SOTTREADER
The Living Force
I couldn't think of where else to post this. A thought came to my mind that I’d very much like to try to articulate.
Basically, what are the limits of war from a 3D perspective? If we were to strip away the imagery and horrors of war from our perspective, what might its purpose and limits look like from a 4D perspective?
From our perspective, war appears to ultimately serve the purpose of extracting suffering from the targeted population. At the same time, the act of warring seems to indirectly drive other developments e.g. technology, laws, the so-called “rules-based order”, culture etc. Since the post-industrial age, natural resources, including human capital, can also be siphoned from the conquered to the conqueror and used to drive innovation in those societies. All in all, it feels as though warring has been a central feature of our evolution, at least since the last Ice Age.
Furthermore, there has been an interesting evolution in the nature of wars and conflict. For the majority of our history, wars were a very personal affair. The butchery was done at a level I can only describe as personal - people hacking each other with swords or similar instruments, or fighting at extremely close quarters. I imagine the emotional intensity of such conflicts would have had a certain esoteric flavour to them for 4D STS. It’s also worth noting that, for the most part, such conflicts largely left the wider natural environment undisturbed. It is almost as if the “gods” who those wars fed had different requirements - they wanted visceral human suffering without it spilling over into the destruction of the natural world.
Fast forward to more recent times, with the invention of bombs and missiles. It feels as though war, while now more destructive and industrial, is of a different flavour to the wars of the past (and this is not meant to downplay the horrors of modern warfare). To explain the thought more clearly: a missile or bomb is dropped on a location and, while these are extremely destructive, the killing is very efficient and often instantaneous -thousands of souls departing in an instant. Compare this to a medieval army marching to a city, laying siege, breaking through the walls, and soldiers having to carry out the very manual and labour-intensive work of ending lives.
Another aspect of bombs and missiles is the pronounced damage to the natural environment. Not only are the intended targets attacked, nature itself is also attacked. It’s almost as if the gods have changed, and we are now under the rule of different gods than before. The gods of today seem to prefer industrial methods of destruction that also damage nature, whereas the gods of the past seemed to prefer more personal and visceral methods that largely left nature untouched.
With bombs and missiles, one begins to wonder where the limit of what humanity is allowed to do is set by higher forces. If there were truly no limits, then there could be 3D civilizations capable of developing technologies that destroy entire planets. I would even hazard the guess that such civilizations might have arisen in the distant past on this planet. Yet life is still here, and so are humans. How can this be explained?
The only explanation I can think of is that the gods who preferred the visceral and personal methods that left nature largely intact must always have prevailed against the gods who favour industrial methods that also obliterate nature.
Putin, in his method of warfare, appears to appeal to the former gods, while Trump, in his method of warfare, seems to call upon the latter. Oreshnik appears to respect the ways of the former gods, while Tomahawks represent the latter.
If true, it makes you wonder why the former gods eventually always win against the latter?!? Maybe Putin figured it out.
In any case, I wonder whether there is intrigue at play in the conflicts we are now witnessing between so-called superpowers, and whether, rather than heralding the destruction of humanity and nature, they might instead herald the return of the old gods.
Whatever it is they herald, I much rather be on a planet, where the central defining feature of civilization is not war or intergroup conflicts.
Feel free to move this post somewhere else. Perhaps to the conspiracy theory section if it fits better there.
Basically, what are the limits of war from a 3D perspective? If we were to strip away the imagery and horrors of war from our perspective, what might its purpose and limits look like from a 4D perspective?
From our perspective, war appears to ultimately serve the purpose of extracting suffering from the targeted population. At the same time, the act of warring seems to indirectly drive other developments e.g. technology, laws, the so-called “rules-based order”, culture etc. Since the post-industrial age, natural resources, including human capital, can also be siphoned from the conquered to the conqueror and used to drive innovation in those societies. All in all, it feels as though warring has been a central feature of our evolution, at least since the last Ice Age.
Furthermore, there has been an interesting evolution in the nature of wars and conflict. For the majority of our history, wars were a very personal affair. The butchery was done at a level I can only describe as personal - people hacking each other with swords or similar instruments, or fighting at extremely close quarters. I imagine the emotional intensity of such conflicts would have had a certain esoteric flavour to them for 4D STS. It’s also worth noting that, for the most part, such conflicts largely left the wider natural environment undisturbed. It is almost as if the “gods” who those wars fed had different requirements - they wanted visceral human suffering without it spilling over into the destruction of the natural world.
Fast forward to more recent times, with the invention of bombs and missiles. It feels as though war, while now more destructive and industrial, is of a different flavour to the wars of the past (and this is not meant to downplay the horrors of modern warfare). To explain the thought more clearly: a missile or bomb is dropped on a location and, while these are extremely destructive, the killing is very efficient and often instantaneous -thousands of souls departing in an instant. Compare this to a medieval army marching to a city, laying siege, breaking through the walls, and soldiers having to carry out the very manual and labour-intensive work of ending lives.
Another aspect of bombs and missiles is the pronounced damage to the natural environment. Not only are the intended targets attacked, nature itself is also attacked. It’s almost as if the gods have changed, and we are now under the rule of different gods than before. The gods of today seem to prefer industrial methods of destruction that also damage nature, whereas the gods of the past seemed to prefer more personal and visceral methods that largely left nature untouched.
With bombs and missiles, one begins to wonder where the limit of what humanity is allowed to do is set by higher forces. If there were truly no limits, then there could be 3D civilizations capable of developing technologies that destroy entire planets. I would even hazard the guess that such civilizations might have arisen in the distant past on this planet. Yet life is still here, and so are humans. How can this be explained?
The only explanation I can think of is that the gods who preferred the visceral and personal methods that left nature largely intact must always have prevailed against the gods who favour industrial methods that also obliterate nature.
Putin, in his method of warfare, appears to appeal to the former gods, while Trump, in his method of warfare, seems to call upon the latter. Oreshnik appears to respect the ways of the former gods, while Tomahawks represent the latter.
If true, it makes you wonder why the former gods eventually always win against the latter?!? Maybe Putin figured it out.
In any case, I wonder whether there is intrigue at play in the conflicts we are now witnessing between so-called superpowers, and whether, rather than heralding the destruction of humanity and nature, they might instead herald the return of the old gods.
Whatever it is they herald, I much rather be on a planet, where the central defining feature of civilization is not war or intergroup conflicts.
Feel free to move this post somewhere else. Perhaps to the conspiracy theory section if it fits better there.