Harmony of Fate: Navigating the Interplay Between Free Will, Destiny, and Nature's Intelligence
Harmony of Fate: Navigating the Interplay Between Free Will, Destiny, and Nature's Intelligence
In the exploration of the delicate interplay between free will, destiny,
and the intricate intelligence of nature, it becomes evident that these
elements are not necessarily in stark opposition but rather exist in a
harmonious dance. The belief in both free will and destiny coexisting is
rooted in the understanding that each possesses its own reality and
significance.
To me, they are not really in opposition to each other; I believe both are real. I have the free will to act as I see fit now, and destiny itself represents the end result rather than the action. I can choose to follow the straight line to what I perceive my destiny to be, or I can choose to create something else that I believe is meant for me. In my view, destiny is merely the end result of a multitude of people acting freely, and sometimes not so freely; their actions bounce against each other, ultimately shaping the inevitable "destiny." Nothing is bound to happen, yet everything is bound to happen. I believe some people are destined to meet each other, though.
Nature is intelligent,
Like us, who have the conscious unconscious and collective unconscious, nature has the predestined, unpredicted, entropic aspects.
The thing we call destiny are in the predestined. Things that will happen to us and we can easily foretell and predict. We call this an inevitability
There is the unpredicted that is outside our action that we can’t foresee the outcome but make speculations. It’s more controlled and grounded in reality. This is where I would say the actions of multiple people or bodies interact and “bounce off” each other to form an unpredictable situation that is still grounded within the confines of what you would imagine is real
The last is the entropic aspect which is infinite and uncontrollable. Anything can happen here. This is the true aspect and parent to absolute randomness and contradiction. Here nothing can really be foretold because anything can happen. This is chaos. the Void. This is where there is freedom. Free Will. The result of every single thing in the cosmos interacting with each other to produce (-*-*-)
Predestined is conscious
Unpredictable is unconscious
Entropy is the collective
Free will lies in the nature or entropic aspect, where freedom or free will operates without inherent motivation. The notion that actions must be bound to a rational reason, interpretable without any form of irrational justification, contradicts this perspective. The free will I refer to aligns with "acting on your nature," allowing for the expression of irrational and chaotic impulses without a clear end in mind.
Take, for example, the story of Adam and Eve. Adam and Eve acted on the irrational need for freedom and the human instinct to seek knowledge. The course of their actions couldn't be predetermined but was influenced by the serpent. In the end, the serpent provided input and received a fortunate outcome that supported its prompting. Symbolically, the story suggests not just "two things" that could happen but a myriad of potential answers stemming from human instincts, whether driven by temptation or not.
There was no rational reason for why humans want to know or why they want to walk on two legs. The response given in this context arose from a standpoint of free will. However, the eventual outcome or predestined answer depends on the will of God, the answer of Man, and the entire creation's response. The result of this free will is what would lead to a predestined answer — in this case, exile from paradise. Whether this is considered a good answer for humanity or not is subjective and may not ultimately matter.
However, this banal fatal philosophizing is unproductive and, most of all, ungermane. The relevance of destiny lies only in how it defines mortal life, with narratives ever cumulating into a grander one, such as 'God's plan.' It serves as an intuition of a higher lens. The vagueness of modern 'destiny' ensures it always remains a metaphysical placeholder, a perfectly colorless neutrality from which a person's essence might be perceived and grasped.
It’s key to note, he who remembers he is free is free and he who can intuit a higher lens has a destiny. You decide where you fall.


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