humanity that ensures the survival of the species through procreation. The desire to fulfill this need is programmed precisely to the nth degree to ensure the development of the species in support of its primary purpose.

The function that defines the creature and its purpose is distinguished from all other attributes associated with the creature. Each creature possesses a hierarchy of functions, a pyramid of duties, with his or her defining function fixed at the top. Other subservient functions assist in the success of the primary function. Subservient functions are common among all species, but the primary function is unique to a single species. Creatures possess several subservient functions that ensure the primary function succeeds. Although there may be multiple subservient functions present in order to accommodate the primary function, there is only one primary function that requires fulfillment. The primary function is a necessity designed for the fluent operation of nature and, ultimately, the universe. This primary function is a critical operation that must succeed in order for the mechanism of existence to perform. As all things have a purpose in a purposeful universe, they are of a unique and critical function.

The Curvature of a Medium

Einstein illustrated a universe with curves and divots in space time, which create an attractive force of gravity. These divots are created by matter floating within a medium of fields, causing space to warp. Slow moving and bulky matter stretches space, creating pockets in which other matter gets sucked into. Photons, particles that move at high velocities, do not emit a gravitational attraction and do not create divots in space. Particles that do not create a gravitational field are moving at the pace of the underlying medium of the universe. They move with the wave of fields, thereby not creating a disturbance in space time. We can experience these particles, as they are within the speed limits of the universe’s medium. Universal fields pulsate at a frequency, and matter that exists within this frequency can be experienced by human senses. Matter retains substance when it exists within the confines of the universal medium.

The faster a particle moves within the universal medium, the fewer attributes it retains. Photon particles are simple particles with little substance. A photon particle accelerates at the same pace as the underlying fields of the universe, thereby allowing the photon to retain a simplistic form. A section of space time that contains only photon particles is flat and smooth, and does not contain divots or protrusions. Particles that move quicker than the medium of the universe create an opposite effect, compared to those particles moving slowly in space. If a particle moves quicker than the underlying fields, it creatures an outward or upward protrusion in the fabric of space. Space time would warp outwardly, creating a hill instead of a divot. This hill in the fabric of space exerts a repulsion effect instead of an attractive force. Matter located within the vicinity of this type of particle will be repulsed at an intensity of the particle’s velocity above the limiting frequency of the underlying fields. Figure 40 displays two elements, one moving within the frequency of the universal fields (Object B), and one accelerating beyond the frequency (Object A). Matter moving within the speed limit of the medium of space emits a gravitational effect by creating a divot in space. Particles moving faster than the medium of space emit an inflationary repulsion effect that repulses matter. For example, a ball rolling on a sheet of cloth with mounds protruding from the cloth will move away from the mounds toward divots. This illustration for the fabric of space is curvy, containing divots and hills.

The frequency range for the medium of the universe represents the proverbial surface for the fabric of space. Every particle that exists on or below the surface can be experienced by humans. Particles moving beyond the frequency of the medium cannot be experienced and create a dark void known as dark matter. Figure 4 illustrates the frequency range for the medium of the universe and those particles that move at a pace outside that frequency. Particles moving quicker than the medium appear to be dark, as they cannot reflect light that exists within the medium of the universe. Light particles do not move fast enough to reflect off of dark particles moving at greater velocities. For instance, a fish can experience objects in water (its medium) and not those things above the water’s surface. Objects beyond the water’s surface will not be directly experienced.

"Everywhere one seeks to produce meaning, to make the world signify, to render it visible. We are not, however, in danger of lacking meaning; quite the contrary, we are gorged with meaning and it is killing us."
Baudrillard, Jean

"Just as all thought, and primarily that of non-signification, signifies something, so there is no art that has no signification."
Camus, Albert

"The deeper the experience of an absence of meaning -- in other words, of absurdity --the more energetically meaning is sought."
Havel, Vaclav


"Darkness within darkness. The gateway to all understanding."
Lao-Tzu

 
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