All Life Is One
Many ideas on life have risen and fallen throughout human history. But as entire human civilizations have came and went over the last five thousand years, one universal idea has stood the test of time: "All life is one." A new book studies the profound meaning of "All life is one" that is found universally within human artistic expressions past and present. You will find this idea within both Eastern and Western philosophy, civilizations new and old, and within almost every world religion. Many great thinkers are quoted to have said "All life is one" in one form or another including Gandhi, Carl Jung, George Washington, Bill Bryson, General George Patton, John Donne, Bill Hicks, Silver Birch, Ed Viswanathan and even Buddha. A simple way to define 'all life is one' is the following: "Life exists as a singular interconnected consciousness." Science now teaches us that DNA is the chain that binds us together. The idea of 'all life is one' takes into account that all DNA alive today has been alive since the first life. DNA is neither born during the replication process (no new life is recreated) nor does it die during the replication process (it merely becomes part of another chain). This contradicts the concept that we are born, reproduce and die. All life is actually infinite. Of course, not only does this idea go against our traditional thinking of birth, reproduction and death, it also dives into the concept of infinity, a concept the human mind has extreme difficulty understanding. An 'infinite, singular life' is quite profound to understand. Such is why you may go your entire life without hearing the idea 'all life is one'. Why?
- Your parents won't teach it to you.
- You won't find it in public or private education.
- It is not part of your university degree program.
- It will not be in a TV commercial.
- It won't be on the news tonight.
- It is not part of next week's corporate training.
- It will not be on this week's Reality TV program.
- It will not be part of this Sunday's sermon.
- Your friends will rarely bring it up (in the fear of being considered loony).
- You will have trouble finding a book written about it.
- You can barely find it in the temple of outlandish ideas: The Internet.
- The idea has to be consciously denied in order to function in artificial civilization.
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