Sunday, September 7, 2014

My Philosopy Of Biology

It matters greatly. Because-
Larger planetary organisms on earth spend a great deal of measurable time and energy in the life spans of their individual members and of member generations, creating and utilising whatever they can achievably minimize in order to amass power among themselves, for themselves, and for their legacies.
Humans, for instance, want tinier and tinier batteries and battery systems to elicit the power of motion in tinier and tinier particles.
Whales, as well, whose organic processes rule our oceans,  have evolved to make maximum use of plankton.
I don't believe dinosaurs would have met extinction had they succeeded in finding a tiny enough but
powerful enough fueling source to feed them without causing them to deposit the heavy body wastes they had to dispel.
Of course, evolution would have shrunken them - as it has done to many remnants we have of them now.
Smaller planetary organisms on earth spend a great deal of measurable time and energy in the life
spans of their individual members and of their generations, creating and utilising whatever they can
achievable build to gargantuan sizes in order to amass structural power among themselves, for
themselves, and for their legacies. These humungous structures insure the thriving in these many tiny species which would otherwise be more unkindly governed by time alone.
African termite nests defy the ticking of clocks and the smallness of the creatures given birth in them.
The Great Barrier Reef is as large and as powerful structure as we have, and it is made and sustained
by tiny, tiny organisms- and even microorganisms.
Would that we could inevitably shrink the power of needless destruction in our own biology...then
mimic the skills for our planet in our interactions with one another.

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