On the origin of life, following the spaghetti article

 It has long been my hobby and particular interest, the origin of life. I have written a lot about it and more recently, akin to the article I just wrote, I wondered about yeast while working in a pizzeria. That blog is only a few from here, must I link it?

Anyway, the idea struck me that life was an existing thing, that it existed in the universe and isn't just a spontaneous malfunction that turned out really cool. 

(Most planets have gas and no ozone and here we are with all these trees and people, ew!)

Lately, as opposed to my old "fishing around" in areas of the ancient past, I have noted that, since I only know little about earth's land creatures, the ocean looks rife with intriguing things that seem even more practical for study and wondrous for them being so. This made me want to dive into the wonder of marine life, which could be of more value because the primitive appearance of wild things in the ocean may let us in on secrets of the earths past. 

But more than having a new reef to hang out in, I have wondered about making either a philosophical or scientific statement about life's rather sudden and mysterious appearance, as it too often is glazed over as simply chemistry and not that it must be an underlying natural part of the grand scheme. As a believer I know it is, but the clues and the description have yet to be fine tuned. At least by my limited reading.

If life exists without the components, and we believe that it does, that the dead will rise is an interesting suggestion by the faithful as we know our bodies decompose, then the aspects of life are different from the components. Meaning, life is a substance itself, for lack of a better word. 

If life is a substance itself, then it creates itself a body out of necessity to have a body. As the Indians believe, there is no individual soul without auffering, liberation is uniting with the divine. 

The idea being that the earth and it's greatness are only part of design, thus it being spoken of extensively in various religious texts are clues and those given to inspirations have been gifted insights yet to be told. This has been a great interest to me.

Lately, I have been reading again about religions. I am interested in the ways some human beings have been touched by the divine, what they were told and shown especially interests me about the origin of life. It is not a matter of debate that life on earth began at some time, but rather what is life and where does it go if there are other places beyond our sight? All of this seems pretty cut and dry, but from the believers perspective there is the question of what life is and where it lives outside our mediums. 

I hope to continue to look into these things, and especially make clear the notion that although life on earth must develop like an embryo inside its mother's womb, life in it's grander form extends to possibly any region of space and time. 

I like to look at Ezekial's creatures and imagine the wheels on the carriages give clues about space- time? Do they? They tell us something!




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