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 This blog is focused around exploration of human mind, the human condition, our various behavioral patterns, the history and the way we came to be, who we are today and where we're going, exploring big questions like: What is life? What does it mean to be alive? What is reality, outside of our natural perception and senses that are there to merely approximate it, for the benefit of our survival on this beautiful blue space rock and, unfortunately, perhaps to the detriment of our enlightenment? Will we ever be able to peek through the secrets of the universe or are we doomed to stay blind from it forever, due to our place on intelligence scale? Most of these questions of course, cannot be answered with our current state of understanding and our current progress in technology, however, this is the place to imagine, dream and hypothesize, of the answers we may one day find, what's just beyond our current reach.

~419141 

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Purpose

L'Inconnue de la Seine (The Unknown Woman of the Seine) Anthropocentric view, Might not be all so. If human condition Taught us anything at all Is that we're not here to create Nor we're here to destroy, We're not here to explore, We're not here with a meaning Rather we're just here, Left purposeless, and all alone. If star dust is where we come from, And ashes is where we go to, Then everything in between is just,  life, And we have a single raison d'être, To die.

Life imitates art

If experiences are nothing but an approximation of reality, are they doomed to only live within ourselves? If art is an expression of our inner-selves, A holistic experience for the world to share, And the brain hallucinates the now, Then it's our dreams that create the future. The people you meet is who you become, Life imitates art, And I imitate you .

Sol III: a post-mortem

Between the now unstoppable climate crisis, never ending power struggle of nations, and our technological immaturity (that I've outlined in the post  "Is humanity a self-terminating system?' ), it is hard to argue for a non-zero chance of survival of human civilization, along with 50-95% of the rest of the species on planet Earth. So perhaps, it's worth to take a look back, and do a little retrospective, see how did it all end up the way it did, perform an autopsy on another body that fell victim to the Fermi Paradox.  Our earliest traceable human-like ancestors is said to be Ardipithicines Ardipithecus, who appeared around 5 million years ago, or around 99,9% into Earth's existence. In a group of 15 difference human-like species, perhaps most notable ones were Homo Habilis, who appeared 2 Million years ago, they were the first ones to start making tools, then Homo Heidelbergensis, who appeared 700 thousands years ago, and were making various structures, like shelt...