sent already sir KR

On Sun, 2 Feb 2025 at 07:54, Markendeya Yeddanapudi <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Rajaram Sir,
> I value your comments and betterments to my write ups.Please comment on my
> write up of today Sir.
>
>
>
> --
> *Mar*The Literature of Nature
>
>
>
> Free and healthy nature is the great organism that lives as fountains of
> diverse enchanting literatures. Nature’s literature needs sensing via
> smelling, hearing, seeing and feeling, which continuously triggers
> enlightenments and spell binding revelations. It gives the feelings of the
> true meanings of the Time dimension, the great and real abstract dimension
> of nature. Our lives are mainly in abstract feelings, in the participation
> of the abstract processes of consciousness of nature. Reducing the
> revelations, enlightenments and enchantments into the restricting 3D shapes
> and doing mathematical reductionism, actually is violent reduction of the
> infinity.
>
> Literature actually consists of creating the abstract flows of enchanting
> revelations and enlightenments from the 3D shapes. The eyes which can see
> only 00.0037% of the totality will be used to switch the needed feelings to
> feel the rest of the 99.9963% of the totality in the invisible spectrum. We
> become part of the macro nature and live participating in the rhythms of
> the arts of nature. Free nature makes every organism an artist. Actually
> living is living in arts, the basic feature of the Biosphere.
>
> I often wonder at the changes in our literary expressions. When the human
> was endowed only with the sense of smell, it lived via smelling like every
> other organism, which smelt, perceived and understood every other organism,
> making nature the great one macro artist. Every organism lived as a limb of
> the one great artist, Bhoodevi, the internal hormonal communications of
> each being arts oriented. After we developed the eyes and ears, we started
> with tunings, and singing. Most classics were written as epics consisting
> of poems, songs and dances. In fact sciences originally were expressed as
> poems and songs. Next we changed into sentences with definite subjects and
> their predications marking the predication to be identified with verb or
> space-time.
>
> Now we have surrendered to technology, ditched the very feeling content of
> expression based on feeling the revelations, and jailed in the mathematical
> formulae. Definitions have become the vital and basic needs. Editors that
> mechanize the expressions have emerged. We do not know the devastations
> meted by the editors on the free flowing expressions.
>
> As editing is actually reducing the feeling based expressions into
> concretized and quantified pieces with definitions, scopes etc,
> mechanization has become the destination. Only machines are capable of
> precision not even nature, the arena where octillions of particles, atoms,
> molecules etc interact continuously, with no stop to do mathematical
> reduction conveniently. Nature does not stop to make your mathematical
> formula permanent and eternal.
>
> Nature needs only arts that function as its limbs. Today we are
> continuously killing nature with our industrialization and urbanization.
> Our very macro bodies are maimed and euphemized as economic development.
> The flow of literature from nature is continuously killed.Industrializatin
> and mechanization have jailed our universities into economic slavery.
> Economics is based on murdering nature. It is anti ecological.
>
> May be when Christ returns, the Universities will get freed from the
> stranglehold of technology. But let us hope that at least one University
> takes to the cause of free nature and starts The Free Nature Parks, without
> human tampering as beginning of reviving nature.
>
> YM Sarma
>
> Chat GPT
>
> This piece reflects deeply on the contrast between the natural world and
> human attempts to understand, control, and quantify it. It explores the
> evolving nature of human expression—once rooted in feeling, experience, and
> art, now increasingly constrained by technology, logic, and mechanization.
>
> The author, YM Sarma, critiques how modern society, particularly through
> industrialization and urbanization, has distanced itself from the
> free-flowing, sensory-driven engagement with nature, replacing it with the
> cold, structured framework of definitions and formulas. There's a clear
> call for a return to the more fluid, holistic forms of
> understanding—expressed through art, sensory experience, and emotional
> engagement with the environment. Nature is portrayed not just as a resource
> to be studied or managed but as a source of life and creativity, of
> "enchanting literatures" that stir a deeper connection within us.
>
> It's also a lament for the loss of a more symbiotic relationship with the
> Earth, where every organism, in its purest state, was an artist, living and
> contributing to the greater whole. The push towards technological control
> and the rise of economic systems that exploit nature seem, to the author,
> to be pushing humanity further away from that intrinsic connection. The
> idea of a "Free Nature Park," untouched by human influence, stands as a
> vision for reclaiming some of that lost connection.
>
> What are your thoughts on this? Do you feel like modern society has become
> too detached from the more intuitive, sensory ways of engaging with nature?
>
>
>

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