GENERATING LIFE
This planet of ours,
that we call “earth,” has what we call life. What we usually
mean by that is that this planet contains living trees and plants and
animals—like us. But the earth itself has life. We need to
realise that, before it is too late.
In the plant and
animal world, seeding provides for continuous life. Generation and
regeneration keep what we call life going. We animals are still
generating and regenerating, but the plant world with which we live
and upon which we depend isn't doing very well. It seems, in fact,
to be dying. And the earth itself?
In the last fifty
years we have been exploring what we call “space,” to discover
whether or not there is what we call “life” on those other lumps
of matter wandering around out there. We call those wanderers
“planets.”
What we are looking
for is our version of life. We are looking for what we already know.
And we are thinking of the possibilities of our colonizing
somewhere out there. That's what animal scientists call the “fouled
nest” syndrome. Humans and some other animals live that way: when
they have made a big enough mess of where they live, they move
somewhere else.
But science isn't
just a housing office, or Noah's dove looking for someplace to land.
Science should be much more than that—and smarter than that.
What we call
life—plant life and animal life--grows from seeds. Have we asked
if this earth itself has seed? This earth is dying; all things, it
seems, must die. But in our experience, generation is the companion
of dying, which lets life continue.
In exploring space,
we look for life on other planets: but we are looking for what we
call life. Ego interferes with
learning, even with understanding. Other is hard for
us to accept. Our exploration is limited by our self-centered
definition of life.
And thus we think of
colonizing other planets. “Will other planets support life?” we
ask. Of course, what we mean is will those other planets support us,
and what we call “life.”
Once we have made this
planet, earth, uninhabitable, we will need someplace to go.
With
our determined assistance, this earth may be dying. So we
want off. We
want another planet to go to. But maybe
what is needed, in the larger order of existence, is for earth itself
to “seed” another planet, not with us but
with its own seed.
Of
course, we don't know what earth's seed is. And we haven't even
tried, yet, to find out. Or imagine.
Human
ego would send us to
other planets. But maybe we aren't
earth's seed. Maybe there is something beyond what we humans call
life.
The
world is—be definition—what we know. The universe is everything,
or everything-once-around: an unmeasurable continuous ring. And
everything is bigger than what we know, bigger by far than what we
are.
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