-- 
*Mar*Here is an edited and improved version that preserves your core ideas,
tone, and philosophical intent, while clarifying language, tightening
structure, and improving flow and readability. I have avoided adding new
arguments and focused on refinement rather than reinterpretation.
------------------------------

*The Two Destructive Superstitions*

Theism is the symbiotic functioning of a free and healthy nature. The
scents and soundless signals of diverse organisms blend and coalesce in the
troposphere, forming nature’s coordinated direction. This ongoing grand
symbiosis cannot be adequately expressed through language, for it is not a
collection of separate subjects and predicates, but an indivisible whole.

This theism, emerging from the troposphere, remains a wonderful and
unwordable feeling. Yet this feeling guides life, provided it is not
contaminated by human interference. In a truly free and healthy nature,
there is no place for sickness or disease. What we encounter instead is the
symbiotic coordination of birth and death, which constitutes the
fundamental rhythm of the biosphere. Every organism participates, through
ecological links, in the continuous flow of theism.

In many books dealing with death, I have read that death itself is a
wonderful and positive experience. Accounts from those who were revived
after brief moments of death often convey deeply positive impressions of
it. Yet today, medical science relentlessly strives to delay death, even
when existence has become continuously diseased and unbearable. Our fear of
death has grown so intense that we have lost even our curiosity about it.

Unfortunately, nature today is suffering under two destructive human
superstitions: those imposed by religion and the virulent economic
superstitions imposed by technology. Neither respects the rights of
organisms other than humans, and both dismiss the very existence of
nature’s macro-level symbiosis.

While religions often push aside rationality, they still allow, at least to
some extent, the free functioning of the human body. However, one
contemporary religion is now promoting misogyny in a shameless and
profoundly disturbing manner.

Science, through the unchecked promotion of technology, is gradually
eliminating our natural faculties altogether. When machines perform the
work of our limbs, those limbs slowly lose their vitality. We have already
lost many natural abilities and have come to accept this maiming as a mark
of a higher standard of living. The marketing of technological gadgets
routinely celebrates the functional weakening of the human body.

We are also conditioned to identify all bacteria solely with disease. The
crucial fact that even the smallest functions of our bodies depend upon
bacteria is deliberately ignored. We kill bacteria indiscriminately,
treating this destruction as a necessary and virtuous act.

We urgently need free nature—nature without human tampering. Every
university must immediately establish a nature park free from human
interference, so that nature may once again offer us its health-giving and
rapture-generating symbiosis.

*— Y. M. Sarma*
------------------------------

If you would like, I can also:

   -

   Make it more *academic/philosophical*
   -

   Make it more *poetic and meditative*
   -

   Make it more *direct and activist*
   -

   Prepare it for *publication or a speech*

Just tell me the direction.

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