3. a hole is nothing but the absence of a certain part of our
essence. .however to say we have lost parts of essence does not
mean they are gone forever; they are never gone forever.. when you’re a
baby, you have no holes; you are complete when you are born. ..
A H Almaas
almaas holes law:
4. ever since.. we’ve been trying to
refill our holes
recapture our essence
reground our grounding
with different flavors of
5. descola control law:
the control of the stock becomes the central point
inequity not on shift to agri but on stockpiling/accumulation.. whether thru
agri or foraging.. the control of the stock becomes the central point
precisely not interpreted in terms of the immediate ecological analysis.. but
the point to understanding the emergence of social control/protection
– Philippe Descola
6. the more we seek/cling to control/order..
the more our grounding/essence keeps slipping
a w a y
7. then..
the easier it is for others to control us..
(in their similar efforts of reclaiming that lost grounding/essence)
8.
9. we’ve got a lot of people.. in a lot of pain (from lost essence)..
trying to cope by filling holes with their (or most likely someone else’s)
(solving other people’s problems)
11. so we have inspectors of inspectors and people making
instruments for inspectors to inspect inspectors
- Buckminster Fuller
fuller too much law:
12. entropy suggests a gradual deterioration of a.. h a r d w o n o r d e r
it may be that some brains could stand to have a little more entropy, not less
- Robin Carhart-Harris
Carhart-Harris suggests that the psychological ‘disorders’ at the low entropy end of the
spectrum (ie: narrow or rigid thinking; addiction; obsessive compulsive disorder;
depression; anesthesia; and finally, coma) are not the result of a lack of order in the
brain but rather stem from an excess of order
carhart-harris entropy law: