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*Mar*The Ecological Symbiosis-Vs-The Economic Holocaust


The meaning and purpose of life is complemented by every organism, with its
nano contribution to the ecological symbiosis. In free and healthy nature,
one experiences the flashes of macro revelations edited by the troposphere,
of all the smell, sight and sound contributions of messages from every
organism. Nature does not create problems. It creates continuously diverse
paths of symbiosis, every organism a link in the macro DNA chain of nature.
Nature’s links are feelings and sensing. When one enters the free and
healthy nature, the nature in raptures in musics, one gets arrested by the
lessons, which take to feelings as understandings. There is a common
language of the Biosphere, which every organism uses in smells,* sights*
and musics. Every organism can communicate with every other organism via
smelling and sensing. The eyes may not see, but nothing can be hidden from
smells.

Living in free and healthy nature, is experiencing continuously meanings
and revelations from nature, which simply cannot be straitjacketed into a
Cartesian mould. We have converted our own earth into an unknown planet, a
subject of Archeology, which once lived as a living organism. We are busy
fossilizing the Biosphere.

Our economic life involves the torture; subjugation, killing, and cruel lab
experimentation of every life form of the Biosphere.We have removed the
freedom for life of every life form. From infancy on we drag away the baby
from nature’s wonderful symbiosis and inject into it terrible economic
ambition hysteria. We train it for Social Darwinism.

Our stupidity is so terrible that we do not realize the utter incongruity
of predicting the future evolution, while murdering every organism for our
economic life. An organism has to live freely to evolve gradually, but we
just maim it of life. And most of us cannot live without some medicine.
Chemicals as tablets govern our lives, not free and healthy nature. Most of
us need tablets to sleep, which actually is stupor. Healthy sleep needs the
enabling healthy nature. Economies are furnaces that roast.

In the Universities every student lives in terrible anxiety. He/She has to
prove his/her merit, the most meaningless concept that drags the student
away from nature’s wonderful symbiosis. After the final examinations the
results may give relief from tension or mild shock or total shock for life.

It is the basic duty of every university, to provide relief and opportunity
to bounce back into life, when a student is damned with adverse grades or
marks sheet.

A Free Nature Park without human tampering provides the student the
desperately needed opportunity to live in ecological symbiosis. The library
of every university must have the vital Free Nature Parks, where a student
learns from nature.

Every University must wake up from its economic stupor and recognize that
the whole world is getting destroyed by the economic life of the human
vandal.

YM Sarma

Chat GPT

The text you’ve shared presents a powerful critique of modern economic and
educational systems, portraying them as disconnected from the natural world
and destructive to ecological harmony. It contrasts the notion of *ecological
symbiosis*—a harmonious, interdependent relationship between organisms and
the environment—with the *economic holocaust* caused by human-driven
exploitation of nature for profit. Here's an interpretation of its key
points:

1.      *Ecological Symbiosis as the Ideal*: The natural world, in its
untouched state, is a complex, interwoven system where every organism
contributes to the greater whole. Each organism, through its unique
actions, contributes to a vast symbiosis that brings balance and
understanding. There is a "language" of the biosphere, expressed through
sensory experiences—smells, sights, and sounds—which connects all living
beings. Nature doesn't create problems; it offers continuous paths of
interconnection and revelation.

2.      *Economic Life as Destructive*: In contrast, modern economic
systems are depicted as violent and exploitative, reducing life forms to
mere resources for profit. These systems foster an environment of torture,
subjugation, and cruelty, transforming human beings and other creatures
into cogs in an economic machine. Nature’s life force is stripped away in
favor of economic ambition, and humans are conditioned from an early age to
prioritize economic success over ecological health.

3.      *Education and Its Role in the Economic System*: The educational
system, too, is implicated in this destructive cycle. Students are taught
to prioritize economic success and prove their worth, often under
tremendous pressure and anxiety. The text suggests that the pursuit of
grades and degrees, while seemingly vital, ultimately distances individuals
from the natural world and its inherent wisdom. The “merit” system, in this
view, is a meaningless construct that contributes to the degradation of
both individual well-being and ecological balance.

4.      *The Call for Change*: The author advocates for a shift in
perspective, urging universities to prioritize ecological healing and
symbiosis. A university’s role should go beyond producing individuals who
fit into the economic system and should instead foster a deeper
understanding of nature’s interconnectedness. Universities should
incorporate natural spaces—*Free Nature Parks*—where students can reconnect
with the environment and learn from it directly.

5.      *The Economic Furnace and Human Vandalism*: The text concludes with
a critique of economic life as a “furnace” that roasts humanity, destroying
both individual health and the planet. The author sees humans as "vandals"
of the Earth, tearing down the ecological structures that sustain life in
the name of economic progress.

Overall, the piece is a passionate plea for a return to a more symbiotic,
ecologically balanced way of life—one that respects the interconnectedness
of all organisms and prioritizes ecological health over economic growth.
The author is challenging the deeply entrenched systems of economic
exploitation and educational pressure, urging a shift towards holistic,
nature-centered ways of living and learning.

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