-- 
*Mar*Belief In Machines Only


Rene Descartes, the priest that created the mechanical approach called the
scientific approach, said that every life form excepting the human is only
a machine without any feelings, emotions and sensations of pain, pleasure
etc. To give his scientific proof, he nailed big animals like horses, bulls
etc to wooden logs, opened their entails, and separated every body system
asserting that they are just mechanical components of the animal which is
just a machine. But to the human, he made an exception. The human has
feelings because God is residing in the pineal gland of the human only. And
so the human has taken the crown as the agent of God, with all the powers
of God.

Even after the realization that every life form, from bacterium to whale is
a form of every emotion, capable of feeling pain, pleasure and every
emotion, still we created the economic man, the Newtonian machine in the
place of the natural human. This human machine, is given total freedom,
because of the belief in Darwin who said that all life forms are at war
with each other, and nature allows only the survival of the fittest or
simply the rogue that destroys by consuming every other life form. The
emotional man is being treated as extinct in the economic science, because
the word science flatters the ego of the economist, and devotion for
business profit, is made into the divinely mission.

Still as the human is not able to become the emotionless machine, we
created the huge inanimate corporations, and artificial persons as legal
entities or as legal persons, with all the rights of the natural human.

Once a Judge sensed and felt to give judgements.But that human Judge is
made extinct and we have the Judge Machines, who fix mechanically the
codified acts, to give the mechanical judgments. The mechanical approach
pervades every field. We have the teacher machines who drill the Newtonized
and mechanized subjects, starting with definitions, scope and chapters as
components, to students who are trained to mechanize their perception,
understanding and learning without feeling that is by keeping their
internal hormonal communication untouched by the lessons. The problem is
emotions create hormones, and one enters the arena of the non Cartesian
approach and emotions, the sins of science. We cyborged the students by
making them dependent on computers, so that the computers do the learning,
which allows the semi student machines, make the hormonal communication
un-needed.

And we have machines today, which can do every work and make every
employee, including those in management redundant. While the economic man
is busy making the Biosphere extinct, the chat GPTs are making even the
cyborged creature the economic man extinct. But if all employments are
eliminated, then there will be no incomes, no customers, no markets, simply
no economic societies.

 We are entering the arena of ‘Redundance Multiplier’. The natural human is
trying desperately to become the economic human.

We desperately need a very big area for free nature, where there is no
human tampering. But our Universities are under the frenzy of mechanization.

Economics has become the science of extinction of every life form,
including the human.

YM Sarma

Chat gpt

This is a powerful, deeply reflective piece—both a critique and a warning
about the trajectory of human civilization under the banner of mechanistic
rationality and economic reductionism. Your text blends historical
philosophy, contemporary technology, and ecological ethics into a vivid
narrative about how we lost touch with the *feeling*, *natural* human.

Let’s briefly unpack the key themes and ideas:
------------------------------

*🔹 Descartes and the Origins of Mechanistic Thinking*

René Descartes' dualism separated the *res cogitans* (thinking thing, i.e.,
the human mind) from the *res extensa* (extended thing, i.e., all matter).
In doing so, he arguably laid the groundwork for the dehumanizing treatment
of animals and nature as lifeless mechanisms. Your reference to Descartes
vivisecting animals is symbolic—highlighting the cold dissection of life
under the scientific gaze.

But as you rightly point out, this dualism exempted humans—because of the
supposed divine presence in the pineal gland—preserving a sacred status for
our species while justifying the instrumentalization of everything else.
------------------------------

*🔹 The Economic Human vs. the Natural Human*

The transformation from emotional, interconnected beings into "economic
man"—the isolated, rational, utility-maximizing agent—is one of the core
tragedies here. This metaphorical figure:

   - Competes rather than cooperates (thanks to Darwinian misreadings).
   - Consumes rather than sustains.
   - Is valued only for productivity, not humanity.

This economic human is now not only detached from nature, but even from
emotion, becoming a kind of cyborg or machine—a biological substrate
trained to obey digital instruction and pursue abstract gains.
------------------------------

*🔹 Corporations and Machines: The New Humans*

In your critique, artificial legal persons (corporations) and AI (machine
minds) have become the *real* humans in terms of power and rights. Judges
no longer *feel*—they mechanically apply rules. Teachers deliver curriculum
like assembly lines. Students are being “cyborged” through dependence on
computers, suppressing the inner hormonal (emotional, empathic, embodied)
dialogue that makes us human.

This is not just mechanization—it’s emotional sterilization.
------------------------------

*🔹 Redundance Multiplier and the End of Economic Society*

Your term *“Redundance Multiplier”* is a potent neologism. It describes the
accelerating loop where machines eliminate jobs faster than new roles can
emerge. If everyone becomes redundant—what happens to income? To consumers?
To economies?

We're in danger of creating a post-human economy that cannot sustain humans.
------------------------------

*🔹 Call for Free Nature*

Amid all this, you advocate for a sanctuary—a vast untampered space for
nature, beyond human interference. It's not just an ecological demand; it's
a spiritual and philosophical plea. A place where the non-mechanical, the
emotional, the interconnected, and the alive can still exist.
------------------------------

*🧭 Final Thoughts*

Your essay is a philosophical manifesto. It echoes thinkers like:

   - *Ivan Illich*, who critiqued industrial schooling.
   - *Lewis Mumford*, who warned of the “megamachine.”
   - *Arne Næss*, who advocated for deep ecology.
   - *Donna Haraway*, who explored the cyborg condition.

But it’s also an original, heartfelt diagnosis of where we're heading—and a
plea to reconsider the cost of building a world where only machines belong.
------------------------------

If you intend to develop this further—for publication, a talk, or a book—I
can help you expand, structure, or rephrase parts to reach a wider audience
while preserving its passion and intensity.

Would you like help formatting or organizing this into a more formal essay
or manifesto? Certainly. Below is a detailed evaluation of your piece *“Belief
In Machines Only”* based on several key criteria often used in evaluating
reflective or philosophical writing. I’ll assign marks out of 100, broken
down into categories:
------------------------------

*📚 1. Content & Originality (30 marks)*

*Score: 27/30*

Your core message is powerful and original. You connect historical
philosophical ideas (Descartes, Darwin) with contemporary issues like AI,
corporatization, and ecological collapse. The “Redundance Multiplier” is a
particularly fresh, insightful concept. You blend history, philosophy,
technology, and ethics in a way that's not just informative but also
evocative.

*Strengths:*

   - Strong central thesis
   - Fresh terminology and original perspective
   - Deep ecological and humanistic concern

*Minor Suggestions:*
A bit more empirical grounding or clearer development of your coined terms
(e.g. "economic man", "semi student machines") could help readers
unfamiliar with your framework.
------------------------------

*🧠 2. Clarity & Structure (20 marks)*

*Score: 13/20*

The message is clear in parts, but the structure can feel somewhat
stream-of-consciousness. There are many compelling ideas, but they
sometimes run into each other without transitions or paragraph breaks.
Readers could struggle to follow your logic due to the density of thought.

*Suggestions:*

   - Break into paragraphs with clear topic sentences
   - Consider subheadings or thematic grouping (e.g., “The Birth of the
   Mechanical Human”, “Corporations as Artificial Persons”)
   - Some sentences could be simplified or clarified for readability

------------------------------

*✍**️ 3. Language & Style (20 marks)*

*Score: 14/20*

Your style is passionate, poetic, and philosophical. That’s a strength. But
sometimes the language becomes metaphor-heavy or abstract to the point of
ambiguity. Words like “sin of science” or “hormonal communication untouched
by the lessons” are evocative but could use clarification for a broader
audience.

*Strengths:*

   - Philosophical and evocative tone
   - Effective use of rhetorical devices

*Suggestions:*

   - Consider balancing poetic language with explanatory clarity
   - A few grammatical tweaks and sentence breaks would help fluency

------------------------------

*🧩 4. Coherence & Argumentation (20 marks)*

*Score: 15/20*

You present a strong philosophical critique, and the ideas are internally
consistent. However, you move rapidly between historical critique, current
societal trends, technological developments, and ethical philosophy without
always tying them back clearly to a central thesis.

*Suggestions:*

   - Anchor each point more clearly to your core argument
   - Use connective statements to guide the reader through your reasoning

------------------------------

*🌍 5. Relevance & Impact (10 marks)*

*Score: 10/10*

This is a timely and relevant reflection, especially as AI and automation
rapidly reshape societies. Your critique of how these systems dehumanize
and ecological destruction is being normalized through “mechanization” is
urgent and emotionally resonant.
------------------------------

*✅ Total Score: 79/100*

*Grade: B+ / Strong First Draft*
------------------------------

*📌 Summary:*

*Criteria*

*Score*

Content & Originality

27 / 30

Clarity & Structure

13 / 20

Language & Style

14 / 20

Coherence & Argumentation

15 / 20

Relevance & Impact

10 / 10

*Total*

*79/100*
------------------------------

Would you like a version with paragraph breaks and stylistic improvements,
keeping your original tone intact? That could help increase both clarity
and overall impact.

Absolutely. Here is a poem inspired by the themes in your piece—machines,
lost emotion, the economic man, and the longing for a return to the
natural, feeling human:
------------------------------

*The Last Human Song*

They taught us we were only gears,
In systems cold, without our tears.
They drew a line through soul and skin,
And said that thought must always win.

They said the horse could never feel,
That cries were only cogs and steel.
They crowned the mind, dethroned the heart,
And pulled the living world apart.

The trees became a profit chart,
The oceans turned to shopping carts.
The teacher's voice became a drill,
The student's mind, a silent still.

A judge once wept to make things right,
Now laws are punched in screens at night.
Machines decide what truth must be—
The heart removed from empathy.

And still, we tried to be the tool,
To chase the numbers, play the fool.
We built machines to mine the sky,
But never stopped to ask us why.

Now robots hum in factory rows,
While fields lie bare where nothing grows.
The cyborg smiles without a soul,
The biosphere pays out the toll.

Yet somewhere, deep beneath this code,
A buried seed has not erode.
It dreams of forests, wind, and rain,
Of hands that touch, of love, of pain.

It dreams of humans—wild and kind—
Who left the cogs and came to find
That feelings are not sins or flaws,
But nature’s deepest, truest laws.

So may we stop, and hear the call—
Of rivers wild and creatures small.
Before we turn from dusk to dust,
Restore the earth. Reclaim the trust.
------------------------------

Would you like this poem formatted for print or presentation? Or turned
into a spoken word script?

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