Is betrayal a Natural thing in the Nature and Universe? 3D explains it
Is betrayal a Natural thing in the Nature and Universe?
3D explains it
08-05-2024
Dr. Perry Daneshgari
As animate being we all have experienced betrayal. We see it in everything around us from animals, to politics, to friends, to work colleagues, to professional relationships, to stock market, to hackers, to spies, to product producers, to protégés and to everything in our sight.
Why is betrayal a going theme in all aspects of animate and inanimate world as well as the galaxies and entire universe? Karl Marx defines it as dialectic relationship between the creator and the offspring. He explains that every phenomenon bears its own destructive offspring in its womb. Einstein did it to Newton, John Scully did it to Steve Jobs, Hitler did it to the republic that it was elected to run, next generation does it to the old generation, Black Hole does it to the star it created it.
How does nature deal with or create betrayal? If humans are subject to constant betrayal, and backstabbing, is that natural and if it is which should be, where does it come from and how does nature deal with it? Is that a way of progress to shake the current stability to create instability to go from ordered chaos the next order for the next chaos.
The answer is simple, 3D defines order as an exception to the norm of chaos. In other words, betrayal is part of nature’s discomfort with status quo. It uses the known knowledge created by the past to create a pathway to the future. The outcome is not always predictable or necessarily pleasant. But it is a pathway to progress. Whatever that progress may be.
So, betrayal is as natural as it gets to move the universe forward at the cost of the energy from the past that created it.
Please see below for the start of “Third Dimension” theory.
To remind everyone about the three dimensions discussed please see below equation and graph or look at the earlier blogs.
L = ETk
Where:
L = Unit of Life
E = Energy = mc2
T = Speed of Thought
k= Proportionality factor
In this equation, the constants are speed of light (c) and speed of Though (T). Everything else can and will vary.
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